
The game had ended. What happened had happened and there was no changing it. There wasn’t a person in Paul Brown Tiger Stadium that wasn’t shaken. It had never been done before. I immediately wondered what the media’s reaction would be. I worried about all the internet comments. It was all about to hit the fan. The date? September 26, 2025.
The Tigers had lost 34-2, and for the first time ever, a running clock had been placed ON the Tigers on their home field. For the first time since Coach Nate Moore had taken over the Tigers, his offense didn’t score a point. As the game ended, the Massillon Tigers, who just a week before had dismantled the number one team in Ohio for the fourth year in a row, shook hands with the Canadian team that was celebrating like they had just, well . . . slain a tiger.
Two weeks before that, a team came up from Georgia and put 50 points on the Tigers in their home stadium, in a game that was a toss up in the fourth quarter. The Tigers shook hands and said, “Good game” to coaches and players.
In a playoff game a year before, Big Walnut called out Massillon’s pre-snap count causing the offense to jump for 18 penalties and the defending state champions to get knocked out of the playoffs, three weeks earlier than expected, to a team that is probably still celebrating their dubious win. There wasn’t a push, a shove, or a moment of unsportsman-like conduct from Massillon Tiger players.
Here is what you have been waiting for: we finally get to the aftermath of the October 3, 2025, game against Cardinal Ritter College Prep. Every media outlet is spouting off about the handshake mishap after the game. Everyone is reporting that BOTH teams had issues. But that isn’t what the full video shows. People want to blame Massillon because this is something that keeps happening after the games. It happened after the Massillon-McKinely game in 2023 when Massillon won 35-0. It happened earlier this year, when St. Edward lost 21-14. It happened BEFORE a game in 2019 when Louisville tried to provoke the Tigers by running right into them before kick off. Not one Massillon player pushed back or moved. No penalties were called against Louisville, and the local media said BOTH TEAMS were to blame. Massillon would win that game 24-0. It happened with St. John’s College in 2023, and a few other teams that year—covered in the book Massillon Against The World. Honestly, I can’t remember every time it has happened. It is happening much more than it should, because it should never happen even once.
But happen it did on Friday night, when a team from out of state came to little Massillon, Ohio—population 32,000. Cardinal Ritter came into town with a ton of hope and left with a loss. They couldn’t handle it. No one drives hundreds of miles through big cities and huge interstates, comes off Route 21, turns onto Lincoln Way, and thinks they are gonna lose a game to that town. But most of them do. And when it happens in front of more people than they may have ever played in front of before, they lose control. That is what is shown on the video released by the Massillon Police Department. That is what is shown on WHS-TV’s YouTube channel, which documents all of Massillon’s prior games.
Everyone wants to say this is a Massillon problem. But if that is the case, then why has there never been one of these fights when Massillon loses? If anyone would just look at the facts, (I know that citing facts in a post-truth country is not what is in-style at the moment) it would show that Massillon has never refused to shake hands after a game.
So the media, keyboard warriors, and Yahoo-Yappi wanna-be’s think Massillon would start a fight when they won a mediocre game against a Missouri team no one has ever heard of, but they wouldn’t when they lose 34-2 and get a running clock at home? That isn’t how discipline works. You don’t pick and choose when you lose control.
Coach Moore has installed a respect for the game, the process, the town, and instills honor in these young men. If he didn’t, I have a feeling the aftermath of the Big Walnut loss of 2024 would still be talked about on the news.

Anyone watching the full video, not the two second video that FOX2NOW played of the police spraying mace at kids, can see that the Cardinal Ritter team was losing control. They had surrounded a captain of the Massillon football team. They had taken his property, were pulling his uniform, and shoving him around while he was siphoned off from his team. He didn’t fight back. He never pushed and shoved. He de-escalated the incident, while Cardinal Ritter players were escalating the event only ten yards away. Missouri players threw their helmets, pushed players, and didn’t shake hands. This isn’t my opinion, this is what is shown on the video.
My opinion on whether the Massillon Police Department did the right or wrong thing that night is irrelevant. I am not a police officer, so I don’t know the procedures. I wasn’t on the field. But I do know that Massillon has been on the other end of teams coming after them for quite a few years now. This is mostly because Massillon is forced to schedule out of state, national powerhouse teams because Ohio schools won’t schedule Massillon. That is a reality for the team. The more those teams come in, expecting to win, and leave with a loss, the more it seems that these attacks keep happening. The police did what they felt they had to do to stop the escalation. Massillon Public Schools had no say in whether that was a right or wrong decision.
My pointless wish is that we will move on from this age of bad journalism where the media reports on only the sensational aspects of stories, while leaving out what actually occurred. I have reluctantly accepted that life around these parts will forever be Massillon Against The World. But I shouldn’t have to accept that it will also be Massillon Against The Facts.
Scott Ryan is the co-Host of Tiger Talk and co-Author of Massillon Against The World, both with Becca Moore
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