PEABODY – The Peabody (1-5) and Gloucester (6-0) football teams have not played each other since the Tanners were victorious 28-7 all the way back in 1969.After the Fishermen’s 39-0 win last night at Lee Field, Peabody most likely hopes it will not have to square off against the undefeated juggernaut that is Gloucester for another 38 years.The Tanners fought hard throughout the entire contest, but their will was no match for the sheer size, speed and experience of their adversary’s rushing attack. The Fishermen outgained Peabody by 331 yards, amassed 389 yards on the ground and ran for six touchdowns.Anthony Enderle (3 carries, 76 yards), a 6-0, 225-pound senior, got the scoring started for the Fishermen when he rumbled 70 yards into the end zone on his first carry of the game. Following a Tanner fumble, Enderle led the way for his team’s second score as the lead man in the power-I formation and took a defender off his feet to create enough space for Andrew Fulford (11 carries, 121 yards) to score his first TD (1-yard run) of the night.Just before halftime, Fulford capped an 11-play, 55-yard drive with a 6-yard touchdown run to give Gloucester a 20-0 lead and added a 61-yard TD run three plays into the third quarter.”They didn’t do anything we didn’t expect,” said Peabody coach Dick Woodbury. “They’re a very, very good football team and we’re just not there yet.”The Tanners walk onto the field week to week as a young team (they started 10 underclassmen) yearning to improve, but their chances against the Fishermen became even bleaker without the presence of their starting quarterback, senior Scott Diefenbach, who missed the contest after being ill the whole week. Junior Tommy Ciulla took the snaps in his place, but he, like the rest of his offense, did not fare well.Nicholas Hiou (10 carries, 81 yards) was his team’s lone bright spot out of the backfield and junior Kevin Bettencourt made himself known on the defensive side of the ball with a plethora of tackles.”We had a couple players who played outstanding. We just need to get where (Gloucester is), and we’re not there yet,” Woodbury said.Peabody’s best chance to score came on its second possession of the second half. After a 50-yard run by Hiou brought the drive to the Gloucester 20, two run plays advanced the ball to the 16, but incompletions on third and fourth down kept the home team from cracking the scoreboard.”Our goal, and it’s not an easy goal, is to get better each week and the kids came out to play,” said Fishermen coach Paul Ingram. “This is our first league game, so what we did before doesn’t matter at this point.”Gloucester’s one area of imperfection was a knack for penalties. The Fishermen committed six penalties for 38 yards and had two blocking in the back flags negate a 75-yard TD run by sophomore Taylor Burbine and a 55-yard Brian Harnish rush deep into Tanner territory,The Fishermen’s final two scores came with predominantly backups on the field. Ross Carlson rushed for a 10-yard touchdown and freshman Gilbert Brown added a 20-yard run of his own on a counter play.