Just 1 Tiger Fan

I have often been told, (well, made fun of,) that I am guilty of living for the Massillon Tigers High School football team. I don’t live for them. I am alive because of them. And I’m just one Tiger fan among thousands. Massillon, Ohio is where football was born—me, too. The Massillon Tigers and the McKinley Bulldogs have the oldest rivalry in the country. They were the first 2 pro teams created and have now morphed into high school teams. They have played 130 times since 1894. (That isn’t a typo, I meant the actual 1800s.) I am a Massillon fan. McKinley is my sworn enemy. I don’t wear Red and Black ever, and I hardly even wear red at all. I wear, and bleed, Orange and Black only.

In 48 hours, the Massillon Tigers will have the chance to do something they have never done in their storied history. They can win a state championship on the football field. They have won 24 newspaper titles back in the days when sports writers picked the winning teams. The time before 1970. The time before me.

This Thursday, December 5th, they will play Cincinnati Lasalle in the Division 2 state championship game. This will be their 5th attempt to win at states on the field in the last 49 years. I have been at 4 of the 5 attempts. All have ended in losses. But this time…

I have been going to the games since as far as I can remember. My dad, mom, brother and I went and sat in Section 14, Row S, Seats 1-4. That started for me in the late 70s. My parents had those seats years before that. In the 80s, my brother stopped going and my first wife went with us. In the 90s, a McKinley fan sat behind us and started a fight with the people next to us. My mom never went to another game again.

A Massillon McKinley game in the late 90s. With my Dad and my friend.

When I had twins in the late 90s, my first wife stopped going and just my dad and I went. Once a year, we brought the twins for the first half and my wife took them home. In the late 2000s, my dad and I took both twins until just my son came with us. When I got divorced it was just dad and son till 2008 when my dad died. My son and I went together for a few years until my second wife started to come with us. We drive from Columbus every week. A 4-hour, round-trip drive back to my hometown to see the Tigers. We had to get extra seats so we could bring her kids too. That lasted 4 years until all the kids graduated from school, and then it was just my second wife and I. That has lasted up till 2019—this year. This year the Tigers have gone undefeated and earned a spot in the state championship game. This time?

My wife and I at a rainy game last year.

I have asked my grown son to come back from Chicago to go to the game with us. My wife, my son and I will go—and watch—and see—if for the first time since I was on the planet they can win a state championship. For 49 years, I have ended each year experiencing a loss. Basically, 50 years of learning to deal with loss and then picking up and starting over with hope for another year. 49 years of starting over—and cheering—and supporting—and sitting in the same seat that my father sat in.

This year, we could end with a win. The town could win. The team could win. I could win. I would have to learn to live with being on the winning side. That will be something new.

I don’t live for the Tigers. I live because of them. When you grow up with something in your family since your birth, you don’t often discuss it with your family. The fact that I am at the games every Friday night is not something worth talking about with my mom. There is nowhere else I would be. In talking to her about the upcoming game, I learned a family fact that I never knew. In 1967, my dad placed a bet on the Massillon-McKinley game. The Tigers won 20-15. He took the money and bought an engagement ring. He asked my mom to marry him and she said, “Yes.” A year later my brother was born. 3 years later Massillon won their final “paper” state championship, and I was born. It’s been 49 years since then. Thursday is waiting. Massillon is waiting. Maybe somewhere my dad is waiting. My son, my wife and I will be there waiting. Believing. Cheering. Hoping. Supporting. Win or Lose, I know where I will be next year. Where I have always been: Section 14. Row S. Seats 1-4. Go Tigers.

Order the NEW book about the 2019 Massillon Tiger Football season written by David Lee Morgan, Jr.

Scott Ryan is the author of The Last Days of Letterman, thirtysomething at thirty and the upcoming book about Moonlighting. He is also the managing editor of The Blue Rose magazine and a co-founder of FMP publishing. He has written more about the Tigers in his ebook, Scott Luck Stories. Follow on Twitter:@scottluckstory

8 Replies to “Just 1 Tiger Fan”

  1. Love this post. It is a heartwarming human interest story and a definite underdog fairytale. I’ll be rooting for this Tigers come Thursday night! Love that you’ve continued this tradition and you bleed orange and brown (although it must scare the nurses when they draw your blood.)
    Good luck Massillon Tigers!

  2. Great story. So many of us in Massillon have a Tiger tale to tell. My parents were also loyal section 14 fans since right out of high school 1954. He had been going to games long before then sitting in student section. It was his seat until 2008 when my mom past away. Then my dad moved under the roof to sit near his brother. He passed in 2011 and now I sit on the visiting side in section 14 with my family and friends. My dad was also The President of the Booster club in 1983. He had always had a sideliner as long as I could remember. The boys became family to us. Massillon is a very special place year round. But come late August we turn into Massillon fans “true to thee” just as the Alma mater states. Funny thing. I now work at WHS and in 20.5 years in the school system this group is the most dedicated deserving group of young men. Go Tigers Beat LaSalle!

  3. Great article man. Seems like a similar story to many of us Tiger fans. Id love for my father to see a state championship won on the field as well. He has been a season ticket holder for 48 years and missed 3 games. It would mean so much to do many with stories like yours.

  4. Well done my friend… although I do not know you. I, like you have a Massillon history and I to, have been waiting, waiting and yes, waiting. I married a Canton girl… no, not that one. A Canton Lincoln girl, a girl who was a majorette… then, they, closed her school to consolidate with that red and black that you mentioned. No red and black for her… ‘they stole my school, my memories… my heart.’ Then upon meeting me, ‘let’ s go to a Tiger’s game.’ Bought season tickets and went for approximately seven years, with friends… lots of friends. Tailgating, visiting local watering holes after… then all our friends moved away. Not the same, season tickets cancelled.

    Drought… NOW, I AM BACK… TICKET IN HAND FOR THURSDAY’S GAME. Yes, I want to be part of history because I AM a TIGER and because… Win or lose… MASSILLON ALWAYS! T-I-G…

  5. I was not born in Massillon and do not live in Massillon. I am not really a football fan. However, over the last three years I have become an obsessed Tiger fan as I have watched my nephew have the opportunity to be a part of the team (Go Ben #1!). What I have learned is that football is not a sport in Massillon. They call it a tradition. I think it is a lifestyle. The players, parents, coaches, staff, community and fans give so much to continue the tradition. It is such a great feeling to be part of it. I understand why people come home to Massillon from all over the country to see the Tigers. I want a state championship for all of them! This has been an awesome ride. I will now forever be a tiger fan.

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