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High School Canton McKinley Bulldogs

Canton

All-county running back Griffin leaving Aquinas for McKinley
Wednesday, February 21, 2007


CANTON All-Stark County running back Christian Griffin has transferred from St. Thomas Aquinas to McKinley High School.

Griffin ran for 1,340 yards and 10 touchdowns during his junior season in helping the Knights finish 7-3. The 5-foot-11, 185-pounder was named second-team Division V All-Ohio.

Griffin also earned All-Ohio track and field honors as a sophomore with Aquinas' 400-meter relay team.
 
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Tulsa World - Sports Extra

Union rolls in road rout in Canton, Ohio.

CANTON, Ohio -- It took the Union High football team two days to get a victory in Ohio, but the extra day was well worth it.

In a game that started late Saturday and ended in the early hours Sunday morning, Union routed three-time Canton McKinley 31-0, a traditional power in Ohio.

Playing in the third annual Kirk Herbstreit Challenge, the Redskins scored 10 points off a pair of McKinley turnovers and another touchdown following a blocked punt in the shadows of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Continued...
 
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Canton

Tough to replace: Coach Cross one thing, person another
[FONT=Verdana,Times New Roman,arial,helvetica,sans-serif]SUNDAY SPECIAL[/FONT]
Sunday, December 23, 2007
BY Todd Porter
REPOSITORY SPORTS WRITER

During a 26-year head coaching career, Brian Cross has seen many areas of the state. He has met many families and gotten to know thousands of kids. But the ones he is leaving at McKinley High School may have touched the head coach more than most.

Cross took the McKinley job with his eyes open. He knew it was a public high school in the city. He knew players would have family issues or, worse, no family whatsoever. He had no idea, though, how many.

?There were more kids who had issues than I was used to,? Cross said. ?Every school has kids with issues, but there were more of them, and you have to work with those kids individually.?

Cross will leave having received his share of criticism. He lost to Massillon three times in the last four games. In an ironic twist, that may not be enough to get Massillon coach Tom Stacy a contract extension. The Bulldogs are coming off a 3-7 season that included a one-game suspension for Cross because of an administrative oversight for which he took responsibility.

Cont...
 
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CPD

Coaches on McKinley's radar



Friday, February 08, 2008

Five area head coaches are on the list of 11 candidates being considered for head football coach at Canton McKinley.
Benedictine's Art Bortnick, Normandy's Rich Turner, Richmond Heights' Derrick Johnson, Firestone's Tim Flossie and Wadsworth's Greg Dennison have been asked to interview for the position. They were chosen from a field of 30 applicants. Interviews began Wednesday and are expected to last into the middle of next week.
The other candidates include Craig Coleman, a McKinley graduate and an assistant coach at Savannah State; Ron Johnson, the head coach at Middletown; Rob Karovic, a McKinley assistant coach and the former head coach at Waterloo; Warren Miller, a former McKinley assistant; Brian Shaner, head coach at Youngstown East; and Stephen Tutsie, the head coach at Warren Central in Indianapolis.




Cont...
 
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Best high school football stadiums


Courtesy of Ohio High School Athletic Association
The Hall of Fame Game is just one of the highly anticipated events held at Canton-Fawcett Stadium.

Here are our top choices -- some famous, some quirky and some for other reasons -- for the nation's best places to watch high school football.

1. Fawcett Stadium (Canton, Ohio)
Located adjacent to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and the site since 1962 of the annual preseason Hall of Fame Game, the 70-year-old structure currently is a home field for three high schools -- famed Canton McKinley, Timken and GlenOak -- and two NAIA colleges, Walsh and Malone. Named after local civic leader and school board president John Fawcett, the venue has an NFL flavor with artificial turf, a pro-style press box and lighting system. The Ohio state high school playoffs uses this site, along with nearby Paul Brown Stadium in Massillon, for its six championship games.
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10. Paul Brown Tiger Stadium (Massillon, Ohio)
Like Valdosta's field, this one needs to be on any stadium list as well. The home of Washington High School, or more famously the Massillon Tigers, Paul Brown Tiger Stadium is named for the legendary NFL head coach who started his coaching career at the high school. It's an older facility, but a partial roof on one side with a press box on top creates a modern effect of crowd noise being deflected back down toward the players. When Massillon plays Canton McKinley each year, the place can get packed with more than 18,000 fans.

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Entire article: ESPN Best high school football stadiums -ESPN Rise FOOTBALL
 
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ScriptOhio;1300460; said:

Courtesy of Ohio High School Athletic Association
The Hall of Fame Game is just one of the highly anticipated events held at Canton-Fawcett Stadium.

Here are our top choices -- some famous, some quirky and some for other reasons -- for the nation's best places to watch high school football.

1. Fawcett Stadium (Canton, Ohio)
Located adjacent to the Pro Football Hall of Fame, and the site since 1962 of the annual preseason Hall of Fame Game, the 70-year-old structure currently is a home field for three high schools -- famed Canton McKinley, Timken and GlenOak -- and two NAIA colleges, Walsh and Malone. Named after local civic leader and school board president John Fawcett, the venue has an NFL flavor with artificial turf, a pro-style press box and lighting system. The Ohio state high school playoffs uses this site, along with nearby Paul Brown Stadium in Massillon, for its six championship games.
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.
.
.
.
continued

10. Paul Brown Tiger Stadium (Massillon, Ohio)
Like Valdosta's field, this one needs to be on any stadium list as well. The home of Washington High School, or more famously the Massillon Tigers, Paul Brown Tiger Stadium is named for the legendary NFL head coach who started his coaching career at the high school. It's an older facility, but a partial roof on one side with a press box on top creates a modern effect of crowd noise being deflected back down toward the players. When Massillon plays Canton McKinley each year, the place can get packed with more than 18,000 fans.

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continued

Entire article: ESPN Best high school football stadiums -ESPN Rise FOOTBALL


I grew up less than five minutes away from that stadium and I used to work at the HOF. When Michael Irvin was inducted into the Hall he was talking about how amazing it would be to grow up by the Hall and to play your HS games at the field. He was just in awe of the place and of the opportunties those students have to play there.

On another note, GlenOak no longer plays there, they built their own stadium.
 
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Saw in the paper this weekend that the Bulldogs beat Cleveland East Tech 81-0, with lots of big plays, because they had only 13 first downs. Ouch. Interesting to see how they play against Huber Hts. this weekend.
 
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Was at the McKinley/Massillon game this weekend...huge win for the Bulldogs, I believe they snuck into the 8 spot from being #15 after winning and having the stars align for them. Was a good time, but a somewhat sparse crowd.
 
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massillonvmck_large.jpg


McKinley quarterback Kyle Ohradzansky talks about Massillon rivalry

Josh Weir
[email protected]
Updated: Monday, October 25, 2010

CANTON For the fourth time in three years, Kyle Ohradzansky preps to start a McKinley-Massillon game."Has it been that many?" the Bulldogs' senior quarterback asks with a laugh.

Ohradzansky has experienced it all, from the high of last year's McKinley win in the regular season - a game that barely got the Bulldogs into the playoffs and snapped a four-game losing streak to Massillon - to the lows of a regular-season loss in which the Tigers totaled seven sacks his sophomore year and last year's Massillon win in a brutally physical regional final rematch.

Continued...
 
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Bees upset Bulldogs after trailing by 3 TDs - cleveland.com

#8 MEDINA 31 #1 McKINLEY 28

Canton ? Down three touchdowns with McKinley ready to throw a knock-out punch in the first half, Medina looked like it was headed for the mat.

"It teetered a little bit there, but our guys believe in themselves and the coaching staff," Medina coach Larry Laird said. "That's the biggest part of the battle: You gotta believe."

Believe this. The No. 8 seed Medina Bees went into Fawcett Stadium and knocked off No. 1 McKinley, 31-28, Saturday night in a Division I, Region 2 high school football quarterfinal.

The Bees overcame deficits of 21-0 and 28-14 to move on and play Toledo St. John's next week in a regional semifinal at a site to be announced.

This wasn't how McKinley (8-3), a team with state championship aspirations, envisioned its season ending. As Medina fans chanted "Overrated," McKinley linebacker Mike Aylward slammed down his helmet. Senior Steve Miller knelt by himself in disbelief.

Continued...
 
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