Linebacker Jack Rees (who rushed for 191 yards and 2 TDs on offense) forced the fumble, stripping Canton QB J.T. Norton on a ...
The committee made its decision on November 12. The committee instead selected Ralph Hay, a co-founder of the National Football League and the owner of the Canton Bulldogs from 1918 to 1922.
Mentor, the top seed in Division I, Region 1, earned a second straight shutout win in the playoffs after defeating No. 5 ...
Hay was also owner of the Canton Bulldogs from 1918 to 1922, winning an NFL title with them. Advertisement Kraft, 83, has hoped to join the game’s greats in the Hall of Fame for multiple years ...
Hay was the owner of the Canton Bulldogs from 1918 through 1922. He will be considered along with one coaching candidate, and three candidates from an earlier NFL era. Those names have not yet ...
Following a win over fellow Federal League co-champion Jackson High School last week, the Canton McKinley Bulldogs advanced ...
2) and No. 8 Canton (Div. 4) will be the underdogs looking for upsets. There are two local vs. local matchups. In Div. 4, two ...
No. 1 seed Mentor (13-0) advances to face No. 7 seed (and three-time defending state champion) St. Edward (8-5) next week in ...
The Dragons (9-1) held off the upset bid from the Bulldogs (6-4) as James Scanlon's fumble recovery in Canton territory set ...
Mentor had plenty to prove in the second half against Canton McKinley ... averaged 42 points in its first two playoff wins. The Bulldogs only entered Mentor territory three times in the game.
Next year's class will instead include NFL co-founder and former Canton Bulldogs owner Ralph Hay. Kraft purchased the Patriots back in 1994, and in the last 30 years, he built Gillette Stadium and ...
Mentor coach Matt Gray didn't bother to glance back at the scoreboard before jogging off the field at halftime of his team's Division I, Region 1 semifinal against Canton McKinley on Nov. 15.He didn't ...