ADVERTISEMENT

4A State Championship

Another great state championship game! I must say it’s somewhat amazing a single A school can beat a 4A power. The quips were massive; they certainly didn’t look like a single A school. And those RBs (23 and 25) were fun to watch. Both programs appear to be in great shape with all the young guys contributing.
We’ve had two really entertaining and competitive games. I hope it continues through the weekend!

PS: two boundary vs non-boundary games and they both came down to the last possession. I get the SJP disdain, but I don’t think their is a massive gap between boundary and non-boundary outside of SJP. But let’s focus on the games!

PIAA Football Finals, Dec 9, 10, 11, 2021….what the math says.

PIAA Football Finals, Dec 9, 10, 11, 2021….what the math says.

Ok guys here we go. As noted this is what the math says although it’s no better than personal picks, maybe worse at 68%. As always, it’s about getting information out you may not otherwise have seen. Here are a couple quick hits before the games.
1A Will Redbank break through giving District 9 their first title in any sport or Guilfoyle pull it off again in what has been a down year for them with 4 losses?
2A Can Southern Columbia get a 3-peat against what might be the toughest competition they’ve played in the final in years?
3A Few thought Wyomissing would be here, even fewer thought they’d blow out Southern Columbia 41-21 in Catawissa.
4A Will McDevitt ever live up to all that potential or fall to another quick and talented Aliquippa team?
5A Can anyone score on Tep’s defense and where is Governor Mifflin?
6A Can anyone slow down Samaj Jones? And who cares how young they are. Half the teams still playing are stocked with youth.

Thursday Dec 9 games: 1A (1 PM) and 4A (7 PM) playoffs
1A
Bishop Guilfoyle 10-4 vs Redbank Valley 13-1 (Bishop Guilfoyle 5.68)

Bishop Guilfoyle is making their 5th appearance in the title game since 2014 after defeating Canton (13-1) in Altoona’s Mansion Park Stadium 20-7. It’s been quite a year for the District-6 powerhouse, replacing 10 D starters, overcoming early season injuries and a 1-2 start. But they always schedule bigger schools to toughen them up for the postseason. This year’s included another District-6 power in 2A Richland Township (11-3, a 28-3 loss) who just lost to Southern Columbia in the playoffs. They also played 3A Bedford (10-2, a 28-10 loss) from District-5 who was eliminated last week by Central-Martinsburg. A schedule of 4-2A teams and 4-4As where 6 made the playoffs eases the pressure of postseason play especially playing those people on the road. Their talented quarterback Karson Kiesewetter was close to unstoppable last week, rushing for 132 yards with 3 touchdowns on 20 carries and throwing for 82 yards as the Mauraders outgained Canton narrowly, 233-194 in total yards. It was a super short game of ground pounders where both used 5 and 6 minute drives to eat up the clock. Kiesewetter is their main weapon and a handful to contain with 1823 yards passing (63%, 12/10) and 1005 rushing. Their opponent this week is Redbank Valley from District 9 who just beat a solid Bishop Canevin (13-2, D-7) team 23-14 at North Hills High. They did it the hard way, falling behind 14-0 before roaring back with 23 unanswered points. Chris Marshall tied it up at 14 all with a 98-yard Pick-6. There’s a memory! They are a balanced team with a 6-4, 220-pound quarterback in Bryson Bain who can get it out there, completing 59% for 2318 yards with a 33/10 ratio. Everyone can catch (154, 162, 289, 474, 524 and 630 yard receivers) with Ray Shreckengost (6-0, 220, 890 yards) powering over people while Drew Byers (5-8, 140, 275) and Brenden Shreckengost (5-3, 130, 267) scorch the turf. They don’t look like a typical D9 Single-A as they’ve shown consistency like Coudersport once showed winning back-to-back D9 titles with a 42-14 record the last 5 years. They’ve become the 1A alpha in the district with Coudy slipping to 33-18 the last 5 years. But Bishop Guilfoyle definitely has the pedigree here with a 115-17 record since 2012 and consecutive 1A state titles in 2014, 2015, 2016. The 2019 team (12-3) lost in the state final 10-7 to Farrell in ot. Coach Justin Wheeler has the program on fire in his 11th season. This looks to pit the Bulldogs passing game and defense against Bishop Guilfoyle’s dual threat quarterback and poise.
4A
Bishop McDevitt 12-1 vs Aliquippa 12-1 (Aliquippa 4.92)

Bishop McDevitt got a 25-yard Pick-6 from defensive end Nate Kinsey putting them up 28-14 in the 3rd quarter, before relying on their defense to hold off a final drive by Bishop Shanahan preserving a 28-21win at Coatesville. Marquese Williams had 110 yards rushing while McDevitt’s defense held Shanahan to 212 total yards of offense. Have to mention quarterback Cooper Jordan of Bishop Shanahan who completed 12 of 23 tosses for 125 yards, rushed for another 46 yards on 15 carries and had a 92-yard kickoff return for a touchdown in the 3rd quarter. That’s game winning stuff and it almost happened. In the other semifinal, Aliquippa fell behind Jersey Shore 10-7 at the half before erupting for 34 second half points to demolish the Bulldogs 41-16. Turnovers and big plays ruled the day with Tajier Thornton snagging an 86 yard pass from Qb Quentin Goode followed by Cameron Lindsey’s 14-yard Pick 6 followed by Cyair Clack’s 94-yard punt return, all in the 3rd quarter. Lindsey is also a talent at LB. Tiqwai Hayes had a 37-yard touchdown in the 4th quarter, his second of the game, followed by Clark getting another Pick-6, this one for 25 yards to end the Quips scoring. Their super quick defense held JS to 62-yard rushing and 250 total.
McDevitt and Aliquippa are two of the younger teams in the playoffs with both backfields starting freshman, juniors and sophomores; no seniors. Freshman quarterback Stone Saunders tops the list for McDevitt, throwing for 2798 yards at 65% with a 43/4 ratio. Juniors Marquese Williams at 1657 yards and Cyncir Bowers with 987 rush yards are their lead backs. Sophomore Rico Scott is their third leading receiver at 522 yards behind seniors Mario Easterly at 945 yards and Kamil Foster at 846. Aliquippa counters with sophomore quarterback Quentin Goode with 1802 yards passing (55%, 17/5), freshman Tiqwai Hayes with 1589 rush yards and soph Jon Tracy with 621 yards. Their receiver corps is veteran and senior with Cyair Clark at 602 yards on 30 receptions and Tajier Thornton with 496 yards on 25 receptions. It will be interesting seeing who gets the jump on who with both having explosive offenses and shutdown defenses.

Friday Dec 10 games: 2A (1 PM) and 5A (7 PA) playoffs
2A
Southern Columbia 14-1 vs Serra Catholic 14-1 (Southern Columbia 9.14)

Friday’s games kick off with Southern Columbia going for their 12th state title and 6th in the last 7 years! A win would also be their 5th consecutive state title. They’re here after taking apart Northern Lehigh (11-4) 56-14. As the score broadcasts, this was not a competitive game with Southern getting a 14-point lead in the first 5 minutes before going into the break with a 35-7 lead. Three Tigers rushed for over 100 yards with Gavin Garcia rushing for 108 on 6 carries and a touchdown, Wes Barnes getting 120 yards and 3 scores and Braeden Wisloski banging out 132-yards and a touchdown on 7 carries. That’s 18.0 yards per carry! If you’re looking for production you found the right team with SCA at 6.7 yards per point (380 total yards) to Northern Lehigh’s having to go 21.64 yards to get a point. Across the field, Serra Catholic got past always strong Farrell (state titles 95, 96, 19, 20, silver 90, 15) 27-18 despite being out gained 364 yards to 139. Once again, turnovers paved the way. Two weeks ago saw them beat Beaver Falls 35-12 in part because of 9 turnovers. This one saw Farrell uncharacteristically give up 6 turnovers. One, a fumble on their 4-yard line Serra ran in on the next play for a 13-7 lead, while another was a 43-yard Pick-6 providing a 20-12 lead. You can’t do that against teams this deep in the playoffs. Serra is a senior team with a lot of veteran playmakers. Quarterback Max Rocco (6-2, 195, sr) threw for 1934 yards at 55% with a 27/9 ratio to 3 quality receivers; Terrell Booth with 868 yards, Jayvon Holt with 674 and Amir Spencer at 323 yards. Machai Brooks-Dutrieuille (5-8, 175, 1039ry, sr) is a tough tackle, low, great balance, cuts on a dime. They could be a challenge for Southern Columbia knowing not just any team beats Beaver Falls and Farrell back-to-back as Serra has. One thing they won’t be able to count on is Southern being as generous in turnovers as Beaver Falls and Farrell were. Like St. Joseph’s Prep, Southern Columbia is a frequent flyer into central Pennsylvania where they seldom self-destruct.
5A
Imhotep Charter 11-1 vs Penn Trafford 12-2 (Imhotep 17.1)

Imhotep Charter scored on their first three possessions where an explosive 22 point second quarter proved fatal in downing a game but outmanned Strath Haven (13-2) 36-0. ICS simply had too much of everything; speed, athleticism and size. All of which conspired to bottle up Haven’s offense at 139 total yards while gouging out 334 yards on the ground for themselves. The win puts them in the state final for the 6th time since 2013 and first time since 2018. They are 1-4 in finals appearances, losing in 2018 38-7, 2017 38-28 and 2016 27-20, all to Cathedral Prep after defeating the Ramblers 40-3 in 2015 and losing to South Fayette 41-0 in 2013. That was then. This year’s team is super talented with division one talent throughout the lineup. Their O-Line is over 300 pounds with a catlike quick quarterback in Mikal Davis (6-0, 210, soph, 542py, 9/0) who hasn’t thrown an interception. Running backs Tre McLeod (5-10, 190, soph, 845ry) and Rahmir Stewart (6-0, 190, jr, 188ry) are their principal weapons along with receiver RJ Atkinson (6-3, 190, sr, 22-280py). Defensively, they’re led by DE Enai White (6-5, 235, sr), LB Khalif Kemp (6-1, 230, sr, Temple), OLB (DE) Keon Wylie (6-3, 220, sr, PSU) and standout safety (free?) Rahmir Stewart. Since their first 3 games where they beat Pitt CC 12-6, DeMatha 14-10 and lost to LaSalle 13-8, they’ve outscored opponents 312-31. While Imhotep was playing Strath Haven, Penn Trafford was taking apart Exeter Township 49-14 at Bald Eagle in District-6. That wasn’t the result many expected with Wisconsin recruit Cade Yacamelli running for 148 yards and 3 touchdowns and a fourth score on a pass. He has 1766 rush yards for the year and is their primary receiver with 19 catches for 318 yards. 4 other receivers have the bulk of receptions. Quarterback Carter Green (1215, 59%, 12/5, 1130ry!) made it look easy completing 10 of 16 passes for 84 yards and 2 touchdown tosses. A 24 point 2nd quarter blew it open as the Warriors got their 10th straight win following an inauspicious 2-2 start. They had Exeter all confused and pressured throwing 4 interceptions and rushing for a meager 66 yards! Trafford was all over Exeter rushing for 260 yards to advance to their first state final. We’ll see if they can keep up with Imhotep’s machine or handle their D-Front knowing teams like Central Catholic, DeMatha, LaSalle and Cathedral only managed to get 36 points combined. For Imhotep, Penn Trafford is nothing like Strath Haven as they are far more balanced with a dual threat quarterback.

Saturday Dec 11 games: 3A (12 PM) and 6A (6 PM) playoffs
3A
Wyomissing 15-0 vs Central Valley 14-0 (Wyomissing 1.14)

Once again Wyomissing made a good team look bad, overwhelming Neumann Goretti (13-2) 42-6, snapping their 12 game winning streak on the way to a rematch with Central Valley in the 3A final. Wins against Pottsville, Southern Columbia, Scranton Prep and now Neumann give them an air of invincibility until seeing what happened to other outstanding teams the last few weeks. Governor Mifflin comes to mind. Still, Wyo absolutely dominated Neumann, holding them to 9 first downs and scoring 42 unanswered points. Amory Thompson rushed for 115 yards and a score with Tommy Grabowski adding 114 yards and a touchdown behind their massive line led by J’ven Williams (6-4, 285, jr, SC, Ky, Mich St), Pacen Ziegler (6-3, 255, jr) and TE Aiden Mack (6-4, 225, sr, Richmond). Ben Zechman kept them on their heels with 2 scoring passes on 5 completions of 7 passes for 62 yards. They advance to play Central Valley who beat them in last year’s final 35-21, rallying from a 14-7 halftime deficit. They got a fight from Central of Martinsburg (14-1) before pulling away for another 35-21 win at Central Valley! Nothing like the home field in a PIAA State Semifinal game!? Although CV held a 21-7 lead at the break, Central battled back with a 35-yard Pick-6, closing the gap to 21-13. Then they recovered an on-sides kick but fumbled it away with Matt Merritt returned it 75 yards for the score putting CV back in front for good, 28-13. Their outstanding back Landon Alexander (2157ry) rushed for 210 yards and 2 scores with Jayvon Thompson (26-748) catching 3 passes for 107 yards and a touchdown. Giving teams such as Aliquippa 11-1, North Catholic 12-1 (formerly Cardinal Wuerl) and Central 14-1 their first loss gets your attention, as does their enormous offense scoring 49ppg with a defense allowing 8! Their immovable force at DT Sean Fitz Simmons (6-3, 285, sr, Pitt) is the center piece of that defense with 114 tackles, 49 tfl and 21 sacks. The win extends their 26 game winning streak, ushering them into their third straight 3A final. A lot of scores to settle here in what could be a contentious and definitely a combative game.
6A
St. Joseph’s Prep 11-2 vs Mount Lebanon 14-0 (Mount Lebanon 8.6)

Just when you think you’ve got a line on a few teams and games, St. Joe’s comes along and blows it all up, getting a surprisingly easy 49-13 win over previously undefeated and unchallenged Garnet Valley. One of the keys mentioned last week was holding quarterback Samaj Jones (6-1, 210, soph) in check, or at least on a short leash. That was easier said than done as he was off the chart throwing touchdowns of 7, 30 and 16 yards while rushing for 5, 4, 4 and 1 yard scores! He finished the game completing 10 of 14 passes for 145 yards and rushing for 85 yards on 8 carries. What a performance! A 28-point 2nd quarter showed all you needed to see while putting the Jaguars in a 35-7 hole at the half. Thus ends Garnet Valley’s season at 14-1 and the outstanding career of Coach Mike Ricci, spanning 35 years at the school where he garnered a 260-125 log. The Hawks advance to the state final, their 8th in the last 9 years where they’ll go for a four-peat. Here they’ll play Mount Lebanon who also won easily against an 8-6 State College team 49-28. Quarterback Joey Daniels (1925py, 60%, 29/5!) picked them apart, completing 12 of 15 passes for 292 yards, throwing touchdowns of 68, 66, 4, 15, 13 and 48 yards, mostly to Eli Heidenreich (Navy recruit, 1298py) with 8 passes for 264 yards. 5 went for touchdowns. Alex Tecza (1996ry, Army, Colgate, et al) rushed for 104 yards. That’s quite a trio. Lebo found the end zone early and often, racing out to a 42-14 halftime lead on the way to their first trip to Hershey. About the Blue Devils; their O-line is mostly senior, averaging 6-2, 250 pounds. They’re a diverse offense averaging 39ppg with a defense at 11ppg. Their conference, the WPIAL-6A always has a powerhouse or two, teams like North Allegheny (7-5) and Pittsburgh Central Catholic (9-3). They rocked both these teams (NA is down, first 5 loss season since 2008), surviving rematches in the postseason. They destroyed a particularly good Central Catholic team 35-14 in the regular season and again in the postseason 47-7. This is the same Central Catholic team that lost to Imhotep 12-6 after leading 3-0 at the half with a sophomore quarterback Peyton Wehner in his first start. Bottom line, Mount Lebanon is a powerful football team putting 9 on the All-Conference team including LG Owen Halter 6-1 235, LT Kade Capristo 6-3 275, their quarterback and running back. NG William Harvey also made first team at 6-3 285. The coach is the legendary Bob Palko (240-81 entering 2021) in his third year after 24 years at West Allegheny where he won 8 WPIAL titles. There he guided the Indians to three 3A finals appearances, all against Strath Haven, losing in 1999 21-7 and 2000 31-28, then finally defeating them 28-13 in 2001. This game seems easy to handicap from Mount Lebanon’s side knowing they’ve been a model of consistency and waffled Central Catholic twice. They’re playing good football in the South Hills. The problem is figuring out the Hawks. Who’s going to show up, the team that routed Garnet Valley and LaSalle recently or the team that edged Freedom 24-21, Wood 17-14 and Judge 21-13. This is Lebo’s first trip to the big dance with a wily, playoff veteran coach while St. Joe’s can probably tell where the cracks are in the walls of Hershey Park Stadium. Samaj Jones continues to develop. As he goes, so go the Hawks.

SJP "Should" Win Gold Yearly

This should not be read as yet another complainer whining about boundary vs. non-boundary teams. St. Joe's Prep is not your ordinary non-boundary school. Most non-boundary schools get their athletes from an approximate 30 min radius within their state. SJP radius is never-ending and they get kids from Philly, the greater Philly area, the state of Delaware, and several parts of New Jersey. In fact, 25 players on their current roster are from New Jersey! To add to this madness, 6-7 of them start on offense and 5-6 of them start on defense! In fact, SJP's starting offensive line are ALL FROM NEW JERSEY except the center!!!! That is downright ridiculous. So a public school has to compete not only against kids from all over the region near SJP but also has to compete against New Jersey kids too??? This is not an argument about boundary vs. non-boundary it's about how SJP makes a mockery of the PIAA. They humiliated GV the other night. That game should never take place because GV should not have to compete against kids from other states TOO. The whole thing is a joke. PIAA State Champs and you live in Vineland, NJ or Cinnaminson, NJ or Wilmington DE?

Just not sure what SJP gets out of beating up on teams that they SHOULD beat up every year. Why not play UP to your competition. Why play a "national schedule" only to come back to the PIAA and demolish a boundary-strapped school? SJP would survive just fine playing against the Don Bosco, St. Francis, St. Peter's Prep, DePaul Catholic, Paramus Catholic, St. Joseph, Blair Academy, Wyoming Seminary, LaSalle, Bergen Catholic, St. Johns, and Ceasar Rodney. That's 12 teams to choose from. Then have their very own regional championship much like Blair Academy does in wrestling.

What the PIAA should do regarding the playoffs is seed the state playoff contenders at each classification 1 thru 8. Then re-seed after the quarter-final round. This would avoid the same district matchups year after year and mix up the state championship process. This format currently is not working nor is the idea that it makes sense to have SJP in the mix! They should win every year! It's not coaching. It's taking in the best 22 kids from 20 different NJ high schools, a few from Delaware, and spreading them amongst the other 45-50 kids from the Philly region, the largest region in the northeast outside of NYC! When you really look at the arrangement, it was impressive what Freedom High School accomplished two weeks ago! Change is needed.

A Class State Championship

Congrats to BG! RBV played their hearts out (loved that trick play to tie it up!). What a great game by both teams. RBV would tie it up, and BG would answer with a quick score every time. It looked like a great atmosphere; great crowd for a midweek daytime game. They treated those fans to a great show. Looking forward to a great 4A game.

Ps: There is football being played this weekend. Maybe we should take a break from the recruiting stuff :)

Judging playoff blow outs.

7 of the 12 semifinal games were blow outs with SCA beating NLehi 56-14, Aliq defeating Jersey 41-16, ICS topping Haven 41-16, PTraf over Xter 49-14, Wyo winning 42-6 over Neumann, Lebo doing SC 49-28 and SJP handling GV 49-13.

Despite coming into these games with a combined 83-13 record and multiple conference, district and inter-district crowns, school record win levels, FBS-FCS-Div 1-2 players, etc, some seem willing to indict what amounts to over half the state as not playing good football. That’s a little harsh reviewing who those teams beat to get to the semifinal, which would indict another majority segment of the state. Blowouts happen but shouldn’t reverberate throughout respective conferences and districts on the strength of one game. Sometimes you get it handed to you. The reasons are myriad. Ok, off my soap box

Window Slams Shut As Prep Humbles La Salle, 35-7

Just didn’t see it coming.

With the graduation of Div. 1 stalwarts like Kyle McCord, Jeremiah Trotter Jr., and Marvin Harrison Jr., St. Joseph’s Prep would be reloading, not rebuilding. But with the acknowledged strong class being the sophomores, there seemed to be a window of opportunity to unseat the Hawks from their perch, at least for a year. Not dumb enough to consider a changing of the guard, like what occurred back in ’06, but a window nonetheless.

Well, that window was slammed shut at Franklin Field on Saturday, as St. Joseph’s Prep rode a 35-0 halftime mercy-rule lead to win the District XII semifinal game against a shocked Explorer eleven. Here’s how the game went down:

The Prep won the toss, and elected to receive, and La Salle would kick from the west end, with a 17 mph wind at their backs. Santi Sturla booted the ball into the end zone, and St. Joe’s would start from their own 20. Senior QB Dane Picariello got the start, and he handed off to Kahseim Phillips for a 4-yard gain. If there was any turning point in this game, it was this next play. Picariello dropped back, and launched a bomb into the wind on the right side. The pass seemed to be overthrown to wide receiver Mike DiTrolio, but the wind brought it back into his arms as he reached the La Salle 38 for a first down. Picariello tossed a screen pass to the left for 8 yards to David Washington, with tackle by LB Sean McFadden. Blaine Bunch ran a jet sweep to the left for a first down to the La Salle 11 before being brought down by LB Chris Thompson. Phillips tested the middle for 3, as Thompson bearhugged him down. Picariello then fired a slant-in on the right side for an 8-yard touchdown to Washington. The reliable Antonio Chadha added the extra point, and with 9:13 left in the first period, the Prep drew first-blood with a drive into the wind, 7-0.

Chadha’s kickoff into the wind got to the 5, where Amir Anderson returned it to the 32, but La Salle was flagged for holding, returning the ball to the 15. Senior QB Alan Paturzo handed off to soph Stevie Davis for 3 yards up right tackle. La Salle was flagged for procedure prior to the next play. Four-year starting RB Sam Brown tried left tackle, but there was no room, and he gained nothing. On third and 12 at the 13, Paturzo sent a deep pass to WR Ryan Moore down the middle, but the pass, aided by the wind, was too long. Sturla’s punt was almost blocked, and it looked like it was touched by the Prep return man, but he recovered the ball on the Hawk 42, with 7:21 left in the first stanza.

Bunch got 4 yards up right guard, as Abdul Carter and McFadden combined on the tackle. The Explorer defense then sacked Picariello for a 6-yard loss, with soph DL Kieran Campbell and McFadden on the takedown. On third and 12 at the Prep 40, La Salle blitzed, and Picariello scrambled for just a yard, with Tim Fiedler making the hit. Chadha’s punt to the La Salle 25 was returned by Moore to the 29, with 5:22 left in the first, and La Salle looking to shift the momentum away from the Prep.

Brown went off left tackle for 3 yards, and then up left tackle for just a yard. On third and 6 at the 33, Paturzo dropped back, but was sacked on a blitz from the blind side, and he fumbled the ball. DE James Heard scooped up the ball, and went in for a 22-yard return for a touchdown. Chadha added the point, and St. Joe’s now had a two-touchdown lead at 14-0, stunning the Explorers, with 4:12 left in the first.

Chadha’s kickoff got to the 12, where Davis returned it up the middle to the 24. Paturzo’s pass in the flat to WR Nole Henry missed, as the wind benefit seemed to be a detriment to the Blue and Gold. Paturzo tossed a swing pass to Brown that was dropped. On third and 10 at the 24, Paturzo hit Moore with a screen on the left, but the Hawk defense swarmed him for a 2-yard loss. Sturla’s punt was blocked on a big rush, and was recovered and returned by the Prep’s Keenan Nelson to the La Salle 4. Prior to the first play of Prep’s possession, La Salle’s defense was flagged for 12 men on the field, bringing the ball to the 2. Phillips went up left guard and cruised into the end zone for a 2-yard touchdown. Chadha’s kick was true, and the well-prepared Prep team now had a commanding 21-0 lead, with still 3:02 left in the opening stanza.

Chadha’s boot to the 10 was returned by a determined Davis up the left side to the La Salle 35, where they would enjoy their best field position of the first quarter. But Paturzo was sacked for a 5-yard loss on the first play, as the Hawks were swarming in the La Salle backfield all game long. Paturzo then sent a long pass down the left side for Brown, but the wind took it beyond his reach. On third and 15 at the 28, Paturzo scrambled down the left side and went out of bounds at the La Salle 46, and St. Joe’s was called for a late hit, and La Salle had a first down at the Prep 39, with chance to start crawling back into this game. Paturzo ran a QB draw up the middle for a first down to the 28. FB E.J. Wentz gained 4 up right guard. Paturzo gained a yard on a keeper up left guard, setting up a third and 5 at the 23. Paturzo swung a pass to Brown on the right side for 8 yards and a first down to the 15. Brown ran a jet sweep to right for a 1-yard loss, as the quick Prep defense was stopping any east-west plays. The quarter ended with the Hawks on top, 21-0. Now heading into the wind, Paturzo threw a pass into the left flat, but the ball was intercepted on a dive by DB Anthony Sacca, and the Hawks would take over on their own 7, with 11:52 left, puncturing any chance of La Salle getting back into this game.

Phillips went up left tackle, and he fumbled the ball. La Salle came out of the pile with the ball, but the officials ruled that a Prep player had recovered the ball while on the ground, ending the play on the 19-yard line. Picariello kept the ball for 2 up the middle, as Thompson administered another bear hug. Bunch swept the left side, but Carter stopped him for a 2-yard loss. On third and 10 at the 19, Phillips swept the left side, as the Hawk blockers created a seal, and gained 12 yards for a first down, with tackle by Anderson. Heard went off left tackle for 5, as McFadden and Campbell brought him to the turf. Josh Barlow swept the right side, and cut back for 2 yards, with Thompson on the stop. On third and 3 at the Prep 38, Phillips went untouched up the middle for a 62-yard touchdown. Chadha made the boot, and St. Joe’s now led, 28-0, with 8:31 left in the half, and the mercy-rule was now in the on-deck circle.

Chadha’s kickoff with the wind sailed into the end zone. Brown swept the left side for 5 yards. On a delay, Brown got just a yard up the middle, setting up a third and 4 at the 26. Paturzo, dropping back and looking, was sacked for a 14-yard loss, as the Prep line and their blitzing linebackers were overwhelming the La Salle blockers. Sturla’s punt was fair-caught by Omillio Agard on the La Salle 31. The Prep was called for holding on the return, and would start their drive on the La Salle 43, with 6:50 left in the half.

Bunch shot through a big hole up the middle for 7 yards, with McFadden on the tackle. Picariello ran an option keeper up the middle for a first down to the La Salle 29. Barlow then blasted through a hole up left guard, and Carter made a touchdown-saving tackle on the La Salle 5 for a first and goal. Barlow gained a yard up left guard, with tackle by Darold Dengohe. On play action, Picariello tossed to a wide-open Josiah Trotter on the right side for a 4-yard touchdown. Chadha made the extra point, and the 35-0 Prep lead would initiate the mercy-rule running clock in the third period, if La Salle did not score in the remaining 4:51 of the first half.

Chadha popped his kickoff to the La Salle 14, where Anderson returned it to the 39. Moore came in as the wildcat QB, and kept the ball up the middle for 4 yards. Moore then found a hole up the middle for a first down to the Prep 39. Moore kept the ball up left guard for 8, as the quick hitters seemed to be working against the Prep defense. Moore ran an option keeper up left tackle and powered his way to the Hawk 24 for another first down. Brown then swept the right side for 3 yards. Moore went up left guard for 4. On third and 3 at the 17, the Prep called a time out with 1:24 left in the half. Moore then swept the left side on a keeper, following a good block by Brown, to the 11, but La Salle was hit for holding, sending the ball back to the 30. On third and 16, Moore ran an option keeper to the left side to the Prep 11 for a first down. Moore gained 4 up right tackle, and La Salle called a time out with 46 seconds left. Brown went up the middle for 2, but La Salle was flagged for an illegal shift. With second and 11 at the 12, La Salle burned another time out with 41 seconds left. On play action, Moore swung a pass to Wentz, who went out of bounds after a 4-yard gain. On third and 7 at the 8, Paturzo was back in at QB, and he threw a pass over the middle to Henry, which was broken up, but the Hawks were flagged for a penalty that moved the ball to the 4, where it became third and 3. Paturzo snuck to the two-yard line, setting up a fourth and one, and La Salle used their last time out, with 20 seconds remaining.

Then, the unthinkable happened. The offense lined up in position, and Moore was the wildcat QB in the pistol formation. He looked to the sideline to check-down the play, and while he looked, the ball was snapped, and shot past him. The ball was recovered on the La Salle 42, and was turned over on downs. Picariello knelt down to end the half, and the mercy rule would take effect, with St. Joe’s blanking the Explorers, 35-0.

The game was effectively over, but the La Salle seniors still had a half to play in their high school career, albeit an abridged one. Playing for pride was all that was left.

Chadha, kicking with the wind, boomed his second-half kickoff into the end zone. Paturzo found Moore on the right sideline for a first down to the 40. Paturzo, under a rush, threw past Ryan Sorge on the left side. Paturzo, rushed again, threw the ball away on the right side, and the pass was almost intercepted. On third and 10 at the 40, with a running clock, La Salle was flagged for a false start. Paturzo then scrambled to the right and got a first down at the Prep 49. Paturzo threw in the left flat over Brown, as it seemed like the wind was affecting his throws. Paturzo was then blitzed and sacked for an 8-yard loss, and it seemed like the Prep knew where to blitz from based on the La Salle formations. On third and 18 at the La Salle 43, Paturzo threw deep down the left side to Brown, who looked like he was interfered with, but no flag was dropped. Sturla’s punt to the Prep 23 ware returned by Agard to the 45, as Sam Ross made the tackle. Both teams were assessed offsetting personal fouls, and St. Joe’s would take over, with 7:09 left in the third.

Phillips gained 3 up the middle, with Dan Ford and Fiedler on the stop. Phillips swept the left side for 6 yards, with Anderson on the tackle, but the Hawks were called for holding, setting them back to the 36. Bunch swept the left side for 6 yards, and was bumped out of bounds by McFadden, and La Salle was hit with a personal foul, taking the ball to the Explorer 44. Bunch again went off the left side, as the Hawks sealed the pursuit, and he gained 11 for a first down to the 33, with Thompson on the tackle. Barlow went off right tackle for 6, with McFadden and Thompson on the takedown. Barlow was stopped for no gain up the middle, as Dengohe and Ford combined to bring him to the turf. On third and 4 at the 27, Bunch was stopped in the middle, bounced to the right, and got a first down to the La Salle 19, with Carter on the tackle. Picariello was stopped for no gain on a keeper on the right side, with McFadden making another tackle. Bunch gained 2 up right guard, as Thompson brought him down. On third and 8 at the 17, Barlow gained 3 up the middle, with Fiedler and Ford stopping him. On fourth and 5 at the 14, Chadha lined up for a field goal attempt. But La Salle jumped offsides, giving the Prep a first and goal at the 9, as the third quarter running clock ran out, with the Hawks maintaining their 35-0 lead. Phillips gained 2 up the middle, Ford making the tackle. Phillips tested left guard, and got to the two, with Carter stopping him. On third and goal at the 2, Phillips tried left guard again, but gained nothing, as Thompson bearhugged him down. On fourth and goal at the two, Phillips tried right guard, but Kelby Hampton and Thompson stopped him at the one, and the ball would turn over to La Salle, with 10:18 left in the game.

The Prep jumped offsides before the first play of the La Salle drive. Brown went up left tackle for two yards. La Salle then was hit for a false start, setting them back to the 4. Brown went off right tackle for six yards. On third and one at the 10, Paturzo ran an option keeper, but lost 2 yards. On fourth down, Sturla’s punt was fair-caught by Agard on the La Salle 46, with 7:54 left in the game.

Barlow gained two up the middle, with Ford and Dengohe combining for the tackle. Barlow bounced out to the right side, and got 12 yards and a first down, with Matt Wills stopping him. Bunch swept the right side, but McFadden made a great tackle for a 5-yard loss. Bunch got one up the middle, as McFadden, blitzing unabated from the right side of the defense, made another tackle. On third and 14 at the 36, Isaiah West was hit immediately by a rampaging Thompson for no gain. The Prep took a delay of game penalty prior to the next snap, and then called a time out, with 2:49 left in the game and La Salle’s season. Chadha’s punt bounced to the 7, and Moore returned it to the 15, with 2:38 left.

Sam Brown has provided La Salle fans with so many great plays during his stellar 4-year career as an Explorer running back, joining some of the great backs in La Salle history such as Johnny Herrera, Jim Maxwell, Gerry Tate, Eddie Meehan, Jamal Abdur-Rahman, Tim Wade, Sy Madden, and others. In his last play as a La Salle running back, Brown swept the right side, got the edge, and broke away from his pursuers, going down the sideline for an 85-yard touchdown jaunt. Sturla’s PAT made the score 35-7, with 2:17 left in the game.

Sturla pooch-kicked to the Prep 17, where Nelson fell on the ball for the Hawks, but La Salle was called for a procedure penalty, probably for too many defenders on one side of the ball for the kickoff. Sturla tried an onsides kick, but Josiah Trotter recovered it on the Prep 48. Picariello knelt down twice, and the clock ran out on the game and La Salle’s season. St. Joseph’s Prep won the District XII semifinal game with a convincing 35-7 victory over La Salle, and will go on to play Northeast High School in the final.

Notes

Again, just didn’t see this coming, and I’m sure that the La Salle players and coaches didn’t either. Credit must be given to the St. Joseph’s Prep coaching staff for having an answer to everything that La Salle did on both sides of the ball. Credit also has to be given to Prep seniors Picariello, Barlow, Chadha, and Bunch, who provided the leadership that guided the soph-heavy team to a convincing victory. And, yeah, the window may be closing again.

La Salle had a great senior class, featuring Paturzo, Moore, Thompson, Sturla, and their two Div. 1 commits Carter and Brown. The 2021 team, led by the seniors, created such great energy, electricity, enthusiasm, and enjoyment for the La Salle parents, alums, and faithful this season. Many La Salle fans at Franklin Field on Saturday were at their first La Salle game in many years, and you players were the reason for it. Don’t let one game define your legacy at La Salle.

Seniors, you will think about this game for years to come, but trust that this game will fade back into the background compared to the great experience that you’ve had with La Salle football for the last 4 years. You have made unbreakable bonds with your fellow teammates/classmates. A few years from now, you will gather when a classmate at a distant college is home for a weekend. Ten years from now, you will gather at a wedding of a teammate, with some of you as groomsmen. Twenty years from now, you will celebrate at a La Salle reunion, and talk about your sons who may be entering La Salle soon. Fifty years from now, that loss to the Prep on November 13, 2021 will be just a distant memory, replaced by a lifetime of bonding with the brothers you acquired from the La Salle Class of 2022. Live Jesus in your hearts, forever.

Third-Quarter Knockdown Has La Salle Streak Past The Prep, 28-21

Nine losses in a row. Fourteen of the last fifteen, and it would be fifteen in a row if not for “The Catch” by Nick Rinella in 2015. It had to end sometime, but could it possibly be today?

Stay with them for the first half, and maybe you’ll have a puncher’s chance of knocking them out in the second half. It would be tough if you got down 14-0, like it seems to happen all the time in the last 7 years or so.

Well, the Explorers did hang with the Hawks in the first half, and then a couple of thundering punches put the Prep on the ropes, and the Blue and Gold defense stiffened down the stretch in the 28-21 victory. Let these old fingers type out what these old eyes witnessed at venerable Franklin Field on a beautiful fall afternoon:

La Salle won the toss, and deferred to the second half, trusting their defense to bottle up the Hawks. Santi Sturla’s kickoff curved toward the flag, and went out of bounds at the one, forcing a penalty, and the Prep would start at their own 35. Sophomore multi-talented quarterback Samaj Jones called his own number, a delay up the middle, and gained two yards while being stopped by LB Kevin Hawley, as Chris Thompson was still out with his shoulder injury. Jones then tossed a quick buttonhook to WR David Washington for a first down at the La Salle 49, as the Explorer defenders were playing off their receivers; LB Sean McFadden brought him down. RB Josh Barlow went up left guard for three, as Brennen Miller and Hawley combined on the hit. Jones again went to Washington on a buttonhook on the other side for a first down at the La Salle 36. Jones, very deceiving on the option play, ran an option keeper for just a yard, as Darold Dengohe, having another fine game, took him down. Jones tossed to senior QB/WR Dane Piciarello on the left side for a 6-yard gain, as junior DB Del Jackson wrapped him up. On third and 3 at the La Salle 29, RB Kahseim Phillips got a 3-yard gain and a first down while being tackled by DL Daniel Ford. Jones scrambled away from pressure and motored for 6 yards up the middle, with Hawley and Dengohe taking him down. Then, Jones ran a nifty option keeper up the middle after a great fake for a 20-yard touchdown. Kicker Antonio Chadha boomed the extra point, and the Hawks moved down the field at ease for a 7-0 lead, with 8:03 left in the initial period. So much for bottling them up early.

Chadha, a star kicker, nailed the kickoff into the end zone, and La Salle would take over for their first possession. Sam Brown tried to sweep the left end, but half of the Prep team was waiting for him, and he lost 4 yards. Brown then tried it again, and broke a tackle or two for a 7-yard gain, setting up a third and 7 at the 23. QB Alan Paturzo dropped back to pass, and fired a pass to the Swiss Army-knife Ryan Moore, who ran a skinny post. Moore caught the ball in traffic, and slashed down the field to the Prep 30 for a 47-yard gain and a first down. Paturzo tossed a quick screen to the right to junior WR Ryan Sorge for 3 yards. The same play was tried to the left side, and the Hawks smelled it out, and the play lost three yards. On third and 10 at the 30, La Salle was flagged for procedure. Paturzo then threw an out pattern to the left to Moore, which looked like it was caught for a first down, but the officials ruled that the ball had hit the ground. On fourth and 15 at the Prep 35, Paturzo threw an out pattern again to Moore on the left side, but the ball was late, and it was intercepted by Shamir Johnson, and the ball would turn over to the Prep at their own 15, with 5:19 left in the first stanza. It was time for the La Salle defense to keep St. Joe’s from cashing in on another drive.

Hawley stopped Phillips after a 5-yard gain up the middle. Phillips tried left guard, but Dengohe buried him for no gain, setting up a third and 5 at the 20. Jones let loose a long pass to WR Mike DiTrolio, and the pass just went off his fingertips. Chadha’s punt was downed on the La Salle 46, with 3:44 left in the quarter, and La Salle in good field position.

Stevie Davis ran up left guard for a yard. Brown tried right tackle for three, and it was third and 6 at midfield. Paturzo slipped a pass to EJ Wentz in the right flat for a gain of 4, and it was fourth and 2 at the Prep 46. It looked like La Salle would punt, but the Prep called time out, and La Salle then came out with their offense. Paturzo tried a few double counts to try to draw the Hawks offsides, but it wouldn’t work, and La Salle took a delay of game penalty. Sturla’s punt was downed smartly by Matt Mitchell on the St. Joe’s 2-yard line, and the Hawks would have a long way to go.

Jones snuck up the middle with his powerful line for a 5-yard gain. Josh Barlow gained three up right guard, stopped by Hawley and Abdul Carter, who would make his presence known throughout the game, lining up in many different positions on defense. On third and two at the Prep 10, Jones fumbled the snap, and scrambled for no gain as Carter crunched him down to end the first quarter, with St. Joe’s leading La Salle, 7-0. Chadha’s punt was fair-caught by Moore right at midfield, and La Salle would start in good field position in an attempt to tie the score.

Moore came in at wildcat, and picked up a great block by Brown on a sweep right to get a first down at the Prep 19. Moore gained two more yards off left tackle. Paturzo came back in and tossed a screen right to Sorge for 7 yards, following a great block by OL Luke Shissler. On third and one at the Prep 10, Brown powered up right guard for 6 yards and a first and goal at the 4. Off of a fake jet sweep left, Paturzo swung a pass countering to the right to Wentz, who blasted into the end zone for a 4-yard touchdown. Sturla’s kick tied the game up at 7-7, with 9:39 left in the half.

Sturla sent his kickoff into the end zone. Jones hit Washington on the left side, and Washington gained a first down on the Prep 30, breaking through some missed tackles before McFadden brought him down. Phillips found a hole up the middle, but gained just 3 yards as he was hit hard by Carter. A pass from Jones to Owen Garwood gained 4, setting up a third and three at the Hawk 37. Jones flipped a pass on the left side to Phillips for a 7-yard gain and a first down, and La Salle was hit for a 5-yard face mask penalty, and the Prep drive continued on their own 49. Jones continued with the safe passes, as a screen left to Phillips netted 8 yards, with tackle by Del Jackson. Jones ran an option keeper to the La Salle 36 for another first down, with hit by Chris Convey. Barlow went off right tackle to the La Salle 27, as Amir Anderson made the tackle. Barlow was stopped for no gain by Dengohe and Ford. On third and one, Jones kept the ball for a first down at the La Salle 25, and the Prep was moving. Jones scrambled, and made a nice pass to the flag to Washington for a 25-yard touchdown. Chadha’s extra point was good, and the Prep got their 7-point lead back at 14-7, with 5:39 left in the half.

The Hawks were flagged with an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty after the touchdown, and Chadha would have to kick off from his own 25. He boomed the ball to the 7, where Davis picked it up on one bounce and returned it to the 22. Brown broke through some tackles on the right side for a 15-yard gain, but the Explorers were flagged for holding. With the ball back on the La Salle 16, Paturzo swung a pass to Dom Martin on the left side, but it was smelled out by the Prep defense for an 8-yard loss. On second and 24 at the 8, Paturzo arced an alley-oop pass to Brown on the right side, and he leaped between two defenders to come down with the ball for a first down at the La Salle 40. Brown then went off right tackle for 5 yards. Paturzo hit Sorge with a quick swing pass for 2. On third and three at the La Salle 47, there was some confusion before the snap, and a play-action dropback by Paturzo resulted in a 12-yard sack. Sturla’s punt to the Prep 30 was returned by Omillio Agard to the La Salle 49, as McFadden made another tackle, with 2:25 left in the half, and La Salle in danger of going behind by 2 scores.

Jones was rushed in a passing situation, and he spiked the ball, but was not called for grounding. Jones ran an option keeper to the left for 19 yards to the La Salle 30, but the Hawks were called for holding, setting them back to the La Salle 45. Samaj Jones then threw to Elijah Jones on a screen left, with tackle by Dengohe, but the Prep was flagged for ineligible man downfield, and would face a second and 21 at their own 40. Samaj Jones tried to find Washington on the right side, but his errant pass was almost intercepted by Anderson. On third down, Barlow went up the middle for 7 yards, with tackles by Dengohe and Ford. On fourth and long, the Prep looked like they would go for it, forcing La Salle to take a time out. Instead, Chadha punted, and Moore made a fair catch on the La Salle 17, with 1:11 left in the half.

Moore wildcatted for a 1-yard loss. Brown then tried to sweep right, but was swarmed by the Hawks back to the Explorer 7-yard line, as the Prep took a time out, with 19 seconds left. Wentz gained just a yard up right guard, as the half ended, with St. Joe’s ahead of La Salle, 14-7.

St. Joe’s seemed to have the best of the Explorers in the first half, but La Salle kept the Prep from expanding their 7-point lead. The Blue and Gold had kept it close, and now had that puncher’s chance of winning the game. But they would have to make a statement in the third quarter, as they would receive the opening kickoff.

Chadha kicked a split-finger fastball that dove down in front of returner Matt Mitchell, who fell on the ball at the La Salle 15, as the Explorers would start with bad field position. To make matters worse, Paturzo had to keep the ball on a busted handoff, but actually gained three yards up the middle. Then, out of the blue, a haymaker right cross to the Prep’s chin. Sam Brown swept the right side, got the edge at about the 30, and outran the Hawk pursuers into the end zone for an electric 82-yard touchdown bolt. Sturla’s extra point was good, and La Salle had tied the game up, 14-14, just 40 seconds into the second half.

Sturla’s kickoff to the 6 was returned by DiTrolio up the right side to the 31, with a tackle by junior LB John Burnstiel. RB Blaine Bunch gained three yards up left guard, as Sam Ross took him down. Samaj Jones threw to Elijah Jones on the left side for a first down at the Prep 46, as Abdul Carter chased him down. Then, Jones to Jones again, on a nice fade on the left side for a first down at the La Salle 30, as the Hawks were punching back. Phillips got a yard up the middle, as the combo of Dengohe and Ford made the tackle. Phillips then swept the left side for three, as Amir Anderson bumped him out of bounds. On third and 6 at the Explorer 26, Samaj Jones scrambled, and gained four yards before Dengohe and Carter, both all over the field, brought him down. It was now fourth and two at the La Salle 22, and a pivotal moment in the game. All the fans on the south side of the ancient stadium rose to their feet and were yelling, La Salle on the west end and the Prep on the east end. Barlow got the ball and went off right tackle, but the penetration of soph LB Matt Wills, along with DB Kelby Hampton, held Barlow to a gain of just one, and La Salle took over on downs on their own 21, with 9:10 left in the third stanza.

Brown gained 4 up the middle. Brown then shaked through left guard to the 33 for a first down. On play action, Paturzo threw to Wentz in the left flat, but the pass was a little high and a little quick. Brown went left, then bounced outside for another first down at the La Salle 45, as the body punches were having an effect on the Prep defense. Brown was stuffed for no gain up left tackle. Paturzo, under a big rush, threw incomplete as his arm was hit while he was passing. On third and 10 at the La Salle 45, another thunderous punch stunned the Hawks. Paturzo tossed a screen on the left side to Moore, whose mercurial feet got him down the sideline before he was pushed out of bounds at the Prep 5 for a first and goal, and La Salle was knocking at the door to take the lead. Brown got just one yard up the middle. In a jumbo formation, with 7 linemen, Stevie Davis was hit immediately for a one-yard loss. On third and goal at the 5, Brown angled his way through the line and into the end zone for a 5-yard touchdown and an Explorer lead. Sturla’s kick was true, and the Explorers led for the first time, 21-14, with 5:54 left in the third quarter.

Sturla kicked to the 3, and Elijah Jones got out to the 20, as Sean McFadden and Collin Wade combined on the takedown. It was time for the Prep to counterpunch. Phillips got two up the middle, as Dengohe and Hawley made the hit. Phillips went around right end for a first down to the Hawk 41, bumped out of bounds by DB Mekhi Johnson. Phillips gained just one up the middle, as Carter made the stop. Samaj Jones threw to Elijah Jones for 6 yards with Amir Anderson on the bump out of bounds, but St. Joe’s was flagged for holding. Jones and Jones tried to combine on a deep pass in the middle, but the ball was overthrown, bringing up a third and 20 at the 31. Jones was forced to scramble, and Ford knocked the ball out. The fumble was recovered by the Prep’s Bunch, but gained nothing, and the Hawks would have to punt. But La Salle’s special teams came up with a left hook that floored the Hawks. Chadha was back to punt, and the snap was a little high, which allowed Matt Mitchell to come in from the left side and partially block the punt, which was downed at the Prep 25, with 3:29 left in the third period, and La Salle in great position to extend their lead.

Brown found no room on the right and took a 3-yard loss. Paturzo’s pass on the right side to Nole Henry was too low, but the Hawks were flagged for a roughing the passer penalty, and the Explorers had a first down at the Prep 14. Moore then ran an option keeper out of wildcat for a 5-yard gain up left tackle. Brown gained 3 up left guard to set up a third and 2 at the 6. At the very least, La Salle was in position to have Sturla give them a two-score lead with a field goal. In a tight formation, a phantom punch like what Ali did to Liston came out of the blue. Paturzo snuck up the middle, and somehow the Prep line parted like the Red Sea when Moses did the talking. His 6-yard touchdown, and Sturla’s extra point, gave La Salle a surprising 28-14 lead, with 1:29 left in a third quarter that saw the Explorers roll out 21 unanswered points.

But the Prep was not counted out, and would get up and fight back. Sturla’s kick found the end zone. Samaj Jones, the soph QB who was now under pressure, ran an option keeper for a first down at the Hawk 32, breaking through a missed tackle before being taken down by McFadden. On play action, Jones tried to pass, but the ball was batted back into his face by a blitzing McFadden. On another option keeper, Jones gained 7 up the middle before Ford made the hit, bringing up a third and 7 at the 37. On a less than perfect handoff, Dane Piciarello swept the left side, but Sam Ross took him down for a 2-yard loss. But Ross was flagged for a 15-yard face mask penalty, giving the Hawks new life at the La Salle 47. Jones to Jones went deep left, but was incomplete, as good coverage was provided by Anderson and Mekhi Johnson. Barlow ran hard up the middle, but was slammed down equally hard by Carter after three yards, as the third quarter ended with La Salle on top 28-14, but the Hawks were driving. With third and 7 at the La Salle 44, Jones and Jones connected for a 6-yarder, with Hampton on the tackle. It was now fourth and one, and Jones tossed a quick pass on the left side to Washington for a first down at the La salle 34, with Carter on the stop. Bunch tested the left side for 4 yards, as Ford and Wills combined to bring him down. Bunch then swept the left side, and was pushed out of bounds on the La Salle 23 for another first down, as the Prep was fighting back. QB Jones ran an option keeper up the middle for a first and goal at the La Salle 9, as Johnson made the takedown. Jones got 2 more on another option keeper, with McFadden bringing him down. But Jones’ helmet came off, and he had to sit out a play. The Senior Picariello came in at QB, and on play action, threw deep to the right corner of the end zone to Washington, but the pass was just slightly too long, as Anderson provided good coverage. On third and goal at the 7, Samaj Jones, back in the game with helmet on, had time, and found DiTrolio in the end zone for a 7-yard touchdown pass. The reliable Chadha sent the ball through the uprights, and La Salle’s lead was cut in half, 28-21, with 9:31 left in the game.

Chadha’s bouncing kick was returned by Mitchell from the 8 to the 25. It was now up to La Salle to move the ball and keep the momentum from going back to the Prep. Moore worked his wildcat magic for a 9-yard gain on a sweep right. Paturzo swung a pass to Henry on the left side to the La Salle 43 for a first down. Soph Stevie Davis went off left tackle, and broke a tackle for another first down on the Prep 44, and La Salle was gaining field position as well as making the clock move. Paturzo ran an option keeper that may indeed have been a busted play for a three-yard loss. Paturzo, not the renowned runner that Moore is, ran another option keeper up left tackle and got to the Prep 40, setting up a third and six. Paturzo screened right to Ryan Sorge, but the play only gained two yards. On fourth and four at the Prep 38, Moore entered the game at wildcat, and swept the right end. In a play out of the 20’s (the OTHER 20’s), Moore, on the run toward the sideline, quick-kicked through the Prep pursuers, and the ball was tapped out of bounds at the Hawk 1-yard line, with 6:13 left, and 99 yards separating the Prep from a tie game.

A delay of game penalty was called on the St. Joseph’s sideline, and the half-yard penalty put them further into the shadow of their own goal line. In a tight formation, Samaj Jones snuck forward for a yard, as the clock started to tick. Phillips gained a couple up the middle, but La Salle was flagged for another face mask penalty, bringing the ball out to the 18 for a first down. Jones kept the ball up the middle for another first down to the 28, with Carter on the stop. Phillips gained two up the middle, as Dengohe and Ford bottled him up. Jones tried the middle again, and gained three, as Carter and Wills comboed him down. On third and 5 at the 33, the Prep was flagged for a false start. In a passing down, Bunch swept the left side for 7 yards, as Carter made another takedown. On fourth and three at the Hawk 35, Jones ran a keeper for a first down at the Prep 40, and now the Hawks were just 60 yards away from paydirt. PIcariello came in at quarterback, and dropped back, but the downfield coverage was good, and he was sacked for a one-yard loss by McFadden and Tim Fiedler. Jones came back in at the helm, and under a big rush by Dengohe, he threw the ball away, and was flagged for intentional grounding, setting up a third and 27 at the Prep 23. Jones’ pass to Agard on the right side was wide, and it was now fourth down and very long. In a punt formation without a punter, the ball was snapped to erstwhile linebacker Josiah Trotter, but the play was smelled out for a 7-yard loss as Abdul Carter and Tim Fiedler combined on the takedown, and La Salle would have the ball on the Prep 16, with just 1:56 left, but the Hawks had all three timeouts left.

Brown got two up the middle, and a time out was used. Moore wildcatted up the middle for no gain, and another time out was used. On third and 8 at the 14, Moore optioned around the right side, and lost two yards but stayed in bounds, and the final time out was used, with 1:33 left. Sturla came on for a field goal attempt that would ice the game, but the middle of the line was blown up, and the kick was blocked, and the Hawks now had a last gasp on the 20, with 1:29 left. It was do or die for the Prep, and the La Salle defense had to rise up one more time.

Abdul Carter, lining up all over the field all game long, came in on a blitz as Jones dropped back to pass. The soph Jones fired the ball into the ground, and was again called for intentional grounding, and the Hawks would now face an impossible second and 27 at their own 3. Jones tossed to Owen Garwood for a gain out to the 15, but the clock was now running. And the Prep was then called for procedure, and the clock started again after the ball was placed. Under a big rush by Sam Ross, Jones threw incomplete, bringing up a fourth and 20 at the Hawk 10, with 49 seconds left. Jones dropped back, and threw deep in the middle. The Gorilla Glue-fingered Moore intercepted the ball, and slid down after a 5-yard return to the Prep 30, and now it was Victory-formation time.

Paturzo knelt down on the final play of the game, and the jubilant Explorer team started to celebrate its 28-21 victory over St. Joseph’s Prep on an October afternoon in Franklin Field.

Notes

This was not a miraculous victory, as has happened in years past in this rivalry. This was a hard-earned win by a well-prepared team, whose energy, enthusiasm, and senior leadership has led them to a 6-0 record to start the season. There were explosive plays, to be sure, but credit the play-calling, the execution, and the determination of this team as the reason for today’s success.

No, this is not the changing of the guard. La Salle took advantage of their senior experience, and St. Joe’s played a lot of sophomores in very responsible positions. They will only get better.

Playing at Franklin Field, and watching your team play at Franklin Field, is a very special memory, and supercedes the minor annoyances of parking, creating a “Green Pass” for yourself at the entrance, and not being able to pay cash for refreshments. If you listened closely, you could have heard the ghosts of Chuck Bednarik, Reds Bagnell, and Tommy McDonald, who starred on that field many years ago.

And also the ghosts of great La Salle teams in the past, who won City Title games there in 1955, 1957, and 1960. It may be difficult for an 18-year-old to appreciate the heritage of Franklin Field, and maybe it takes someone old enough who listened on the radio as the Eagles beat the Packers in the 1960 NFL Championship game there, 16 days after La Salle defeated Frankford, to recall those days of yore, but when those 18-year olds who won their game today are old and gray, they’ll know what I mean.

Best Big School Final Four Games

Happy Final Four weekend everybody - a round that I think is almost always the best weekend of football in the state (which is probably because that's apparently as far as Easton can get). This is the round that consistently produces the most classics (way more than the finals, in my opinion) and here are what I think are the best or most notable Eastern/Western Finals we've had in the largest class, with the hopes that we add one or two this weekend.

Pittsburgh Central Catholic 19 Brashear 14
Mike Campolo capped a 68 yard touchdown drive with four minutes left with a nine yard touchdown to erase a 14-12 Brashear lead. PCC went on to win the inaugural state 4A title the following week.
1988: Cedar Cliff 24 Neshaminy 0
The Cedar Cliff defense held Neshaminy and quarterback James Franklin to -21 yards of total offense and no first downs in one of the greatest defensive efforts in state tournament history.
1990: Ridley 14 Wilson West Lawn 12
State player of the year Dennis Decker led Ridley on a game winning drive in the final minutes of the fourth quarter, hitting all state wideout Devon Preston for a TD with 53 seconds left to give the Green Raiders their only state finals berth.
1993: CB West 6 Easton 3
CB West forced an Easton fumble in the final minutes of the first half, then scored a wild touchdown where they were stopped short of the goalline with ten seconds left, and rather than try and kick a field goal, they hustled to the line of scrimmage and ran a QB sneak into the end zone as time expired in the first half, then held on for victory.
1993: North Hills 15 Erie Central 7
After a gadget play to go up 15-7 in the second quarter, North Hills hung on for dear life to advance to their only state final. North Hills fumbled inside their own 30 with four minutes to go, but Eric Kasperowicz made a solo stop on fourth and goal from the 3 when all state running back Eric Quinn could not quite get to the edge on an option play for the potential tying score.
1994: McKeesport 7 Erie Central 6
McKeesport threw one of their only touchdown passes of the season when Bill Isbir hit Jermaine Cromaderie for a 31 yard touchdown. Erie Central answered with a punt return for a touchdown, but the extra point snap went over the holder’s head and McKeesport held on for a 7-6 victory. Brandon Short sealed the game with a red zone strip of the Erie Central running back in the final five minutes of the game.
1997: CB West 27 Central Dauphin 24 (OT)
George Chaump vs. Mike Pettine was every bit the classic the coaching match up suggested. Central Dauphin raced out to a 21-6 halftime lead behind star quarterback Ryan Belicic. CB West trailed 21-14 when they took over with 5:35 to play, and drove for the tying TD with quarterback Corey Potter ripping off a 40 yard TD run. Then after a CD field goal, Potter scored from seven yards out to put the Bucks into their third state title game.
1998: New Castle 27 Erie Cathedral Prep 25
The biggest Cinderella in big school history won with a gutsy, 8 minute drive in the fourth quarter with a Joe Cowart shovel pass to John Rosati on third and nine for a 22 yard TD with 4:36 left. The Red Hurricanes survived a pair of punt return TDs by Bob Sanders and Ed Hinkel, plus a Sanders 78 yard TD run that seemingly put the game away for Erie Cathedral Prep before the final New Castle march.
1999: CB West 26 Bethlehem Catholic 14
This game still holds the record for the biggest attendance at a state playoff game, with 16,000 people crammed into Lehigh’s Goodman Stadium to see the two-time defending champion Bucks survive a war in Mike Pettine’s final year. Bethlehem Catholic took a 14-7 lead into halftime, and famously had a pair of huge fourth down stops of Dustin Picciotti, but Dave Camburn etched himself into CB West lore by returning a punt 77 yards for a game winning touchdown in the final three minutes to launch the Bucks into their third straight state championship.
1999: Erie Cathedral Prep 27 Woodland Hills 23
On the other side of the 1999 bracket, Woodland Hills scored with 4:21 left to take a 23-20 lead over the heavily favored Ramblers, but the quick strike ECP offense hit Ed Hinkel for a 41 yard pass, then a 17 yard touchdown with 1:27 to go. Woodland Hills drove into the red zone in the final minute, but had a desperation fourth down pass knocked down in the end zone.
2001: Neshaminy 24 Cumberland Valley 19
Cumberland Valley held the ball for nearly the entire first half, taking a 13-0 lead on touchdown drives that combined for 33 plays and 171 yards. But Jamarr Brittingham scored two third quarter touchdowns, Neshaminy blocked a punt for a TD, and then after the Eagles scored on a trick play to retake the lead, Keith Ennis returned the kickoff 72 yards to set up Brittingham’s third touchdown of the game to punch a finals ticket for the Redskins.
2004: Neshaminy 21 Easton 14
Neshaminy broke a 14-14 tie with 35 seconds left when Andrew Flogel hit Georg Coleman for a 24 yard touchdown, but the Red Rovers hit a 68 yard pass play all the way to the Neshaminy 11 and weren’t put away until the potential game tying touchdown hit John Suozzo between the numbers in the end zone before falling to the ground, then the Redskins picked off a the last play of the game at the goal line. Neshaminy survived five turnovers and three missed field goals, but used 168 yards from Coleman and a wild hook and lateral touchdown just before halftime to make their second final in four years.
2004: PIttsburgh Central Catholic 44 Bishop McDevitt 0
Just a stunning defensive effort, Pittsburgh Central Catholic held LeSean McCoy to 39 yards on 26 carries after Shady 1,715 yards in the five games leading up to the semifinal. McDevitt finished with just 79 yards of offense as PCC took a 38-0 halftime lead and stamped themselves as one of the great defenses in state history.
2005: Liberty 14 North Penn 12
Andrew Lee blocked an extra point and Mike McClarin stopped the potential game tying two point try in the fourth quarter as Liberty held on for a classic win in the cold against North Penn. Dan Persa threw for 160 yards and a pair of touchdowns to send the Hurricanes to their first of three state finals.
2005: McKeesport 14 Bishop McDevitt 13
McDevitt faced heartbreak from the WPIAL for the second year in a row, as Dan Kopolovich hit Travis McBride for a 23 yard touchdown on fourth down to take a 14-13 lead late in the fourth quarter. McDevitt missed an extra point in the second quarter that proved the difference in the game. McKeesport ran 71 plays and held the ball for 34 minutes in the game, and Kopolovich ran for 170 yards in addition to the winning score while the Tigers held McDevitt to 173 yards of offense, 102 of which came on the Crusaders two touchdowns.
2006: Liberty 45 Pennsbury 38 (4OT)
The Dan Persa show if there ever was one. The state player of the year ran for 161 yards, threw for 160 yards, accounted for five touchdowns (three rushing, two passing) and made ten tackles in what was at the time the longest game in PIAA playoff history. Pennsbury tied the game at 21 with 1:36 left in regulation, then traded touchdown/field goal/touchdown in the first three overtimes before Liberty scored on an option play to Ahkeem Smith in the fourth OT and the defense finally got a stop to end the game.
2007: Pittsburgh Central Catholic 14 Harrisburg 6
PIttsburgh Central Catholic set a dubious record of 79 yards of total offense for a state playoff winner as the Vikings outlasted George Chaump’s Harrisburg squad for a state finals berth. PCC scored on a 21 yard TD pass after a blocked punt in the first half to take a 7-6 lead, and despite having negative yards of offense in the second half, scored the only points with a scoop and score touchdown after a dropped option pitch on the PCC side of the field. The win set up the Vikings second title in four years.
2008: Bethel Park 38 WIlson West Lawn 35 (3OT)
Erik Olsen threw for 288 yards and five touchdowns and the Cinderella Blackhawks kicked a field goal in overtime to advance to an improbable state final. After trading touchdowns in teh first two overtimes, Wilson was held out of the end zone for three downs, then tried to fake a field goal, but threw an interception. Bethel Park immediately lined up for a field goal to win and missed, but a running into the kicker penalty gave them new life, and they knocked through the ensuing attempt for the win and deny Doug Dahms his best shot at a state title.
2010: LaSalle 38 North Penn 35h
Seven lead changes, 900 yards of offense, and two electric “game winning” drives in the final minutes makes this one of the best PIAA games ever, regardless of round, and the most popular game on this board. North Penn took a 35-31 lead on a 15 play touchdown drive in the fourth quarter, which LaSalle answered with a 65 yard touchdown drive of their own, with Matt McGarrity hitting Sean Coleman for a 30 yard touchdown to take a 38-35 lead. North Penn drove out to midfield, but a tipped pass interception ended the game and put LaSalle into their second straight state final.
2011: Central Dauphin 23 North Allegheny 20
The only postseason loss for North Allegheny from 2010-2012, Central Dauphin broke a 20-20 tie by getting the ball back with 1:39 to play, using a tough third and long conversion by Drew Scales, who broke two tackles to get to the sticks and extend the drive, then Zayd Issah made his only catch of the day a big one, with a 23 yard grab on third down to set Central Dauphin up at the two, and the Rams knocked through a field goal for the win.
2011: North Penn 21 LaSalle 14
Ralphie Reeves scored three touchdowns for North Penn and Steve Gozur picked off a pass with 40 seconds left to exact some revenge for the Knights and get a playoff win in the classic early 2010s series between LaSalle and North Penn.
2016: St. Joseph’s Prep 35 North Penn 25
North Penn took a 17-14 lead into the fourth quarter before the D’Andre Swift show really took over. Swift scored two touchdowns to erase the North Penn lead, but the Knights scored quickly with a forty yard TD pass, to cut the lead to 28-25, then took the ball back with a fourth down stop at their 40 with a chance to take the lead. But a fumble deep in SJP territory doomed the Knights, and Swift ripped off his fourth TD run of the night to put the game away. Swift finished with 272 yards and four scores to lead Prep to their third championship game in four years and started their current streak of five straight state finals.
2017: St. Joseph's Prep 53 Coatesville 49
St. Joseph’s Prep overcame an 18 point second half deficit to extend their 27 game winning streak. Prep drove for a touchdown on their first drive of the third quarter, then got a 72 yard interception return to set up a touchdown to cut the lead to 28-25. Coatesville briefly retook control with a TD, but Prep scored four straight touchdowns to seemingly ice the game at 53-35. A pair of Coatesville TDs in the final four minutes pulled the Red Raiders within 3, but Prep recovered the final onside kick and Marquez McCray picked up a tough first down to run the clock out and hold on for the win. McCray ran for four touchdowns and threw a pair of touchdowns in the win, while Ricky Ortega threw for 423 yards and six touchdowns, 269 of which went to Dapree Bryant.
2018: Harrisburg 27 Coatesville 24
Harrisburg avenged a 37-6 regular season loss to Harrisburg by swarming the potent Coatesville offense, sacking Ricky Ortega seven times and holding Aaron Young to a season low 69 yards in the win. Kane Everson threw for 104 yards, ran for 71, and accounted for two scores and Jahmir Plant ran for 128 and a pair of touchdowns in the huge upset.
2019: St. Joseph’s Prep 31 Pittsburgh Central Catholic 24 (OT)
With no Kyle McCord, St. Joseph’s Prep withstood the best shot from Pittsburgh Central Catholic. The Vikings broke a 17-17 tie when Sharod Lindsey won a jump ball and raced in for a 51 yard touchdown with 2:46 left. But SJP marched 82 yards down the field, with Marvin Harrison Jr. somehow getting both feet inbounds in the back of the end zone with 25 seconds left to send the game to overtime. In OT, Mookie Cooper ran for a seven yard touchdown to get Prep on the board, then Keenan Nelson ended the game with a diving interception at the goal line. Cooper filled in for McCord, moving from receiver to do so, and threw for 258 yards and a TD and ran for a pair of scores, while Harrison caught seven passes for 125 yards in the win.

Q&A with Crestwood running back Noah Schultz

How has everything been going football wise as of late?
“Football has been going pretty well. This last season I achieved 1,000 yards rushing on the season. I had a lot of fun during the season and I can't wait for the next one.”

Going forward, what do you feel your team can continue to improve on?
“Next year will be my senior year. I think if our team puts in the right amount of work this offseason that we will be a really dangerous team. This year we will have more experience on the field and as a team playing together.”

Have you been pleased with your performances?
“I am pretty satisfied with my performance, but there is always room for improvement and I will never deny that. I believe I can only get better as I move forward.”

How do you feel about the play of your team?
“I feel like the play of our team wasn't as good as we wanted during the 2021 season, but it can't be denied that we had a young team. Since we lost a lot of players after the 2020 season, many younger guys had to take on very big parts on our team. I believe this year helped for many guys to get comfortable on the field, and we will play much better together next year.”

What are your sporting goals going forward as of now?
“N/A.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I'd love to play a sport in college. I am interested in playing either football or lacrosse at the next level.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“N/A.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“N/A.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“N/A.”

Do you have plans for game day trips?
“N/A.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college has always been Penn State, since I was really young. I love going to Penn State football games, because the environment there is unmatched.”

Q&A with Cumberland Valley linebacker Bryce Beutler

How has everything been going football wise as of late?
“Football has been going good. I feel like our team is on a rise and we improved throughout the season.”

Going forward, what do you feel your team can continue to improve on?
“We can improve by continuing to trust the process our coaches laid out for us and believe in our abilities.”

Have you been pleased with your performances?
“I have been pretty pleased with my play made improvements from last season with my play in the run and pass game. but I’m not done still a lot of room to improve on.”

How do you feel about the play of your team?
“I feel like the play of my team has come a long way since 2020, we have accomplished our goals but we know there are a lot of goals out there that we can attain so we can win championships.”

What are your sporting goals going forward as of now?
“My sporting goals are to win a championship make All Mid Penn, and become one of the best LBs in the state of PA. To do so I’m working on being stronger, faster and intelligent as an LB.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I do plan on playing football in college that has been one of my goals since I was a little kid.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I haven’t really had many colleges reach out to me yet, it’s still pretty early for me but the future looks pretty bright.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“I’m sure recruiting is going to heat up soon.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I took a visit to Shippensburg to watch a game and tour the facilities a few weeks ago and really enjoyed it.”

Do you have plans for game day trips?
“My plan is to do some game day trips when those opportunities present themselves.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college football team I’ve always grown up liking is University of South Carolina.”

Q&A with Lakeland quarterback Dominico Spataro

How has everything been going football wise as of late?
“Football went great this year. We didn’t finish with our final goal of a district championship but I think we shocked a lot of people with our performances throughout the year. I was brought so close to everyone on the team and it was one of the most fun teams I’ve been on in a while.”

Going forward, what do you feel your team can continue to improve on?
“Our team has a great work ethic and never backs down from sprints or workouts. We definitely need to get in the weight room this off-season and get to work. Get a lot stronger and faster. Another thing is just mastering the playbook.”

Have you been pleased with your performances?
“I was definitely pleased with my performance this year. It was cool to hit 2000 passing yards and 3000 total yards but it’s only because of everyone else. My whole team is accountable for my performance. Whether it was my o-line creating a good pocket and keeping me from getting hit. Also creating a run game so the pass game can open up more. My wide receivers did an outstanding job all year and I’m most proud of them all being humble and knowing that there is four of them and the ball is going to get spread around between them all.”

How do you feel about the play of your team?
“The team played great all year. We dealt with adversity so well this year. Everyone kept there heads up and never got knocked down. We had high energy in practice all year and because of that the whole year was so fun. Even though we didn’t win the district we still did a great job and showed a lot of people wrong.”

What are your sporting goals going forward as of now?
“My goals for next year are to definitely just do better than this past year. Pass and run for more yards. Have a bigger difference on defense. Do everything I could to make the team better without doing to much. But definitely just become a better leader and to lead by example. Have a better attitude to everything in football and be a guy that everyone could look at when things go wrong.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I definitely want to play sports in college. It would be an awesome experience to be able to do that. I love swimming. Swimming has been in my head since freshman year and that is my biggest goal for college. Of course football would be nice too. I love football and to be able to get a chance to play at the next level would be amazing.”

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

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“No colleges have been recruiting me yet.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I have not made any college trips yet.”

Do you have plans for game day trips?
“I do not have any plans for college game day trips yet.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college team was Penn State. My family has loved them since I was little and they just grew on me and I have liked them as long as I could remember.”

Q&A with Imhotep Charter defensive tackle David Johnson

How has everything been going football wise as of late?
“Football has been going grate especially pushing on making a state championship run.”

Going forward, what do you feel your team can continue to improve on?
“We just got to work on being discipline and cutting down on penalties we improved a lot.”

Have you been pleased with your performances?
“Yes I’m doing what is best for the team and I’m loving it.”

How do you feel about the play of your team?
“I feel great about our play we been working hard every week.”

What are your sporting goals going forward as of now?
“A state champion ship “

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Football.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“N/A.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“N/A.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“N/A.”

Do you have plans for game day trips?
“No.”

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

Q&A with Central Bucks East offensive tackle Liam Powers

How has everything been going football wise as of late?
“We had a successful season made the playoffs and started preparing for next year the day after.”

Going forward, what do you feel your team can continue to improve on?
“We all need to spend more time in the weight room and with the playbook.”

Have you been pleased with your performances?
“Yes I have been I thought I had a great junior season and made an impact on both sides of the ball.”

How do you feel about the play of your team?
“I thought we all gave 100% and the young guys stepped up in a big way.”

What are your sporting goals going forward as of now?
“Continue to get bigger and stronger and help the team in any way I can and see the team do better than we did last year.”

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“Things are starting to pick and should continue in the next few months with a variety of schools at the one A and one AA level showing interest at this point.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“See above.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I went to a few camps this summer and an unofficial visit to Temple and I have more scheduled for this year.”

Do you have plans for game day trips?
“I hope to get a couple in before the season is over.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“When I was really young one of my family members bought me a Michigan uniform and I would wear it all the time.”
  • Like
Reactions: powers4855
ADVERTISEMENT

Filter

ADVERTISEMENT