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11/17/05
11/17/05
Tigers will be ready to compete
Thursday, November 17, 2005 [FONT=Verdana, Times New Roman, arial, helvetica, sans-serif]By Todd Porter REPOSITORY SPORTS WRITER [/FONT]
Repository Bob Rossiter Gotta slow him down - Any success for Massillon on Saturday starts with containing McKinley running back Morgan Williams (23), who ran for 234 yards in the Bulldogs’ Week 10 victory.
MASSILLON - There isn’t any denying what happened the first time. Massillon isn’t making excuses. Tiger head coach Tom Stacy doesn’t blame bad luck, a slow start, nerves, tension, the moon, stars or the drinking water in Canton.
Three weeks ago, Massillon was dominated by McKinley. The Bulldogs barely broke a sweat when they handed the Tigers their first loss of the season, 38-8.
Stacy, however, is confident his team’s psyche isn’t broken. He’d be lying if he denied there is a revenge factor.
“We’ve won enough games that the kids have confidence in their ability,” Stacy said. “We just have to play well. Whatever that entails, be it execution, coaching or from a technique standpoint ... will be the deciding factor this time.”
It was the last time.
Saturday night at Akron’s Rubber Bowl, Massillon and McKinley will lock up in a Division I, Region 2 title game. The winner moves on to the state semifinals. The Tigers went from consecutive 4-6 seasons to 11-1 in Stacy’s first year.
This is the fourth time the teams have met in the playoffs. McKinley has never beaten Massillon twice in the same year. The Tigers get a second chance, and revenge is on their minds.
“When you get embarrassed like we got embarrassed, you’d like to hope we come out with the idea of playing better and with a revenge factor,” Stacy said. “That’s with complete respect to McKinley. They flat-out outplayed us.”
There wasn’t much to highlight in Massillon’s first effort. The Tigers were held to less than 150 yards. They didn’t score on offense. In fact, Massillon’s only points came off a Troy Ellis interception return.
To boil down a 30-point loss in one play would be insufficient. However, if one play symbolized the Tiger’s day, it came in the first quarter. Both offenses had little success until about five minutes remained in the first quarter.
McKinley faced a second-and-10, and Massillon blitzed safety Andrew Dailey. Bulldog coach Brian Cross called a draw to running back Morgan Williams. Dailey arrived a half-second late, and the draw play opened up in the area that Dailey manned before the snap.
Williams rattled off a 47-yard gain to the Massillon 7, and the Pups took a 7-0 lead two plays later. The Tigers thought twice about blitzing a safety the rest of the half. Cross said it was a lucky call. Perhaps, but it was the perfect call. Had Dailey made the tackle, McKinley might have faced a third-and-14.
From that point, McKinley dominated both lines of scrimmages. Massillon’s defense adjusted in the second half, and the Tigers pinched both outside linebackers off the edge. McKinley, though, wasn’t concerned with yards as much as it was with consuming clock.
Massillon’s offensive line was manhandled. The Tiger offense got little going as a result of too much pressure on quarterback Bobby Huth.
“That’ll be a point of emphasis this week,” Stacy said.
It started Monday night at Stacy’s booster club meeting. A man pronounced Massillon could not block McKinley or Lakewood St. Edwards.
Stacy’s reply?
“Thank goodness our kids don’t believe that.”
“This will be an old fashioned game that will be won up front,” Stacy said.
Massillon did shut down its offense in the fourth quarter. Stacy went with basic plays.
“Were we running every trick play we have? No,” Stacy said. “At that point it would have done no good.”
The game may be more mental than physical for Massillon. The Tigers are coming off their worst winning performance of the season. They made just about every mistake, yet found a way to beat Findlay.
Another game like that, and McKinley could walk out of the Rubber Bowl with a larger winning margin. Perhaps, Massillon looked beyond Findlay to a rematch.
“It could be, but we can’t let that be an excuse or even accept that,” Stacy said. “We can never rationalize how we played Saturday night from an intelligence standpoint or a discipline standpoint. That’s never acceptable, let alone in a playoff game. “I want us to be a methodical football team this weekend,” he said. “We need to have tunnel vision, play hard and play smart. The only thing that needs to matter Saturday night is this game. We’ve played like at times. We need to be in our own little world.” Reach Repository sports writer Todd Porter at (330) 580-8340 or e-mail: [email protected]
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