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SJP-LaSalle

It was as cold as predicted but not as windy as I expected.

The final score (17-3) was a pretty good reflection of the play. Once SJP went up 10-3 in the middle of the 3rd quarter it seemed almost everyone there (certainly the Prep people around me but also, judging from what saw and heard from across the field, the LaSalle people as well) thought the outcome was decided.

A few observations: 1) I couldn't see from where I was sitting whether the Prep recovered the fumble on the punt return near midfield early in the third quarter or if the ruling was the Prep returner was down before the ball came loose, but either way the course of the game just may have changed if LaSalle had recovered the fumble. 2) Wallace and O'Connor were particularly great all game. 3) McCray was the player of the game in my opinion: several key runs, good judgement (almost all the time), and calm leadership. 4) Sutton was the better punter tonight. He really helped Prep win the field possession game. 5) Next time LaSalle beats the Prep? ... Maybe 2025.

Upper Dublin 17 Academy park 12

A good battle with a very wild last four minutes.

The AP offense shot themselves in the foot throughout the game. At the four minute mark, , with UD up 17-6 it appeared to be over with AP throwing an interception with a little over four minutes left.. That was turnover number 8 for the Knights. So, game over, right?

Not so fast.

On UD' possession on third down, the Knights did a jailbreak, forced a fumble, and ran it back for a touchdown, making the score 17-12.

AP then onside kicked, which was recovered by the Cardinals.

So, UD to run the ball and force AP to use the time outs, right? Wrong. Upper Dublin ran one running play, but then inexplicably did tow pass plays, bout incomplete, preserving the clock for AP.

Then, on fourth down, set to put, the long snapper for UP snapped the ball a mile over he punter's head.

So, AP with the ball, inside the 20 with over two minutes left and all three time outs.

AP managed the clock pretty well, got one first down on a fourth, that made it by a millimeter, In that last two minutes, the Knights ran 8 plays, but couldn't get it done, turning it over on downs.

And Upper Dublin, despite their late game meltdown, survives 17-12.

Academy Park finishes 7-4, a decent season, another payoff appearance.

But a season that had to be frustrating. Their four losses all close ones to good teams. I saw three of the losses, and in those (Pennsbury, Penn Wood, Upper Dublin),they had the winning or potential winning score in their hands deep in the opponents territory a the end of the game. And didn't get it in.

SEPA Playoff Confidence Pool - Week 2

Ok, here we go with this weeks lines. Same format as least week. I included the final week of the Inter-Ac to get us 20 games.

Don't forget to pick the scores of three games for bonus points.

D-1 6A:
Pennsbury @ Neshaminy (EVEN)
Downingtown-East @ Coatesville (-6.5)
Pennridge (-5.5) @ Perk. Valley
North Penn (-4.5) @ Garnet Valley

D-1 5A:
WC Rustin @ Springfield-D (-16.5)
Upper Dublin @ Academy Park (-12.5)
Marple @ Upper Moreland (-3.5)
Strath Haven @ Unionville (-17.5)

D-1 4A:
Upper Perk. @ Pottsgrove (-27.5)

PCL:
Conwell-Egan (-26.5) @ New Hope-Solebury
Ryan @ Wood (-34.5)
LaSalle v. SJ Prep (-10.5)
West Catholic @ Neumann-Goretti (-6.5)
Lansdale Cath. (-23.5) @ Future

PUB:

Central @ Northeast (-32.5)
Mastery North v. Simon Gratz (-19.5)
Bartram @ Imhotep (-18.5)

Inter-AC:
SCH @ Malvern (-22.5)
Haverford Sch. @ Episcopal (-13.5)
Germ. Acad. @ Penn Charter (-15.5)

HAPPY VETERANS DAY!

All gave some, some gave all. Let us honor those who served.To those who fought, to those who tried, to those who gave their very lives. A hero is someone who has given his or her life for something bigger than oneself. We remember and never forget. We shall always appreciate the service of our active and retired military. This is a small way for us to recognize those at the intersection of service and football. Thank you.

Albright (16 rostered players from SEPA—including the kneeler) was all over the news in October for what may have been an overblown media portrayal of kneeling during the Star-Spangled Banner. Regardless of your view or opinion, we STAND and salute our current and former service men and women. We are grateful for the liberties provided by those that fought for our freedom and the privilege of enjoying the game of football as players, fans and coaches. The NFL panders to our military and police, and has watched viewership decline over 9% compared to last year. The gods will choose to watch a game Saturday instead, more on that at the end. (coincidentally, the Eagles have a bye).

The 4 major Service Academies (Army, Navy, Air Force and Coast Guard) all have admissions rates that make many of the US News top 25 colleges and universities envious. Coast Guard (which is no breeze) has the highest acceptance rate at 16%. These famed places are building our future leaders of tomorrow. The alumni networks of these academies are extremely strong, and have placement rates into top business schools only to be matched historically by Harvard, Yale, Princeton, MIT, and Stanford.

The admissions process is much, much different. All require fitness tests (6 events: sprinting, a mile run, sit-ups, push-ups, throwing a basketball from the knees and pull-ups) and medical exams administered by Pentagon-approved doctors. All, except the Coast Guard Academy, require nominations, which usually come from members of Congress. Congressional offices will usually require interviews, sometimes with the member of Congress themselves, but more often with an aide or an appointed panel of veterans. Of the new cadets at West Point, nearly 1,200 — about 9 of 10 — had earned varsity letters, and 808 had been varsity team captains. Roughly the same numbers are true at the Naval, Coast Guard and Air Force Academies. Cadets basic training is a six-week crash course in soldiering that plebes know as Beast.


Oh, and the academics are no joke either. These students are fully subsidized by the government, except for a small amount to cover uniform costs. They earn every penny. This is not college, but a way of life. Building character, mental and physical toughness and esprit de corps. All good characteristics that employers desire. These are not regular college student athletes. They have chosen a more challenging path and that is why they will likely be future leaders in whatever endeavor they choose.


We STAND and salute the following dozen players from SEPA playing at “military academies”:

ARMY West Point (2): Hatboro resident from Wood, Chadds Ford resident from Tatnall DE.

USNA (NAVY) (4): Philadelphia resident from Wood, Doylestown resident from Wood, Glen Mills resident from Unionville and Pennsbury kid playing Sprint football.

COAST GUARD ACADEMY (CGA) (3): Jamison resident from CB South, Kennett Square resident from Kennett, Glen Mills resident from SJP.

UNITED STATES MERCHANT MARINE ACADEMY (USMMA) (2): Ambler resident from Germantown Academy, Warrington resident from CB South

Lastly, we had a difficult time trying to confirm a Bucks County or Montgomery County address but wanted to acknowledge another young man that graduated from North Penn that is attending VIRGINIA MILITARY INSTITUTE (VMI).


Six of the twelve (half) are playing FBS football, the highest level. 5 are at the non-scholarship Division III level and the carpetbagger is playing FCS. It is worth noting that Steve has been lampooned (see STEVE’S VERDICT) but has delivered many kids to college rosters. Including three (25%) of these great young role models. Nice work. Two more are from CB South.


We also salute former SEPA players and servicemen. Kuberski, Eckel, et alia. This list is long and distinguished. Feel free to give a shout out to your favorites.


In a few weeks, on December 9th, the 118th Army Navy game will be played. 86 of the 117 contests have taken place in the City of Brotherly Love. Special game with very special meaning with a great history in our back yard. Navy leads the all-time series 60-50-7. Coolest tradition in this “battle” is the “losing team” joins the victors in singing their alma mater to its students as a sign of solidarity.


In closing, it is worth noting that there is a noon game to be played tomorrow on ESPN3. It is the Division III version of Army Navy. It is called The Secretaries Cup and it pits the aforementioned USMMA versus CGA. 5 SEPA kids in the mix. Awesome that it is played on Veterans Day. There are no losers in this game. The 4-4 Mariners travel to New London, CT to take on the 3-6 Bears. Historically, they first played in 1949, but the Secretaries Cup moniker became official in 1981 and they have played every season ever since. USMMA leads the all-time series 31-14 and leads 24-12 in The Cup contests. Great kids representing our area and country and playing for the love of the game. The gods have it queued up on the DVR.



THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE

The West: 6A Top 20….Nov 8th (#1 -#10)

1 Pine Richland 11-0, D7; You have to wonder if anyone in the state is capable of stopping this bunch! Their quarterback is extraordinary and surrounded with considerable talent. No team has slowed him or the Rams down. But if they were to slow him, there is plenty of talent to fill that void as they’re a multifaceted team, capable of beating you a number of ways. Last week saw quarterback Phil Jurkovec pass for 234 yards and 4 touchdowns (17, 19, 31, 54) while rushing for another score (86 yards), to take his season total to 2570 passing yards and 699 rushing! Stats like that let you know they had no trouble with 8th seeded Norwin of the Southeastern Conference who fell to 5-6 in a 49-14 win for the Rams. They advance in the tournament to play 5th seeded North Allegheny, a team they beat 48-28 two weeks ago.

2 Pittsburgh Central Catholic 9-2, D7; Central Catholic got way more than expected from a 6 seed when Peters Township came to play last Friday at Cupples Stadium fighting the Vikings tooth and nail in a game that was near deadlocked at the half where Central Catholic clung to a precarious 7-6 lead then a 13-6 lead early in the 3rd quarter. A touchdown with just under 2 minutes left in the game seemed to seal it with Central up by 14. That’s when senior quarterback Jake Cortes found Josh Casilli, a sophomore, behind the secondary streaking down the sidelines for a touchdown narrowing it to 27-20. A failed on-side kick ended it allowing the 2nd seeded Vikings to escape with the win and advance. As always, Qb Try Fisher had a strong game with 4 touchdowns and 226 total yards of offense, 182 passing. They move on to play 7th seeded Penn Hills, a team they defeated 2 weeks ago 21-0.

3 Manheim Township 9-1, D3; Manheim Township claimed their first Lancaster-Lebanon Section One title since 2007 rolling over Penn Manor 62-14 for their 7th straight win since losing to Governor Mifflin (9-1, 5A, 4seed) 2 months ago. The tandem of Qb Luke Emge and running back Grayson Sallade did most of the damage with Emge completing 5 of 7 passes for 140 yards and 2 scores and Sallade rushing for 172 yards on just 12 carries for 2 scores. The win also secured the 2 seed at home Friday where they’ll play 7th seeded Central Dauphin again. They defeated the Rams in the season opened 17-14 at Township. Since then the Blue Streaks have gone 8-1 while CD went in the opposite direction at 5-3.

4 Cumberland Valley 8-2, D3; A 28-pt 2nd quarter explosion by Harrisburg doomed the Eagles who fell behind 35-7 at the half with Harrisburg outgaining them 282 to 88….in first half! Seeing the writing on the wall Coach Whitehead pulled all starters for the 2nd half as the top ranked Cougars rolled to their 10th win and first undefeated season since 1971. That’s when William Penn and John Harris High merged to form Harrisburg High. Prior to that George Chaump led national power John Harris High to a 58-4 record in the mid-60s. Sorry, I digress. CV moves on to 1st round District 3 playoff action at home Friday as the top seed against Central Dauphin East (6-4, 8th seed) who lost 3 of their last 4 to State High 34-14, CV 42-3 and H-Burg McDevitt 60-10 last week!

5 State College 8-2, D6; State College and Central Dauphin locked up in a typical Mid Penn brawl for a half where SC clung to a 7-3 lead. That’s when it all fell apart for CD when speed merchants Cohen Russell and Tristen Lyons rocked the Rams with their great speed rushing for 98 yards and 108 respectively, while catching 12 passes for 121 yards. Tommy Friberg completed 16 of 25 passes for 212 yards and 2 scores. When SC is “on” its hard imagining how they lost to Cumberland Valley 36-21, although they dented Harrisburg’s D for 28 points. They got 434 total yards against the Rams while holding them to 246. Up next is postseason action in District 2/4/6/10 against Erie High (9-2) who won the District 10 crown last week defeating McDowell 35-34. The winner will play the winner of the Delaware Valley-Hazelton game.

6 North Allegheny 8-3, D7; North Allegheny’s defense dominated with 4 interceptions, one a pick-6, and 5 sacks on the way to a 38-14 road win in 1st round action at 4th seeded Mount Lebanon. Qb James Stocker was lost for Mount Lebanon in the first half with NA up 21-14, although Seth Morgan performed well in relief. NA’s D is peaking at the right time shutting down high powered Lebo in the 2nd half after allowing 14-1st half points. This was the second time NA beat the Blue Devil’s (44-27 six weeks ago) who were held to their lowest output of the year. North Allegheny moves on in another road rematch Friday taking their 5th seed to top seeded Pine Richland in the WPIAL semi-final. It was just 2 weeks ago when NA lost at PR 48-28.

7 Penn Hills 8-3, D7; Here’s the ever present upset of the tournament so far with 6th seeded Penn Hills going into 3rd seeded Bethel Park to come away with a 30-28 victory. Wow! It was a back and forth game where a few things stuck out. Penn Hills’ defense making key stops, their offense denting Bethel Park’s stout defense for more points than anyone except Pine Richland, Bethel allowing numerous big plays and finally the injury bug where the Blackhawks suffered the loss of both running backs to injury in the 2nd half; Tanner Volpatti and John Doleno. And don’t look now but how about Penn Hills junior quarterback Hollis Mathis getting the job done completing 11 of 22 passes for 240 yards and 3 scores. Their next stop is at 3rd seeded Central Catholic where they lost just 2-weeks ago 21-0.

8 Delaware Valley 11-0, D2; Delaware Valley took Scranton (6-5) maybe a little too lightly after rocking them 45-7 four weeks ago in the regular season. Bad move as these guys are a veteran team with 17 starters returned from last year. They came to play, leading at the half 14-7 then deadlocked in a 28-28 tie with 3:52 left in the 3rd quarter. But DV is a veteran team too. They jump started the offense going no huddle in the 2nd half while fully committing to Ryan Obisco, their fine running back who pounded away with 36 carries totaling 368 yards and 5 touchdowns. Nice having a big O-line to plow the way. As the top seed in the District 2/4 sub-regional, they move on to the final against 3rd seeded Hazelton (7-4) who won a nail bitter at Williamsport 28-27.

9 Bethel Park 8-2, D7; Lost as the 3rd seed at home (at home !) in the WPIAL’s 1st round to Penn Hills 30-28 after winning the Southeastern Conference with a win against Mount Lebanon the week before. Not taking anything from Penn Hills but the Blackhawks allowed far too many big plays, giving up a 55-yard touchdown on Penn Hills’ first offensive play, and a 68-yard Td strike (all in the 1st quarter), a 46 yards score in the 2nd quarter, another 50-yard Td strike, this one in the 3rd quarter and finally a 20-yard fumble returned for a touchdown. Add two other turnovers, all (3) in the 2nd half making you wonder how it was this close. The last time they collapsed like this was against Pine Richland 7-weeks ago, falling behind 54-7 at the half in a 54-20 loss. Pine Richland took knees with their subs playing to prevent further scoring in the 2nd half. So that does it for the Blackhawks who had a nice season before falling to Penn Hills.

10 Wilson 7-3, D3; Iggy Reynoso set a Berks County record for career touchdowns at 65 after getting 3 while rushing for 179 yards in their 52-21 win against Conestoga Valley. It’s been a disappointing season by Wilson standards but here they as with the 3 seed and a home game against Red Lion (8-2, 6th seed) where they should roll. Red Lion’s started the season 7-0 then lost 2 of their last 3. But all in all they've done a good job rebuilding last year's 10-1 group..

Great Games in SEPA

I can't remember the last time we had this many good games with such high stakes in SEPA. All of these District 1 6A games look great. Amazing storylines and intrigue considering these teams have all played each other recently. Add Prep-LaSalle into the mix also. That makes five big-time games in the 6A playoffs. Are there some clear favorites? Eh, maybe so. But, I think they will all be decided in the 4th quarter.

So, which one do you go to? Correct me if I'm wrong, but all these games are Friday at 7 pm. Couldn't we stagger these games? At least in District 1...Say, one Friday night, 12:00 Saturday, 3:30 Saturday, then 7:00 Saturday. These are all can't miss games!

Good article on Josh Adams posted on ESPN

The impossible task of bringing Josh Adams down

SOUTH BEND, Ind. -- Apryll Adams likes to say her youngest child received an extra dose of blessings, starting at birth.

Apryll planned to have three kids. First came Jonathan, and then Porscha. Apryll became pregnant again, with a boy she would call Aaron. The family would be complete. But just five months into the pregnancy, she went into labor. Aaron did not survive.

"If Aaron was here, Joshua wouldn't be here," Apryll told ESPN.com. "Three was my limit. The blessing on Joshua is God's way of saying he got a double portion, for the son that I lost, which makes my heart happy."

Josh Adams has warmed his mother's heart ever since. They are similarly determined, driven and defiant -- "in a good way," Apryll says with a laugh. She chased her goals, escaping the projects of North Philadelphia for a college education, a stable job and a family. He chased his goals, too, excelling in sports and school, and overcoming a major injury, to reach one of college football's biggest stages at Notre Dame.

These days, everyone is chasing Josh, and no one's catching him. Thanks in part to his long runs -- Adams leads the FBS with seven rushes of 60 yards or longer -- he has become Notre Dame's first Heisman Trophy candidate since Manti Te'o, the 2012 Heisman runner-up.

Adams is a reluctant star, deflecting praise to his teammates, who volley it right back to him. But the hype is real.

He averages 8.7 yards per rush for a run-centric Notre Dame offense that includes five players with more than 30 carries this season. The man dubbed "Dickerson" by Irish defensive backs coach Todd Lyght -- a comparison to Hall of Fame running back Eric Dickerson -- supplies highlights in bunches, like a 77-yard scoring run against NC State when he was clocked at 22.37 mph. Adams also shows strength and power, recording 852 of his 1,191 yards after contact for the third-ranked Irish, who visit No. 7 Miami on Saturday (ABC and ESPN App, 8 p.m. ET).

Mike McGlinchey, who grew up near Adams. "He's as good of a person as you can come around in this game."

Added guard Quenton Nelson: "Josh is the most humble guy I've ever been around. Doesn't really say much in the locker room, but he's got an energy to him that people really rally behind."

Physical therapist Frank Angiolillo saw it when Adams began to rehab a major knee injury. The clinic where Angiolillo works isn't strictly for sports medicine, so it draws all sorts of patients. Adams stuck out but never isolated himself, offering encouraging words to other patients and politely answering questions about his football career.

"Incredibly respectful of others," Angiolillo said. "Every day, he called me, 'Sir.' I used to say, 'Josh, you can call me Frank.' He said, 'Yes, sir, I'll call you Frank.' He can do things athletically that can boggle the mind, but he's an even nicer person."

Denson saw it the first time he met Adams, who was visiting from Warrington the day before Notre Dame's spring game in 2015. The coach, who had returned to his alma mater that February, picked up Adams at a hotel and started driving him to Notre Dame's football building.

En route, Denson's wife called with an errand. So Adams joined Denson and Denson's sons, Autry and Elijah, as they stopped at the grocery store.

"We were in the car, playing gospel and hip-hop music, just having fun," Denson said. "People probably thought he was another one of my sons. From day one, when I picked him up at that hotel, he jumped in and went with the flow.

"We've been rolling ever since."

'I made up my mind to attack this thing'

It's called the "unhappy triad" in the sports medicine world: a torn ACL, a torn meniscus and a torn MCL. Adams narrowly avoided the triad, tearing the first two ligaments and severely spraining the third in a game near the end of his junior year of high school.

Angiolillo, who had run track at Saint Joseph's University, knew Adams was a promising sprinter and an honors student. He also knew Adams' injury had a 30 to 35 percent rate to reoccur. So he suggested to Josh and Apryll that if Josh focused on track, the Ivy League schools would fight over him.

"Let's clear this up," Apryll shot back. "He's going to be scoring touchdowns for Stanford, Notre Dame or Penn State. You got it?"

"She set me straight right away," Angiolillo said.

For about four months after surgery, Adams went through rehab sessions of 90 minutes to two hours, always asking Angiolillo what more he could do. Adams' brother or sister would pick him up, waiting patiently for him to finish.

"I looked back at my life and how hard everybody in my family worked," Adams said. "I wanted to do the same thing. Through a lot of prayer and discussions with my mom and dad, I made my mind up to attack this thing with everything that I had."

His first game back as a senior was against rival Central Bucks West. On the first play, he was held to a short gain. "Overrated" chants began in the stands. Adams took the next handoff, juked two or three defenders and ran 81 yards to the end zone. Central Bucks South won 41-14 and Adams finished with 232 yards on 15 carries. He didn't even play in the second half.

Some colleges had backed off after the injury. Notre Dame didn't. Tony Alford, then the team's running backs coach, knew if Adams' knee responded, he brought a unique combination of elite straight-line speed and power to get through debris. There was something else, too.

"You could look in his eyes and see he's a guy who will bite," said Alford, now at Ohio State. "He's not out there screaming and hollering, jumping up and down and a look-at-me type of guy, but his demeanor was very serious and businesslike and goal-oriented. Even as a young high school guy, he was a man's man."

'He's a competitor's competitor'

When Notre Dame's running backs reviewed film of the team's 49-14 win over USC, Adams remained quiet as his highlights appeared on screen. There was the 84-yard touchdown through the heart of the Trojans' defense that sent the stadium into a frenzy. There was a 14-yard scoring run in the fourth quarter that made Adams the first Notre Dame player to record three rushing touchdowns against USC since Reggie Brooks in 1992.

Then, Denson showed a Brandon Wimbush run where Adams cut-blocked two USC defenders.

"You would have thought he won the lottery," Denson said. "For three weeks, that's what we focused on in practice, executing the perfect cut block. He wants to be the best, but he understands what it means to be the best, the process behind what it takes."

Denson notes Adams' unique gifts as a ball carrier. Tall backs rarely run with such speed and fluidity. Adams' long-striding style drew the Dickerson comparison from Lyght, a former NFL cornerback. Adams has great hips and can beat defenses in different ways.

But it's the other stuff -- a willingness to block and understand protections, and to improve route running -- that makes Adams unique. Denson knew Adams could handle playing as a freshman, when he averaged 7.1 yards per carry as C.J. Prosise's backup. He endears himself to teammates by finishing every run in practice the way he would in a game.

"He's a competitor's competitor," Denson said. "He's a gentleman off the field, but Josh is a beast. He wants to win, and he's mature enough to understand the process that goes into winning. It's so easy to root for Josh because it's not made up, it's not manufactured."

Denson, who played four seasons in the NFL, thinks Adams will have a long pro career -- ESPN's Mel Kiper ranks Adams sixth among eligible running backs for the 2018 draft -- and will use the platform to impact others. Despite a busy fall schedule at Notre Dame, Adams is mentoring a 10-year-old boy in foster care. Adams missed the initial College Football Playoff rankings show because he and the boy were hanging out and playing cards.

Apryll says she thinks Josh's path is ordained, because "it's not supposed to happen." She has told Josh about Aaron, but she hasn't said much about how Aaron's death shapes how she views Josh's life.

"I think God has given Joshua a double portion," she said, "to not make up for the loss, but to carry on a destiny that was cut short. God allowed him to go in a good way, to mature and to blossom into what we see today.

"And he's not done.
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The West: 6A Top 20….Nov 8th (#11 -#20)

11 Peters Township 7-4, D7; Lost to Pittsburgh Central Catholic in the WPIAL 1st round 27-20. Heck of a season where a 3 point loss to Mt. Lebanon and last week’s 7 point loss deprived them of a 9-2 record. Season over after a 3rd place finish (4-2) in the Southeastern Conference.


12 Erie High 9-2, D10; Beat city rival McDowell in the District 10 final 35-34 when Qb Jason Williams took it in from 2-yards out with 4 seconds left in the game. They move on to play State College, the District 6 champ.


13 Central Dauphin 6-4, D3; Lost to State College 31-10 putting them on the road as the 7th seed for another game at Manheim Township where they lost 17-14 the second week of the season.


14 Mt Lebanon 6-5, D7; Lost to North Allegheny at home 38-14 in the 1st round. Finished 2nd in the Southeastern Conference at 5-1 behind Bethel Park. Season over.


15 Hempfield 7-3, D3; Hempfield beat Lebanon last week with quarterback Mark Himmelsbach completed 11 of 11 tosses for 121 yards and rushing for another 260 yards on 22 carries in a wild 59-48 win. The Black Knights cranked out 499 total yards of offense. Impressive stats. More impressive was the Cedars returning to the old days of Air Lebanon with Qb Zakee Sailsman completing 34 of 46 passes for 523 yards and rushing for 95 on the way to 7 touchdowns. This is crazy numbers even for high school! Hempfield has the 4th seed at home playing Dallastown in a rematch of the season opener where Hempfield prevailed 38-14.


16 Dallastown 8-2, D3; Beat Red Lion 40-27 for their 5th straight win following the York loss. They’re at Hempfield Friday as the 5th seed.


17 Central York 6-4, D3; Lost to York High 26-10 falling a few points short of making the post season. Tied for 2nd in the York-Adams Conference with Red Lion at 5-2. Season over.


18 Red Lion 8-2, D3; Lost 2 of their last 3 to drop out of the York-Adams race won by Dallastown (8-2) and York High (9-1) tied at 6-1. They have the 6th seed at Wilson Friday in District-3’s first round.


19 Central Dauphin East 6-4, D3; Lost to Bishop McDevitt 60-10 suggesting McDevitt (4A, 8-2, 2nd seed) is over their early season losses to Harrisburg and CV and that the Panthers are in big trouble. They move on to the District 3 playoffs as the 8th seed against Cumberland Valley who routed them 42-3 twelve weeks ago.


20 Hazelton 7-4, D2; Beat 2nd seeded Williamsport (7-4) 28-27 in the District 2/4 playoffs and advance to the final with the 3rd seed to play top seeded Delaware Valley. They lost to DV 6-weeks ago 28-14 in a good one.

When Trump says this was a mental issue, he knows what he's talking about

One of the first things he did as President was to revoke checks on people's mental health when attempting to purchase a gun. What could be the possible reason for this?

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-new...ng-obama-era-gun-checks-people-mental-n727221


Trump disgustingly blame a US Senator for the NYC terrorist attack a few days ago. I guess we blame Texas on Trump?

Confidence Pool - Update1

Here are the standings after Week 1. I'll post a new slate of games in a day or so.

Rank-Name-Record-Points=Bonus-Total

1. Burrs5 (17-3) 189-20-209
2. Relayer (15-5) 162-10-172
T3. newman107 (15-5) 161-5-166
T3. fkd25 (14-6) 156-10-166
5. Stalker (14-6) 149-15-164
6. HSfballfan19 (13-7) 148-15-163
7. IAdelco (12-8) 146-10-156
8. SCS19 (12-8) 135-10-145
9. Coverandmove1 (13-7) 149-5-144
10. DDRTC (12-8) 124-20-144
11. Fletchster1 (13-7) 138-0-138
12. Phillyftbfn (12-8) 130-0-130
13. BucksFB (11-9) 114-15-129
14. not_a_fan (9-11) 123-0-123
15. Dada (10-10) 105-5-110

***Please double-check your points. I'm really busy on weekends with my kids and doing my PCL stuff for the league. Mistakes are definitely possible.
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