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Power Ratings: The Finals, 3A, 2A,1A

Power Ratings: The Finals, 3A, 2A, 1A
3A Final; Middletown 13-1 vs Aliquippa 13-1….14.41 Aliquippa

Surprise, surprise! Here’s a game that actually held form with Middletown defeating Scranton Prep for the third consecutive year 35-21. The Blue Raiders beat the Cavaliers in 2017, 35-0 and the year before 40-13. They have some great talent passing through the school just now but the gulf is still evident. And, tradition runs deep along the Susquehanna in the communities of Middletown, Steelton and Highspire that border each other, handed a football the moment they can walk. That’s not meant to take anything from Scranton Prep, the four-time defending district champions who are 38-4 under four year coach Terry Gallagher. About the game; BASD Stadium is becoming something of a home field for both, meeting there for the third straight year. More of a home to the Raiders who scored the first 28 points of the game with Jose Lopez rushing for 224 yards on 22 attempts and scoring 2 touchdowns. They showed the big play with 59 and 80 yard touchdown runs by Lopez and a 60 yard run by Richie Sykes who finished with 68 yards on 5 carries. Qb Scott Ash completed 6 of 14 passes for 134 yards. Prep’s big gun Leo O’Boyle (6-7, 210, sr, 2416 career pass yards) completed 22 of 39 passes for 323 yards. He’ll be playing at Lafayette. He was all they had with the Raider D allowing 44 yards rushing, outdistancing them 418 to 267 in total yards. Their opponent Aliquippa is an old stand-by in the postseason, making their 7th title game appearance (first since 2015) after defeating Sharon. The Quips had to survive a fumbled opening kickoff, a subsequent fumble, the suspension of their leading rusher Avante MacKenzie and an early Sharon score to pull this one out. But they recovered, scoring on five consecutive possessions to rout the Tigers 41-7. MacKenzie’s status is uncertain but with the pile of athletes they have, it may not matter. Senior Xavier Harvey who had 13 carries coming into the game more than adequately replaced MacKenzie, rushing for 142 yards on 14 carries, helping the Quips to a 20-7 1st quarter lead. Wide receiver M.J. Devonshire moved to the backfield where he had 120 yards on 12 carries and 3 touchdowns. Qb Eli Kosanovich balanced the attack out, completing 11 of 13 passes for 228 yards and 3 touchdowns. He is a force to reckon with, completing 64% for 3019 yards! His Td/Pick ratio is 38 to 4, throwing mostly to William Gipson with 1631 yards on 58 receptions. They have some weapons! Their defense was unyielding, holding Sharon to 34 yards rushing. Qb Lane Voytik came in with 2624 yards, but left in a heap, completing 5 of 22 for 98 yards, throwing 3 interceptions. Their lead back Jordan Wilson came in with 1893 rush yards, leaving with 12 more. For the 3rd straight year Middletown will be playing a District-7, 3A Beaver Valley Conference team. That’s bad news for Middletown who has had little success against them, losing in the final last year to Quaker Valley (14-1) 41-24 and the year before to Beaver Falls (13-1) 30-13. Both QV’s and BF’s only losses those years came against Aliquippa who finally got here with what looks like one of their very best teams. They resemble Farrell in the size of their offense scoring 48ppg with a defense allowing 7ppg that has 6 shutouts, holding 9 teams to a touchdown or less.
2A Final; Southern Columbia 15-0 vs Wilmington 13-1….19.69 Southern Columbia
Southern Columbia continued their quest to secure a 9th state title and 2nd straight with a dominating 42-7 win against West Catholic (12-3). The Tigers won gold in 1994, 2002 through 2006 and again in 2015 and 2017. Their run from 1998 through 2006 is unparalleled, appearing in 9 straight title games, winning silver from 1998 to 2001 and gold thereon. Other silver medals came in 1995, 1996, 2011 and 2016, for a total of 16 finals appearances and 8 state titles. Their trip to Chocolate Town went through West Catholic last week who like 15 other opponents, had no answers to the multi-faceted Tiger attack. Defensively, they were dominant, holding the Burrs to minus 7 yards rushing. Tre Johnson, in for the injured Zaire Hart-Hawkins, was then their only option, passing for 192 yards and a 62 yard scoring strike to Seth Degree in the 3rd quarter. 7 running backs had 35 carries for Southern with Gaige Garcia getting 22 for 188 yards and 2 touchdowns. Because the ground game motoring for 295 yards, Stone Hollenbach only threw 12 passes, completing 6 for 70 yards. The 6 completions netted 3 touchdowns, 2 to Julian Fleming (5/58) and one to Preston Zachman. The win sets up a rematch with Wilmington who they defeated in last year’s final 48-0. The Greyhounds got here after routing a well-regarded Steel Valley team 26-6. Scores don’t always tell the story with the Ironmen held to 11 total yards of offense. 11! Steel Valley’s Kam Williams was held to 17 yards on 10 carries after coming into the game with 1809. Todd Hill was also stuffed, coming in with 1618 yards, but held to 16 yards on 7 carries! They were zero for 5 passing and made 2 first downs. Wilmington ran for 239 yards, with Cameron Marett getting 148 on 28 carries. The Hounds disdain the pass as much as Steel Valley, completing 3 of 5 for 36 yards. That should box them into a tight corner against Southern Columbia who will shut down a one dimensional team. With no passing attack going against a prolific scoring machine like Southern’s, Wilmington won’t be able to keep up.
1A Final; Lackawanna Trail 14-1 (D-2) vs Farrell 14-0 (D-10)….37.04 Farrell
Lackawanna Trail or “Trail” as they refer to themselves got past the Hornets of Juniata Valley (11-3) in a good one. While it was a tight affair with JV’s standout quarterback Quinn Zinobile completing 8 of 16 passes for 160 yards and rushing for 2 scores and 105 yards, it’s still about running the football where Trail ran it 60 times for 260 yards. The 4 headed backfield that is Ray Melnikoff, Jeff Resto, Cody Moyle and Qb Nate Rolka rushed for 154, 80, 62 and 60 yards respectively. It was a special year for JV’s Qb Zinobile who finishes 1594 passing yards and 1138 rushing. LT’s defense really did a number in the second half, holding on to a 17-14 lead by shutting out Juniata Valley for the 24-14 win. Their ground game controlled the clock with a 74-44 advantage in plays to out gain JV on the ground 260 yards to 128. This is their first ever appearance in the state final where they’ll play the undefeated western historic powerhouse Farrell. Last week Farrell made a very good Our Lady of the Sacred Heart (12-2) look bad, beating them 41-10. OLSH came into the playoffs red hot, having defeated powerful Clairton 27-7 and Rochester 28-6, but were no match for the Steelers who sacked their outstanding quarterback Tyler Bradley 6 times. Bradley ended the season with 3352 yards passing and 8450 career passing yards. Apart from their defense, Farrell has weapons all over the field, particularly running back Christian Lewis who tapped OLSH for 192 yards and 3 touchdowns, taking his season total to 2227 yards. Quarterback Kyi Wright (1591 pass yards) isn’t bad either. He’s their 6-3, 240 pound signal caller and linebacker who will play at Pitt. He rushed for 84 yards on 14 attempts last week. Farrell embodies old school western Pennsylvania football at its best, meaning they line up and pound you. So its power running football behind a line that averages 6-3, 290 pounds at 278, 282, 283, 295 and 310. The lineman are not a collection of wild body jelly bellies. They ran it 52 times against OLSH for 346 yards, on occasion putting Kobe Hilton 6-4 283 or Melvin Hobson at 6-3 295 in the backfield for 2-pt conversions and other short yardage situations. While the offense is explosive scoring 660 points or 47 a game, the defense is lightening quick, getting 4 shutouts while holding 11 opponents to a touchdown or less. They allow 7ppg! And they’re a playoff staple, losing in the final to Bishop Guilfoyle in 2015, to Clairton in the 2016 semifinal and to Jeannette last year in the semifinal for a 49-9 won-loss over that period. They’ve won state titles in 1995 and 1996 with runner up Silver medals in 1990 and 2015. As a one dimension team, Trail looks to be in trouble here against a team that has the talent, size and speed to take on many of the 5A and 6A programs across the state.
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Salvucci....Harrisburg

Sal, I rushed this some with writeups of finals on front burner and hope it's not too convoluted. I see them and CD once a year, as can, staying in touch with buds who are closer to the programs but in no way expert. Bunch of guys that like football who've been doing this for years. As always, this is just the opinion of a former linebacker and fan of the game, not a coach.

The 2016 group was especially talented at quarterback with Yahmir Wilkerson (+2000) having a strong arm to get it deep, surprisingly deep. Could run but nothing like Kane Everson’s elusiveness. Kane can get it downfield and is a smart, smart heads up Qb. Average running backs until Micah Parson transferred in from Central Dauphin late in the season. LB Zion Patterson also transferred in from Carlisle. Parson’s was a brutal runner with tremendous strength. Jahmir Plant was a sophomore on the team then and has developed into a deceptive, productive runner this year and can catch. Dana Purdy is a water bug at 5-6 160. Nothing physically imposing about their backs but they get the job done, especially with defenses focusing on Qb. That’s a big difference whereas Parson’s mauled you as a pure physical runner. They don’t have that this year. 2016 had a flock of wide outs including Joel Davis, Donnell Henriquez, Ronald Kent and Shaquon Anderson-Butts to stretch any defense. Sure handed like this year’s group although they don’t have a Shaquon Anderson-Butts who was a difference maker like Parsons. The O-Line was massive and surprisingly mobile including Raymond Allen 6-1 315, Javon Mansfield 5-11 270, Jeffrey Chisolm 5-11 260, Trevon Baltimore 6-3 280, Chris Rojas 5-10 215 and Fernando Genao, 6-2 240. It was balanced with defenses having to respect Butts and Parsons but not as dynamic, versatile as 2018s. Except for Everson, this year’s group has little star quality but is a better overall team per chemistry, Qb, sour taste of last year, egos having graduated, speed.

Defensively, 2016’s was superior at DEs in Parson’s 6-3 235 and Damion Barber 6-4 250 with Baltimore, Allen, Mansfield inside. This year’s version is lighter, faster with Saquon Carter-Barton 6-2 230 and Jeff Chisolm-Wilkerson 5-11 260 inside, Dionte Nichols 6-2 230, Brian Yates 6-0 210 outside-DE. Always thought the secondary, essentially the receiver corps was a weakness although not so much this year with corners Dionte Kent and Rynell Gantt with at least 5 picks each, a result of good front pressure rushing 4, almost always 4. Success here allows them to drop S/LBs into coverage. Passing teams gave them problems in 16. Not surprisingly, those are the teams they lost to; McD 28-12, SC 35-28 and CD 13-11 while crushing West Allegheny, Cumberland Valley and Governor Mifflin types. Wood was another story being a state playoff final. This year’s lost the opener; not an excuse but a factor in the loss per new Qb and replacing a slew of offensive contributors. Last year was the year they were supposed to win the title before Governor Mifflin loss with many key parts graduating from that team. This year’s linebackers are a strength, featuring Andre White 6-3 220, Elijah Scott 6-2 210, Jai Burney 5-9 190, Harold O’Neal 6-0 185. Unlike 2016’s D, 2018’s has played well all year, scoring Tds, forcing turnovers as demonstrated in the postseason.
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Q&A with Manheim Township quarterback Harry Kirk (12/4/18)

How did the high school football season go overall?
“The football season went well despite a tough ending being shut out by Central Dauphin.”

What are your plans now with sports and workouts?
“I do not play a winter sport, so I plan on working out with my team throughout the off-season along with speed training.”

What are you trying to improve on the most as a player?
“Right now, I’m focused on improving my speed a lot along with strength to become more of a running threat for next year.”

How do you feel your team will do next football season?
“With a lot of returning talent and leaders, I feel that the team will be able to go very deep in the playoffs next season.”

Who do you feel will be the toughest competition on your schedule next season?
“Wilson and Central Dauphin will both be tough opponents for next year as they always are. Those teams are only two loses so I think everyone is ready to play them again.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yes, I would like to play football in college.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I was asked to go down to Penn State to watch a game. I went to the Penn State-Iowa game and was a great experience with an awesome atmosphere.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I went to the University of Delaware, Temple University, and the University of Wyoming for camps.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up was the University of Arizona. I have been there with my brother, who is about to graduate from there, and it has a really nice campus.”

Q&A with Central Dauphin offensive tackle Chad Layton (12/4/18)

How did the high school football season go overall?
“Overall, I felt that our season this year was phenomenal. There were some season struggles that brought us closer as a team and made us family. Injuries, loss of a teammate and brother made us the team we are. I couldn’t be more proud of my brothers.”

What are your plans now with sports and workouts?
“Now that the season has come to an end, I’m focusing on bettering myself and becoming a strong leader to help form the team.”

What are you trying to improve on the most as a player?
“As a player, I am trying to improve my footwork, technique, strength, and size all while working to become more of a leader.”

How do you feel your team will do next football season?
“Although my focus is on the off-season and school, I feel that next year will be the best team I’ve ever played on. Many of my teammates are already putting the work in and grinding to have a successful year.”

Who do you feel will be the toughest competition on your schedule next season?
“As of next season’s schedule, Wilson, Harrisburg, Manheim, Berks Catholic and State College will all be tough teams to beat.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“My dream is to play college football. Football is really the only sport I feel natural in and comfortable with, so to play at the highest level I can is important to me.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“A college I’ve talked to were Princeton. Villanova came in to Central Dauphin recently and introduced themselves.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“So far, I’ve gone to Princeton. I visited their campus and watched their game against Cornell.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Growing up, my favorite colleges were and still are Oregon, Penn State, Notre Dame and IUP.”

Q&A with Dallas wide receiver Luke Delgaudio (12/4/18)

How did the high school football season go overall?
“The season went very well, but we came short of a district title with a lose to Valley View. That was tough, but everyone gave it all they got and that’s all you can ask for.”

What are your plans now with sports and workouts?
“As of right now, I play basketball for Dallas and weight lift year-round with two weeks off throughout the whole year.”

What are you trying to improve on the most as a player?
“As a player, I’m trying most to improve on my speed and most importantly my quickness, so I’ll be able to beat man coverage.”

How do you feel your team will do next football season?
“Next year, I feel my team will be unstoppable and will come nothing short of a district championship.”

Who do you feel will be the toughest competition on your schedule next season?
“On next year’s schedule, no doubt the toughest competitors will be the Valley View Cougars and the Berwick Bulldogs.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yes, I would play football in college.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“No colleges have fully gone out and started recruiting me yet.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I have visited the campus of the University of Pittsburgh.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“Due to how my high school team was playing on the weekends, I was unable to make it out to any games this year.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up and to this day is the University of Pittsburgh.”

Q&A with Camp Hill wide receiver Connor Trumpy (12/4/18)

How did the high school football season go overall?
“It was great, even though we didn’t have a good season our team was close. I had a fun first season back.”

What are you trying to improve on the most as a player?
“I’m trying to improve jumping in the air and going to get ball and not letting it come to me.”

How do you feel your team will do next football season?
“I think we’ll win a few games better than this year.”

Who do you feel will be the toughest competition on your schedule next season?
“Middletown.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Either football or basketball.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“No colleges yet.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I’ve been to Ship.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Ohio State.”

Q&A with Thomas Jefferson wide receiver Daniel Deabner Jr. (12/4/18)

How did the high school football season go overall?
“Overall, the season went good for all of us, but we did not finish how we wanted to. Our goal every year is a WPIAL Championship and then States, but we fell short. We played as hard as we could, but we did not make the plays needed to extend our season.”

What are your plans now with sports and workouts?
“My plans now are to play basketball. On top of that, I will be lifting and training for the upcoming football season.”

What are you trying to improve on the most as a player?
“What I want to improve on the most is becoming more of a leader for my team. Now that I am a senior, my other teammates in my class and I need to set examples for the classes below us starting now.”

How do you feel your team will do next football season?
“I feel that our team will be very good next season. We only had four seniors starting for us this year, so we will have mostly the same team. The only thing we need to make sure of is that everyone improves tremendously from this season to the next.”

Who do you feel will be the toughest competition on your schedule next season?
“Belle Vernon will still be our main competition. They are just like us, returning mostly everyone but a few seniors. It will be a big game for us.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I would love to play college football as it has always been a dream of mine. I would want to go for football and play receiver, but if defense is offered to me, I would still love to take the opportunity.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“As of right now, I have not been recruited by any colleges.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I have not made any college trips yet, but I plan to now that the season is over.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up has to be Oregon.”
hen posting it on the website (attach if possible)?

The Recruiting Zone (December 2nd, 2018)

Find out what colleges are recruiting Daniel Deabner Jr., Connor Trumpy, Luke Delgaudio, Chad Layton, and Harry Kirk now!

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Thomas Jefferson wide receiver Daniel Deabner Jr.
Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I would love to play college football as it has always been a dream of mine. I would want to go for football and play receiver, but if defense is offered to me, I would still love to take the opportunity.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“As of right now, I have not been recruited by any colleges.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I have not made any college trips yet, but I plan to now that the season is over.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up has to be Oregon.”

......................................................................................................

Camp Hill wide receiver Connor Trumpy
Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Either football or basketball.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“No colleges yet.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I’ve been to Ship.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Ohio State.”

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Dallas wide receiver Luke Delgaudio
Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yes, I would play football in college.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“No colleges have fully gone out and started recruiting me yet.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I have visited the campus of the University of Pittsburgh.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“Due to how my high school team was playing on the weekends, I was unable to make it out to any games this year.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up and to this day is the University of Pittsburgh.”

......................................................................................................

Central Dauphin offensive tackle Chad Layton
Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“My dream is to play college football. Football is really the only sport I feel natural in and comfortable with, so to play at the highest level I can is important to me.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“A college I’ve talked to were Princeton. Villanova came in to Central Dauphin recently and introduced themselves.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“So far, I’ve gone to Princeton. I visited their campus and watched their game against Cornell.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Growing up, my favorite colleges were and still are Oregon, Penn State, Notre Dame and IUP.”

......................................................................................................

Manheim Township quarterback Harry Kirk
Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yes, I would like to play football in college.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I was asked to go down to Penn State to watch a game. I went to the Penn State-Iowa game and was a great experience with an awesome atmosphere.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I went to the University of Delaware, Temple University, and the University of Wyoming for camps.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up was the University of Arizona. I have been there with my brother, who is about to graduate from there, and it has a really nice campus.”

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Class 6A Championship Game Preview (12/3)

PA Preps previews and predicts this matchup to determine the 2018 champion now!

Matchup: Harrisburg vs. St. Joseph's Prep

On Harrisburg: The Cougars turned the tables in a big way by avenging their season opening loss against Coatesville and know are playing for the championship.

On St. Joseph's Prep: This powerhouse has flexed their muscles in a big way during the playoffs and showed why keeping it close against in-state foes has been a challenge every week.

Prediction: St. Joseph's Prep 36, Harrisburg 20

Confidence in Prediction: High

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Agree/disagree? Post your predictions now!

Class 5A Championship Game Preview (12/4)

PA Preps previews and predicts this matchup to determine the 2018 champion now!

Matchup: Manheim Central vs. Penn Hills

On Manheim Central: The dominant athletes on both sides of the ball have allowed Manheim Central to run the table thus far in 2018 and head into this championship battle as the favorites.

On Penn Hills: The Indians have been challenged on their way to the title game and hope that they are more battled tested in tough games. These two squads are very even overall.

Prediction: Manheim Central 30, Penn Hills 27

Confidence in Prediction: Medium

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Agree/disagree? Post your predictions now!

Class 4A Championship Game Preview (12/4)

PA Preps previews and predicts this matchup to determine the 2018 champion now!

Matchup Imhotep Charter vs. Cathedral Prep:

On Imhotep Charter: With an elite defense leading the way from day one, Imhotep Charter is now one victory away from a championship. The Panthers know what Jalen Sutton-Christian can do with the football in his hands.

On Cathedral Prep: The Ramblers have continued spending the season posting jaw dropping offensive numbers and it showed as they posted 48-points in the semifinals. Billy Lucas and company have been very tough to slow down.

Prediction: Cathedral Prep 28, Imhotep Charter 24

Confidence in Prediction: Low

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Agree/disagree? Post your predictions now!

Class 3A Championship Game Preview (12/5)

PA Preps previews and predicts this matchup to determine the 2018 champion now!

Matchup: Middletown vs. Aliquippa

On Middletown: The Blue Raiders have answered every test thrown their way this fall and their resilience has shown week after week. This squad has not lost since September 7th.

On Aliquippa: Since their lone loss of 2018 late in October, Aliquippa has taken their game to another level and it shows with their dominating run during the playoffs. The skill players that the Quips boast offensively are at another level.

Prediction: Aliquippa 35, Middletown 25

Confidence in Prediction: Medium

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Agree/disagree? Post your predictions now!

Class 2A Championship Game Preview (12/6)

PA Preps previews and predicts this matchup to determine the 2018 champion now!

Matchup: Southern Columbia vs. Wilmington

On Southern Columbia: This powerhouse has Division I weapons all over the course of the field and knows what it takes to use them. The Tigers may boast the best offense within state borders.

On Wilmington: They may not be putting up the numbers of Southern Columbia, but Wilmington has also spent the fall lighting up the scoreboard. This group knows that they have nothing to lose heading into the championship.

Prediction: Southern Columbia 45, Wilmington 21

Confidence in Prediction: High

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Agree/disagree? Post your predictions now!

Class 1A Championship Game Preview (12/6)

PA Preps previews and predicts this matchup to determine the 2018 champion now!

Matchup: Lackawanna Trail vs. Farrell

On Lackawanna Trail: Much was expected from the Lackawanna Trail in the preseason and this group has answer every test thrown their way. Now their defense better be ready to handle one of the most balanced units they have seen all year.

On Farrell: Spending the season undefeated and dominating has showed why Farrell is one of the best squads in the entire state. Christian Lewis and Kyi Wright are wrapping up dominating all state seasons.

Prediction: Farrell 38, Lackawanna Trail 24

Confidence in Prediction: Medium

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Agree/disagree? Post your predictions now!

Publics v. privates argument - it's not just in the Keystone state.

The same heated debate that permeates so many of the football threads back in my beloved home state are just as lively out here in California.

Take a read:

https://www.latimes.com/sports/highschool/la-sp-high-schools-sondheimer-20181118-story.html

You'll note that about a month ago or so I was able to catch the regular season Mater Dei versus IMG game as well as a playoff game between St. John Bosco and San Clemente a few weeks back. Without any exaggeration the talent on the field (Bosco and Mater Dei) was as good as I have ever seen at the scholastic level. And what Bosco did to Oaks Christian (56-10) and Mater Dei to Corona Centennial (48-14) in the semi-finals of the playoffs last weekend was scary as Oaks and Corona were both Top 25 nationally (Bosco - number one in the land - and Mater Dei - number three - meet this Friday in the Southern Section Division 1 championship).

College Football Coaching Changes & Coaching Rumors in College Football Today

COLORADO FOOTBALL COACHING RUMORS

Leading Rumored Colorado Football Coaching Candidate Jim Leavitt via ralphiereport.com
Cumulative GPA: 2.65
Leavitt seems like a decent hire if Colorado wants an established name who could inject energy into the program, but he falls flat in other areas of the game, especially recruiting and personality. This would be a medium-floor, low-ceiling move that wouldn’t push Colorado past the mediocrity Rick George abhors. CU should aim for a younger guy with more potential.


https://www.collegefootballtoday.or...hing-changes-rumors-in-college-football-today

COLLEGE FOOTBALL PLAYOFF RANKINGS 2018

Below are the 2018 Official College Football Playoff Rankings Top 8 College Football teams. We are going to highlight what will need to happen for the likes of UCF or even Michigan to creep back into the top four college football playoff discussion. The 13-member College Football Playoff Committee will have the final say on who gets to compete for the 2018-2019 College Football National Championship.

1. Alabama
2. Clemson
3. Notre Dame
4. Georgia
5. Oklahoma
6. Ohio State
7. Michigan
8. UCF



COLLEGE FOOTBALL RECRUITING NEWS

College Football Today 2019 Top 300 College Football Recruits have offers accumulating from Division one programs. Quarterback Brenden Taylor, just received offers from FCS Football program Presbyterian and also from Jacksonville University. He has caught major interest from FBS program like Marshall and other big time college football programs, as a top ATHLETE recruit.




College Football Playoff Rankings & Is College Football Rigged?

College Football Playoff Rankings & Is College Football Rigged?



I keep seeing a hashtag on Twitter that insinuates that College Football is rigged. When you look at the intricacies of this Big 12 Championship contest, you may want whoever is behind the curtain to keep making these magical College Football games occur.




ZACH SMITH TOM HERMAN
In the 247 Sports article titled Zack Smith: Herman wanted to bring Meyer down. Author Jordan James is able to illustrate through a series of Tweets from former Ohio State Coach Zach Smith that paints a very vivid picture of the relationship between Texas and Ohio State in College Football Today.




OHIO STATE VS NORTHWESTERN 2018
When asked how he felt about the upcoming matchup, Northwestern head coach Pat Fitzgerald said, "I don't think anyone outside these doors would pick us to win this game. My mom and dad, I guess, would. I'm not even sure if my sisters would. But I don't need them. I just need the 74 guys who will put on the purple and white Saturday." Fitzgerald may be right, the odds are not in his favor. The Wildcats have been wildly inconsistent this season and have had a number of close wins that should have been blowouts such as Rutgers and Illinois.


CFB PLAYOFF RANKINGS 2018
We already previewed the Alabama vs Georgia SEC Championship match-up that will also dictate the CFB Playoff Rankings and what UCF would need to do to climb into one of the four CFB playoff ranking positions.


Week 14 College Football Picks for College Football Championship week can be found by clicking HERE. College Football Today already has previews for the SEC, BIG 12 and PAC 12 championship match-ups with predictions from College Football Today President Maddy Sperling. Check out how we did week 13 by clicking HERE.


Power Ratings: 6A-5A All games

Power Ratings 6A Semifinals
Coatesville 14-0 vs Harrisburg 12-1….15.40 Coatesville

Coatesville set a school record defeating North Penn 42-13 for their 14th win of the season and second consecutive District-1 title. This one was tight for a while with the Red Raiders up 14-6 at the half. Things were looking good for North Penn until a 28-7 second half blitz featuring a kickoff return and a dominating defense that sacked Knight’s Qb Solomon Robinson 7 times sealed the deal. Aaron Young rushed for 180 yards on 17 carries for 3 scores (57, 53, 4yds), helping Coatesville to a 337 to 264 total yardage advantage, 318 coming on the ground. Shamar Edwards had 120 rushing for North Penn (13-1) who when all is said and done, had a heck of a year, performing beyond expectations. This was not their most talented team. They fell off from last year’s season ending average of 41ppg which followed 2016’s 40ppg to 29 a game this year. But the D was vastly improved to 18ppg from 27, helping them reach another double digit winning season. For the second straight year, Coatesville’s numbers are at stratospheric levels, scoring 46ppg, up from last year’s 41 a game. Like North Penn, their defense is significantly improved over last year’s 17ppg to 11ppg. A rematch with Harrisburg is next. The Cougars reeled off 12 straight since the opening week loss to Coatesville 37-6, defeating quality opponents like State College, Central Dauphin, Cedar Cliff and Wilson. Their offense scores 39 a game with a defense allowing 10, their best defense since the George Chaump years, 2003-2010. Coatesville and Harrisburg met in the opener at Severance Field in Harrisburg where the Red Raiders owned the airways, with Ricky Ortega throwing for 271 yards to Dapree Bryant (5/152) and Dymere Miller (3/122). Harrisburg’s rush defense that has been solid all year allowed 121 yards. The Cougars rushed for 148 yards but could only muster 32 passing in Kane Everson’s first game under center after transferring in from neighboring Central Dauphin East. He’s grown up since then, throwing for 2423 yards while rushing for 768, making him something of a Ricky Ortega clone. Harrisburg has the most dangerous quarterback and balanced attack Coatesville has seen since their last practice against their offense. He can make something out of nothing. Running back Jahmir Plant (5-9 190, jr), has emerged to become a force at running back along with Dana Purdy 5-7 160 who can scat. The receivers are average but the O-Line really picked up Central Dauphin’s blitzes well in the district final. CD has a strong D-Front. Defensively, they are strong up front with Saquon Carter-Barton 6-2 230 and Jeff Chisolm-Wilkerson 5-11 260 inside, with Dionte Nichols 6-2 230 and Brian Yates 6-0 210 at DE. The secondary is average and a team weakness here. The LBs are a team strength, especially Andre White 6-3 215 (Texas A&M), along with Elijah Scott 6-2 210, Jai Burney 5-9 190 and Harold O’Neal 6-0 185 who can all fly. This is not the same Harrisburg team Coatesville played 13 weeks ago. They shouldn’t win but they just might make Coatesville play a 4-quarter football game. Maybe!
St. Joseph’s Prep 11-0 vs Pine Richland 11-2….10.22 St. Joseph’s Prep
St. Joseph’s Prep had no trouble with the District-11 champ Freedom (12-2), holding the mercy ruled Patriots to 204 yards of offense and their skilled quarterback Jared Jenkins to 5 of 10 for 48 yards. St. Joe’s Qb Kyle McCord completed 9 of 14 passes for 159 yards and three scores to lead a well-balanced attack that rushed for 141 yards and passed for 159 in an easy 42-14 win. While it was a school record for Freedom winning 12 games, their best since going 10-3 in 2008, it was also the fifth time in six years St. Joe’s eliminated the District-11 champion. Their offense was efficient and productive, scoring 42 points on 300 total yards of offense. Meaning they only had to go 7.14 yards to get a single point. Freedom, who gained 204 yards of offense while scoring 14 points had to go 14.57 yards to get a point. Actually it’s been an easy ride for the Hawks since opening with St. Peter’s Prep-NJ (7-4) and Our Lady of Good Counsel-Md (6-4). Jersey mimics PA with two dominant teams in St. Joseph Regional (10-2) and Bergen Catholic (10-2) who just faced off in the Non-Public Group Four (North Jersey Super-Red) with SJR winning 13-0. It’s a different story in OLGC’s Washington Catholic-Capital League with DeMatha (8-3), St. John’s (9-1), OLGC (6-4) and Gonzaga (9-3) all beating each other up in a highly competitive league (WCAC) although Gonzaga just upset their bitter rival St. John’s and DeMatha in the postseason. So, how will Pine Richland fare against St. Joe’s? If they can duplicate their performance last week where they routed a solid 12-2 State College team 56-33, they’ll compete. Before we forget, Pine Richland is the defending 6A champ that did a heck of a rebuild after graduating the team that defeated St. Joe’s last year 41-21. Against State, they rushed for 464 yards on 38 carries, forcing SC turnovers on their first two possessions, while PR scored on their first 5 possessions. Luke Meckler rushed for 208 yards and 3 touchdowns while Anthony Cerminara added 148 yards and 3 touchdowns on 10 carries. Sophomore quarterback Cole Spencer had 2 touchdown passes while rushing for 110 yards and a score on 18 carries. Its common knowledge in District-3 the Mid Penn Commonwealth is snake bit in the playoffs at Mansion Park Stadium in Altoona, almost always coming out with a loss. For SC, this was their 10th quarterfinals appearance where they’ve gone 2-8 since 2005. Snake bit or not, they got handled at the Mansion. Season totals show Spencer completed 112 of 183 passes (61%) for 1342 yards with a 13/3 ratio while rushing for 687 yards on 164 attempts. Though they are a downhill team featuring Luke Meckler with 1253 yards, they have a solid receiver corps, headed by Eli Jochem with 34 catches for 309 yards, Luke Miller with 325 yards on 23 catches and Shane Cafardi with 22 receptions for 282 yards. They have numerous weapons and appear on a par with St. Joe’s most difficult opponents, definitely St. Peter’s Prep, played at the top of the season. OLGC and the Washington Catholic League? For Pine and St. Joe’s, this is the third time they’ve met, all finals appearances, with SJP winning in 2014, 49-41 and PR winning last year. This looks like a competitive game where you could write a book on the matchups with the only question in terms of Pine Richland’s ability to compete being their collapse four weeks ago at North Allegheny where they came up empty, losing 27-7. And it has to be significant that Kyle McCord is farther along than Cole Spencer. He’s shown a knack of rising to the occasion with strong games, his best games, coming against the more difficult teams on their schedule. He is 66% on the year for 2299 yards and 30 touchdowns. Against Good Counsel, LaSalle, Wood, Ryan and Freedom, he’s 79 of 109, 72% for 1264 yards and 14 touchdowns.

Power Ratings 5A Semifinals
Archbishop Wood 9-3 vs Penn Hills 14-0….3.07 Penn Hills

Archbishop Wood scored on their first play when Tom Santiago ran 40 yards for the score to kick start the offense to a 31-0 halftime lead where they out-distanced the Golden Tigers 232 to 5 in total yards….in the first half! Santiago finished with 113 on 8 carries with Chris Blackstone adding 90 as the team rushed for 271 yards to defeat a game but outmanned Hollidaysburg 38-7, holding them to 147 total yards. Jack Colyar completed 5 of 8 passes for 79 yards and a touchdown. The win, their fifth straight, put them in the semifinal against undefeated Penn Hills. The Indians rallied from a 10 point deficit late in the first half, scoring on a Hollis Mathis to Dante Cephus pass for a touchdown moments before the break. That was the lift needed to win their fifth WPIAL title by defeating West Allegheny (10-3) 28-18. Qb Mathis completed 9 of 17 passes for 210 yards and 3 touchdowns. Dante Cephus was his primary, catching 3 for 146 yards and 2 scores. Terry “Tank” Smith (5-9, 210, LB) rushed for 81 yards. Penn Hills defense was fierce, sacking West A’s Qb Kam Kruze 5 times and getting 3 turnovers. He threw for 220 yards but the run defense was there, holding them to 101 yards. Penn Hills rushed for 144 yards. Hollis (6-1, 190, sr) will be Wood’s main concern as will a bevy of Penn Hills receivers. Tank Smith is their battering ram at running back with 1427 yards. Hollis is a pro style drop back passer, completing 61% of his passes for 2365 yards and rushing for 605 yards. He is surrounded with playmakers, scoring 39ppg. The receiver corps is numerous, led by Daequan Hardy with 651 yards on 29 receptions, Dante Cephus with 23 catches for 520 yards and Anthony Grimes with 409 yards on 31 catches. The most underrated aspect of the team is their defense allowing 10ppg and only 56 the last 8 games. It’s a veteran team that returned 7 to both sides of the ball with few concerns coming into the season, apart from a couple holes on the line. Evidently that was not an issue, opening at Ohio’s Division-IV power Steubenville (10-2), winning 21-14. Steubenville is one of the small school programs in the state, winning the Div-IV title last year at 15-0 and advancing to the finals the previous two year. Their 5 year won-loss is 62-9. The team that most recently gave Wood a game was Archbishop Ryan, losing 24-17. They have a quarterback in Jahlil Sanders who shares Hollis Mathis’s traits as a dual threat. While Wood defeated Archbishop Ryan (8-4) 24-17, Gratz (5-7) 57-6 and Hollidaysburg (9-5) 38-7 in the postseason, Penn Hills was defeating McKeesport (9-3) 34-7, Peters Township (10-3) 22-14 and West Allegheny (10-3) 28-18. Wood is gunning for their third straight state title and sixth overall, winning runner up Silver Medals in 2008 and 2012.
Upper Dublin 12-1 vs Manheim Central 13-0….22.92 Manheim Central
Here’s some interesting District-3 trivia about Upper Dublin’s Coach Bret Stover. He starred for Millersville University (borders Lancaster) for two years at quarterback, guiding them to the Division II playoffs where they lost to North Dakota State 36-26 who went on to win the title. About their game last week with the score knotted at 28 a piece late in the 3rd quarter, Upper Dublin went on a 9-play 82 yard scoring drive to grab a hard fought 35-28 win against West Chester’s Bayard Rustin (10-3). Quarterback Mike Slivka (6-1, 195, jr) did much of the damage, throwing for 232 yards and a touchdown while rushing for 38 more for two more scores. One man wrecking crew! How about big Mike, having a strong year with a Td-Pick ratio of 17 to 4, throwing for 1484 yards at a 63% clip. Not bad for a first year starter. As always the Cardinals play solid defense, allowing 13ppg. It’s a light swift group that could have issues with Manheim Central’s size but they are quick. Running back Lucas Roselli is a weapon, rushing for 724 yards and catching 27 passes for 430 yards. Mason Novak (5-10, 20, sr) does the heavy work at 564 yards. Three receivers are at 966 total yards in receptions, Selvin Haynes, Dylan Zlotnikoff and Roselli. They score 39ppg. There is no team on the schedule that comes close to approximating their next opponent in the PIAA semifinal from District-3, undefeated Manheim Central, one of the best teams in the state. The Barons roll in after securing their 18th District-3 title, defeating Cocalico. 18th! Quarterback Evan Simon who has become a weapon this year completed 12 of 18 for 374 yards and 5 touchdown passes. Colby Wagner was the prime recipient, catching 5 for 218 yards. With Wagner snagging 23 passes for 753 yards, Will River at 25 for 532, Isaac Perron with 24 receptions for 369 and Ben Wagner at 16 for 344 yards, they are one potent passing attack. Simon has 2319 yards passing for the year with a 26/5 Td-Pick ratio plus 531 yards rushing. Their all-time leading rusher Tyler Flick had 115 yards on 19 carries (1650 for the year) as the Manheim machine rolled out 561 yards of offense to overwhelm Cocalico 48-14. Upper Dublin will have to play their best game of the year to stay on the field with these guys.

Week 14 College Football Picks, Championship Game Preview, Bowl Projections & Recruiting News!

CFB Conference Championship Games

With the 2018 regular season in the books and the CFB Conference Championship games drawing closer, it's time to revisit the exhausted argument for an expanded College Football Playoff system. On Nov. 18, Merf Trout put forth his proposal for an 8-team playoff which consists of the winners of each Power Five conference championship games and three wildcards. Now that the conference championships have been officially set, let's see what this 8-team playoff would look like. - PART ONE

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