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Lehigh Valley Power Rankings - Week 2

Big Schools

1. Freedom Patriots (2-0)

Freedom turned a lot of heads this week after smoking Parkland, 30-13 following a week 1 win on Staten Island over Torey Pines (CA). Freedom used a dominant third quarter to take control against Parkland, blowing open a 14-7 game with a long touchdown drive to open the second half, then a three-and-out followed by a nine-yard Parkland punt set Freedom up for a 28 yard touchdown drive, then a nearly 8 minute long drive following a Parkland touchdown that salted the game away and ended in a field goal.

Freedom is led by another excellent defense – senior Lafayette commit Justin Peluso has been a start in the early season and is the next in a long line of excellent Freedom hybrid linebacker/safeties who wreaks havoc in their strike position. Tanner Wheeler up front and Beete in the back give them three real stars on defense. Offensively, they’ve pulled the same trick for the millionth time, where they take a senior who has tons of experience on defense and turn him into a 1,000 yard running back. Beete finished with 160 yards and two touchdowns against Parkland, including a 78 yard burst to open the scoring. He also went for 119 yards and a score against Torrey Pines and looks like one of the better running backs in the area. The passing game is also in good hands with senior Chase Walker (6’4 235; East Stroudsburg baseball commit) a quarterback with multiple years of experience throwing to Peluso and senior Shacre Colwell (6’3 170), who had a career night with 112 yards and a score against Torey Pines and added two touchdown catches against Parkland on Friday. Colwell was a state finalist in the triple jump last year and is a Division I track athlete if he decides to go that route and is a real match up problem on the edge. This team is good.

2. Nazareth Blue Eagles (2-0)
The Blue Eagles haven’t been tested yet in blowout wins over Hazleton and Whitehall. They only brought back three starters, but what a three starters it is. Lafayette commit Caleb Newsome has nine catches for 191 yards in their first two games and is clearly Peyton Falzone’s favorite target. Falzone, a Virginia Tech pledge, has been sharp, both as a passer and as the major rushing threat for Nazareth so far. And Marquez Wimberly got momentum going against Whitehall with a 46 yard run to set up their first touchdown, then an interception in the end zone to thrwart Whitehall’s chance to tie it back up. They’ve limited his carries early, but once he gets going running the football, it’s as good a three head monster at the skills spots as anybody in eastern Pennsylvania right now. They’re tiny on the offensive line and in the front seven, so how they look against the more physical team in the conference will be telling, but if they can keep the game in the hands of their playmakers, they’re as good as anybody.

3. Parkland Trojans (1-1)
The Trojans blew out George Washington in their opener, 63-10, but had a turnover and penalty filled night in a 30-13 loss to Freedom. Parkland drove into Freedom territory twice in the first half, but an interception and a turnover on downs ended a pair of drives in the red zone. Ten penalties also really hurt Parkland. Like Nazareth, they graduated a ton of players from on of the best teams in the state and are breaking in a ton of new starters, particularly on defense where just TJ Lawrence, Matt Dorsey, and Leo Dauberman returned. Lawrence has been their main offensive weapon so far – he has nearly 300 yards from scrimmage in two games, but Parkland was not quite able to lean on Freedom in their run game with big offensive tackles James Tyler and Evan Saylor like I expected. Tim Moncman made the point to the Morning Call that they will be a lot better in November than August, and particularly the development of senior quarterback Osmany Guzman will go a long way in determining that.

4. Liberty Hurricanes (2-0)
For the third year in a row, Libety has won two games. The difference being, it’s only taken the Hurricanes two game to do that and it looks like Shawn Daignault group is humming so far. The transfer back of Antonio Fontanez has made a huge difference, and unlocked some of the elite skill players Liberty can roll out in Gabe Green, Adrian DeLeon, and Jake Pukszyn. Liberty scored a nice season opening win against Pennridge, with Antonio Fontanez throwing for 162 yards and Gabe Green scoring four touchdowns – including two kick return TDs in a 40-13 romp.

Thursday Liberty got their first statement win in ages, with Christian Hackett drilling a 30 yard field goal as time expired to beat Allentown Central Catholic 15-14. The Canes went up 12-7 in the first half,then nearly coughed up the game when ACC recovered an onside kick to open the second half and score on a short field. Then, clinging to a 14-12 lead, ACC chewed up nine minutes in a fourth quarter drive. But a penalty and a 4th down incompletion gave Liberty the ball with 2:55 left in the game and Fontanez and running back Adrian DeLeon engineered the winning field goal drive.

Pukszyn, a junior and a Division I basketball recruit, already has 10 catches for 147 yards and is a match up nightmare on the edge with his 6’4 frame. Gabe Green has five touchdowns through two games, and hasn’t even gotten the bulk of his teams carries. That would be Adrian DeLeon, who had 97 yards against ACC, including 32 on the final drive, and if he is healthy it gives Liberty a solid all-purpose option out of the backfield. Defensively, Dante Morrison, one of the best 220 pound wrestlers in Pennsylvania, has been a force at defensive end, with three sacks against ACC.

5. Easton Red Rovers (1-1)
Feeling a little bold with this one. They say teams make the biggest improvements between week one and week two. Easton stood tall and fought against a very solid CB West team in an opening week loss, and used whatever lessons they learned about themselves to throttle Spring-Ford on Friday night. The improvement from 2023 is stark. Easton looks significantly more physical on both the offensive and defensive lines, the offense is more cohesive, and they have an attitude that has been sorely lacking out of the Red Rovers for years.

Matt Senneca has said running backs Dorian Thomas and Will Day are the best pair in the Valley, and he’ll get no argument from me. Thomas got starters carries last season when Day suffered a season ending injury, and that experience is clearly paying off here. But the biggest difference in the run game is the offensive line play. Junior tackle Elijah Grovesnor has been a stand-out (on both sides of the ball) and is clearly showing the benefits of getting lots of playing time as an undersized and inexperienced sophomore. Now 6’3 250, (two inches taller and 25 pounds heavier than a year ago) he’s been an anchor in the run game and was a constant presence in the Spring-Ford backfield from his defensive tackle spot. Fellow juniors Algee Macon and Kurtis Crossman have also stood out with a newfound physicality in the trenches as a year bigger and stronger and more experienced. If they can block and get after the passer, it will free up a really good set of skill guys with Day, Thomas, Jasir Frutchey (6’4 215 pound wide receiver), JC Wilson (who had 163 yards on 8 catches against CB West while Frutchey was serving a suspension), and Cael DiSora (a Lafayette lacrosse commit who had two interceptions and a receiving TD against Spring-Ford). We’ll see what they have for Northeast on Friday, a rematch of the 1939 classic at Cottingham.

Small Schools
I’m not going to rank small schools every week because I don’t have that kind of bandwidth. But Northwestern Lehigh is awesome. They killed Northern Lehigh 56-7 on Friday, taking a 49-0 lead into the locker room. Back from last year’s state finalists are safety/running back Eli Zimmerman, linebacker/tight end Shane Hulmes, wideout Mason Bollinger, quarterback Shane Leh, defensive tackle/center Jared Meck, and defensive end/offensive tackle Bryer Reichard. Reichard, Hulmes, and Zimmerman were All State selections in 2023. Reichard is probably the headliner, a 6’5 275 pound defensive end who will be a Division I player at the next level. Zimmerman has added primary ballcarrier on offense to his list of duties (he had ten interceptions last year as a safety) and is pound-for-pound one of the best football players in Pennsylvania (at 5’8 150). Hulmes is a Patriot League/Ivy League player, while Bollinger, whose brother Devon was an All State quarterback now at Delaware, is getting FBS looks at receiver. It’s as talented a 3A team as you’re going to get in a small town. I would not be shocked to see them back in Hershey.

That’s not to say they won’t get tested. Notre Dame (GP) has yet another quarterback off the assembly line in junior Matt Bodnar, who has thrown for 917 yards and 11 touchdowns in their first two games. That includes a 37 completion, 604 yard, 7 touchdown effort in a 71-64 win over Garden Spot in their opener. It’s a typical Phil Stambaugh team – they’re wide open on offense with a sophisticated passing game and good athlets and wideout, and it’ll be a great clash of styles with the smashmouth NW Lehigh Tigers, who they’ll see in week 7 and likely for the D11 championship.
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Week 2 Scores

Post ‘em here.

From D11
Freedom 30 Parkland 13 - Freedom dominates the game of the night. They’re your favorites.
Emmaus 31 Bethlehem Catholic 21
Nazareth 34 Whitehall 6
Easton 49 Spring-Ford 7
Northampton 24 East Stroudsburg South 21 (last second field goal to erase a 21 point deficit)
Blue Mountain 32 Southern Lehigh 20 (surprised!)
Stroudsburg 35 Wilkes-Barre 20
Notre Dame 56 Salisbury 0
Pen Argyl 24 Palmerton 7

Harrisburg

Another year of Shawn Lee throwing to Coke and Cyrus behind all world OL Kevin Brown. Most nights Harrisburg will have the 4 best players on the field. I'm not super dug in with their program. My question is does Harrisburg have enough of a supporting cast to make a legitimate run? What's the defense looking like this year? I'm guessing the offense will average north of 40 points a game so most likely it just has to have a good not great D. Thanks!

SOL National 2023 and Looking Ahead to 2024

It's been a long time since CB West would consider a 12-1 season a "what might have been" year, but that's how you have to look at 2023. Losing two of your top 5 players heading into the season and then two more top starters at the very start of the playoffs wouldn't have been survivable in most other years, but last year's Bucks had enough to overcome those losses and roll to their first SOL title since 2019. Cooper Taylor (Washington and Lee) replaced Ganz Cooper (ACL) at QB and took the very first play of the season to the house against Garnet Valley. West would run for 350 against the Jags in week zero and give up less than 50 on the ground, finally squeaking out a win after three straight losses to GV. From there, the Bucks weren't really challenged on their way to an undefeated regular season. It took a few weeks to change offensive strategies to get the ball into Conor McFadden's (Navy) hands more often, but once they did, the offense started really rolling, and was backed up by the top defense in the league for the second year in a row. Taylor and Clemens would both run for around 1400 yards. McFadden averaged 16 yards a carry and scored 14 offensive TDs, with two more on defense. He scored roughly every 4th time he touched the ball. AJ Gerace (DT) led the defense which was particularly good up front, with tackle Hayden Mulligan (West Chester) leading the o-line. West was very small again between the tackles (guards averaged 170 pounds) but Coach Gehringer's (and Coach Quedenfeld's) group always plays tough. Heading into the playoffs it certainly looked like another run to the D1 title game was in the cards, with perhaps a better shot at the trophy than in 2022. On the opening kickoff in round one against Cheltenham, McFadden's injury bug struck again and he tore his ACL. He had missed the championship portion of his junior track season with a hamstring injury, where he would have been the odds-on favorite for the 200m state title, and this would cost him his senior track season as well. All-league DE Chris Hutchinson was also lost to a broken hand. West struggled their way through that game but pulled it together enough to advance. GV the next week was a classic, with West bottling the Jags up again inside, with GV adjusting this time, pulling the ball for Q keeps and option pitches. West prevailed in OT, with Taylor scoring 4 times and blocking the GV XP in OT to set up the West win. It's the most emotional win I've seen for the Bucks in recent memory. I think everyone in Doylestown knew that the matchup with South was a very different picture than the near mercy rule in week 9. Bucks held tough through halftime, but a disastrous 5 minutes or so in the 3rd quarter sealed their fate. With the D West upset over D East, they missed a golden opportunity to finally get another D1 title.

CB South would then take care of business vs D West the following week. South was a very different team in 23, running the QB and a two. headed RB attack, rarely throwing the ball. They were big and very physical on both sides of the ball. Goetter (Monmouth) was the leader of a very good OL. It was a pretty big departure from what we've seen from them over the past 5-6 seasons. Pinkerton and Leonardi (West Chester) led the running attack, with Leonardi eventually eclipsing 2000 yards on the season. Jimmy Wade (OLB) was a nice pickup from Arch Wood and the two ILBs (Moscowitz - West Chester) were big and could really hit. Coach Hetrick not only got the "no-playoff wins" monkey off his back, he racked up four straight and South's first district title. For the top teams in the SOL National, it was a pretty good showing against the other leagues with playoff wins over Garnet Valley, Spring-Ford, Coatesville and Downingtown West.

North Penn would struggle for the second year in a row, losing their starting QB to injury and then also their second string at one point. They gave Spring-Ford a run for their money in the playoffs, but that might have said more about Spring-Ford than it did about North Penn. Marc Cobb was a speedster but they never put together enough to challenge West or South.

CB East would have 3 players named to All-State teams, finish 4-6, and miss the playoffs.

Pennsbury remained a tough out but with their stud back graduated they struggled with their offensive consistency. They didn't seem to have a weapon that could break the big play and couldn't sustain drives either... they also lost their best o-lineman (center) to a bad injury against CB West. They did make the playoffs and gave a tough game to an undefeated Souderton squad.

Neshaminy was competitive with the middle of the league, with nice wins against CB East and Pennridge, and a close loss to Pennsbury, but were not competitive against the top teams. Really hard to put your finger on their identity currently.

Pennridge took a step forward under their new staff, but like Neshaminy, are not close to challenging the top teams in the league. Nice win against Pennsbury but otherwise just a year to try to build off of.

Abington brought up the rear and there weren't really any morale victories in their losses.

2024:

CB West: Brings back 3 starting d-linemen, 4 starting o-linemen and the league's top returning back in Clemens. The D-line should be elite, with incredibly fast and athletic ends (Hutchinson and Gerace) but the secondary is a total rebuild. QB will be Noah Miller, who took Cleland's spot at OLB last year so has at least been on the field. Can they develop other skill to replace McFadden's production? Can the QB develop quickly? Biggest question: Can they stay healthy? They've lost 5 starters to ACLs in two seasons, plus two underclassmen. Should be in the top 2-3 of the league again. Coach Rowan has the program firing on all cylinders.

CB South: Pinkerton is back at QB, along with Wade, Bowen, Gies and Micewski. Wade should see touches at RB along with a big kid who got the majority of the carries at the JV level. If one of them develops into a solid back then they will be near the top of the league again.

North Penn: QB Bucksar should be back healthy, and they will have their usual assortment of talent. Numbers just aren't what they used to be, even with the size of the school. Does Coach Beck have one more run in him?

CB East: They have Big Mike Carroll (Alabama) but will be debuting a new QB (who will also play LB like last year's QB), and it's unclear at this point who will take over at RB. Coach Donnelly will look for his first playoff win at East, but even the usual East optimism is fairly muted so far.

Pennridge: Have heard some rumblings that the new staff, even though they made some progress last year, made not be getting the buy-in and commitment they need. They have a very fast returning DB / WR but his eligibility is apparently now in question. QB Keating is back for his third year as a starter and should be one of the best in the SOL. Trevor Fuhs returns at LB / RB.

Neshaminy and Pennsbury: I honestly don't know enough about what they're bringing back at this point. Coach Snyder will have Pennsbury ready to fight no matter what he has, but he needs a stud or two in the backfield to get the offense firing.

Abington: Just fired their head coach after one year. Word is he was treated very poorly. Would expect them to finish in the same spot as they did last year. It's a shame, the talent is there in the school, not sure if the commitment to a good football program is there as well. Signs point to no.

Lehigh Valley Transfers - St. Frances (MD) JV Team

So I’m plugging back in to what is going on around the Valley in the preseason, and I cannot believe the number of high end under classmen the East Penn Conference has lost to St. Frances! What is the school setup where kids from Allentown and Bethlehem are able to pick up and transfer to Baltimore to play there, is it a boarding school?

Here’s who is gone -
Antonio Fontanez, QB, Allentown Central Catholic: Sophomore starter for ACC last year, threw for 2,200 yards and 20 TDs last year and was second team all conference behind Peyton Falzone
DJ Kelly, DB/WR, Allentown Central Catjolic: Kent State commit and all conference safety
Jermaine Smith Jr, WR/LB, Freedom: One of the most highly regarded freshmen Freedom has ever had and rated as one of the top sophomores in the state, the 6’4 215 pounder is a likely high level Power 5 recruit.

Allentown Central Catholic also lost all state wide receiver Jaleel Calhoun to transfer - he’ll be at Plainfield in New Jersey.
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