ADVERTISEMENT

Q&A with Armstrong quarterback Cadin Olsen

What have you and your team been doing as of late to get ready for the fall?
“So far, we have been working out all summer and getting in the weight room as much as can this off-season. At this point it’s just pretty much been about getting the chemistry down with my receivers so we can work at the highest level.”

What do you feel you have improved on the most since football ended?
“I think since last year I have been working a lot over the summer and hopefully it pays off again this year. I feel like I have improved my speed and arm strength which are big and important assets to being a quarterback.”

How do you feel your team will do this football season?
“I think that our team will do pretty well this season. Obviously, we’ve lost some key players on both the offensive and defensive side, but our players are pretty determined to do the best they can.”

What team do you feel will be the toughest competition on your schedule?
“I think the toughest team that we will play this year is Mckeesport or Plum. Mckeesport has always had a history of being a great football team and we will be ready for that this year too. Plum has also come off of an undefeated season so we know how tough they can be.”

Who is the toughest individual player your team will face off against?
“I think that there are a lot of talented people in our conference that we play this year, but a few that stick out are Benny Haselrig from Hampton, Peter Gonzalez from Mars, and Eryck Moore from Plum. They all had great seasons last year and are definitely ones to look out for during this upcoming season.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I definitely want to play sports in college and if I get that opportunity football would be my first option.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“So far, I’ve gone to many college camps over the summer such as Pitt, Penn State, West Virginia, Rutgers, Yale, and Penn to name a few. The schools that have been recruiting me the most are Rutgers, Penn, and Western Michigan.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“The main three that have been recruiting me the most are Rutgers, Penn and Western Michigan. In the end, I would say that Western Michigan is probably recruiting me the hardest so far.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I have been to a number of colleges over the summer for camps and have heard back from many of the coaches. Some of the big schools that I’ve been to are Western Michigan, Rutgers, Penn, Yale, Vanderbilt, Pitt, Penn State, and Ohio State.”

What camps did you attend this summer? How did the camps go overall?
“I’ve gone to a number of camps during the summer such as Pitt, Penn State, Rutgers, West Virginia, Western Michigan, Penn, Yale, Vanderbilt, Ohio State, and Wisconsin. Overall, they have gone really well and it’s really cool to see the similarities and differences between the colleges and their facilities.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up was always the University of Oregon. My uncle was an alumni director for them, and I’ve always been a HUGE Marcus Mariota fan my entire life.”

Q&A with Hempfield Area running back Gino Caesar

What have you and your team been doing as of late to get ready for the fall?
“We have been working really hard to prepare for this season. As a team we have never worked harder.”

What do you feel you have improved on the most since football ended?
“I have improved a lot; I have gotten faster and stronger since last football season.”

How do you feel your team will do this football season?
“I think we are going really well this season, we are changing everything around us. We are a whole new team this season.”

What team do you feel will be the toughest competition on your schedule?
“The teams that are going to be toughest competition for us this season are North Allegheny and Mount Lebanon. They have solid player’s all over the field.”

Who is the toughest individual player your team will face off against?
“Anthony Speca from PCC.”

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I have talked to a few schools.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“No, I have not made any college trips yet.”

What camps did you attend this summer? How did the camps go overall?
“I attended Pitt, WVU, Youngstown State, and W&J’s football camps this summer. I felt the camps went great, and I got to learn new things from all the coaches there.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up has always been Pitt.”

The Recruiting Zone (August 23rd, 2021)

Find out what colleges are recruiting Gino Caesar, Cadin Olsen, Nathaniel Kadosh-Harris, James Bermudez, and Benny Haselrig now!


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


Q&A with Hempfield Area running back Gino Caesar​


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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I have talked to a few schools.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“No, I have not made any college trips yet.”

What camps did you attend this summer? How did the camps go overall?
“I attended Pitt, WVU, Youngstown State, and W&J’s football camps this summer. I felt the camps went great, and I got to learn new things from all the coaches there.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up has always been Pitt.”


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


Q&A with Armstrong quarterback Cadin Olsen​


Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I definitely want to play sports in college and if I get that opportunity football would be my first option.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“So far, I’ve gone to many college camps over the summer such as Pitt, Penn State, West Virginia, Rutgers, Yale, and Penn to name a few. The schools that have been recruiting me the most are Rutgers, Penn, and Western Michigan.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“The main three that have been recruiting me the most are Rutgers, Penn and Western Michigan. In the end, I would say that Western Michigan is probably recruiting me the hardest so far.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I have been to a number of colleges over the summer for camps and have heard back from many of the coaches. Some of the big schools that I’ve been to are Western Michigan, Rutgers, Penn, Yale, Vanderbilt, Pitt, Penn State, and Ohio State.”

What camps did you attend this summer? How did the camps go overall?
“I’ve gone to a number of camps during the summer such as Pitt, Penn State, Rutgers, West Virginia, Western Michigan, Penn, Yale, Vanderbilt, Ohio State, and Wisconsin. Overall, they have gone really well and it’s really cool to see the similarities and differences between the colleges and their facilities.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up was always the University of Oregon. My uncle was an alumni director for them, and I’ve always been a HUGE Marcus Mariota fan my entire life.”


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


Q&A with Bethel Park running back Nathaniel Kadosh-Harris​


Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I want to play football in college, it has been my goal since I was a kid.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I have talked to a couple of college coaches. Right now, nothing serious and not heavy recruiting but expecting this coming season to get on more people’s radars.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I got to visit Cal U with a couple of my 7v7 teammates and watch them scrimmage which was a great experience.”

What camps did you attend this summer? How did the camps go overall?
“Slippery Rock and Duquesne are the two camps I attended and enjoyed my time at both and was able to learn a lot from the coaches.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite colleges growing up were Oregon and Arizona State.”


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


Q&A with Archbishop Wood running back James Bermudez​


Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“The final goal is always being able to play college football at the highest level, one of my dream schools is Penn State and Pitt love to go play ball for them.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“Some colleges that have been in touch with me are Yale, Northwestern, and Kutztown and Pitt.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“As of right now I would say Yale has been.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I went down to visit Penn State, Yale, and Kutztown.”

What camps did you attend this summer? How did the camps go overall?
“Some camps I went to were Yale, Penn state, Kutztown, and rising stars camp. Overall, I feel like I crushed it at all of them, just some little things I took home with me to better my game for my team.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“I never really had a favorite college growing up. It was always I wanted to work to get to that point where all my family and friends at home can see me ball out on TV.”


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


Q&A with Hampton wide receiver Benny Haselrig​


Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yes, I plan on playing football in college, so I need to have a really good junior season.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“No D1 ones so far so I need to have a great season this year, but I will.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“Small D3 schools I’m not interested in.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“No, because I was signed up for a few camps, but I strained my quad really bad so I couldn’t go anymore.”

What camps did you attend this summer? How did the camps go overall?
“Duquesne, and that was the only one I actually competed in because early into that camp I strained my quad really bad.”

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


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

District One: Pre-Preseason Top 10

District One: 2021 Pre-Preseason Top 10

Here’s a best guesstimate keying on the Review 2020-Preview 2021 piece recently done that was based on last year’s personnel and results. Who knows how the new starters work out. Neshaminy, Pennridge and others may replace last year’s severe grad losses with better players! Souderton may find a quarterback as productive as Evan Kutzler. Plus, there will always be a surprise or two and that’s the fun of it. Anyway, I thought I should crank out a Preseason Top 10 to follow up the Review-Preview. Don’t forget to use the review-preview post for more detail. Scroll down….posted Feb 26, 2021.

1 North Penn 4-1 6A, (95-28, 48-10, 25-6)….10 year, 5 year, 3 year won-loss.
It’s easy being misled by NP’s finish, winning their last four by an average score of 48-19….if you forget those wins came against 5-19 teams; Pennsbury 0-5, CB West 2-4, CB East 1-5, CB South 2-5. And you can’t forget the season opening 35-19 blowout by Neshaminy that exposed real D issues with diminutive Chris James (5-7, 160) running for 149 yards. With the D tested only once and failing, this looks like the priority issue in the off season, plus the O-line. They came up well short of making the playoffs this year seeded 6th at 128 (#4 Coatesville 150) and may use as extra incentive this year. Previously, they hadn’t missed the playoffs since 2012. For this year they have what looks like the best offensive core in the district returning QB Ryan Zeltt (6-3, 185, jr, 34/62, 650, 9Tds, 55%, minus Pennsbury stats), RB Khalani Eaton (5-11, 210, sr. 1038ry, 14 Tds) and wide out Levi Carroll (6-3, 195, sr.).

2 Garnet Valley 6-0 6A, (98-21, 52-8, 29-3)
The Jags are no longer 3 yards and a cloud of monofilament having upped their game recently by developing a passing attack, averaging 100 yards a game last year (737yds) after averaging 49.5 yards per game the previous 5 years. Last year’s 15-19 combined won loss schedule was less than challenging. Still, they won all their games by an average score of 49-9 including those with winning records where they drubbed Marple Newtown (5-1) 52-30 and Haverford (4-2) 39-8. And they come in super-hot off their Central League title game win against Marple, a six game winning streak and a pile of returning starters. They open 2021 at Downingtown West. And with Downingtown East playing Pennridge, State College (D6) and Delaware Valley (D2) in September….and Perkiomen Valley also getting September action against Coatesville, Downingtown West, Manheim Central (D3) and Spring Ford. We’ll know a lot about the power structure in D1 and beyond by mid-season.

3 Coatesville 4-1 6A (111-18, 52-9, 28-5)
The thing to remember about Coatesville is they came within 3 points of beating a good, veteran, 7-1 Pennridge team….on the road….with a much younger group. Scary thinking what they could mature into. But there is work to do with the Rams pounding out 506 total yards (210 rushing) to the Red Raider’s 216. Plus they’ll play both Downingtown East and West on the road. It will be a workout with many opponents returning good numbers and in most cases they all return a quarterback. Many teams in the Ches Mont are mirror images of one another (returning starters and a Qb), suggesting an entertaining season with a few upsets. Last year’s team was about a powerful running game and defense. If they can keep those strength and upgrade the passing attack they’ll be hard to stop. Note: Aug 21 scrimmage at Wilson-West Lawn.

4 Downingtown West 2-2 6A (72-34, 35-17, 26-6)
Opens with back-to-back homers vs Garnet Valley Aug 27th then Haverford School before Perk Val and Penn Wood away, West Chester East home, Kennett away, Coatesville home, Shanahan away then closing at home against Downingtown East and Avon Grove. Getting G-Val and Coatesville home helps but Perkiomen Valley even Kennett and Shanahan (letdowns?) could be challenging, especially Perk Val. There is a lot of work to do if they hope to hang with Garnet Valley in the opener knowing they allowed Coatesville 310 rushing and Downingtown East 289. But they return a now veteran line backing corps of Nahsir Harris (6-0, 185, sr), Josh Barron (5-10, 195, sr), Ryan Waters (6-0, 210, sr) and Will Mahmud (6-1, 220, sr). The DL looks good with NT Heath Williams (5-11, 250, sr) and DT Cooper Young (6-5, 285, jr) back. Super high recruit Drew Shelton (6-6, 280, sr) transferred to IMG. But for a change they have plenty of size. I believe the secondary returns four starters or co-starters; Josh Barry, Elijah Ford, Jake Kucera and Sam Kester, giving them a stacked defense. At 13ppg allowed last year, they were tough in the red zone. They’ll need that against G-Val who wastes few scoring opportunities.

5 Downingtown East 2-3 6A (83-28, 40-13, 21-8)
East has a difficult schedule opening at Pennridge then State College at a site to be determined. But both Pennridge and State High are rebuilding while the Cougars return much of last year’s team looking to atone for their first losing season since 2013. Actually the schedule is accommodating with 5 of their first 7 games (SC?) at home. Many look like 50-50 games including the two opening games followed by Delaware Valley, Bishop Shanahan, Rustin and Unionville (all home), then Academy Park away. Avon Grove and Downingtown West are home then Coatesville on the road to close it out. No fun playing Coatesville following the rivalry game with D-West. But they have a lot of bodies back on both sides to show improvement and make the Ches Mont-National at least a three horse race with Shanahan there to pick off any stragglers.

6 Perkiomen Valley 6-2 6A (85-28, 43-12, 21-9)
From Review-Preview: They return one of the top quarterbacks in the area in Ethan Kohler (6-2, 195, sr, Mercury 1st team), who, if I did the math right from online articles completed 100 of 156 passes (64%) for 1537 yards with a 17 to 1 Td-Pick ratio. As a reminder, his 2019 stats were 2259 yards, 59%, 21/7 Td-Pick ratio. Returning an excellent quarterback combined with other returns could see them with one of their best teams. 92% (894) of their rushing yards returns and 53% (802) of their receiver yards. They have numerous lineman coming up from the junior class with great size. The schedule is brutal opening on the road at Penn Wood before taking on Coatesville, then Downingtown West, Manheim Central (!) and Spring Ford consecutively….at home. Manheim Central projects as one of the 5A favorites in D3 and will be a severe test as PAC mate Spring Ford discovered last year with another district three power when a less than special Cumberland Valley (3-5) team battled hard in a 20-14 loss. Spring Ford of course will be a war, then Norristown away, OJR home, Boyertown away, Methacton home and a PAC-crossover game (TBD) at home for Senior Night Oct 29th.

7 Upper Dublin 6-2 5A (87-27, 40-15, 23-15)
One look at Upper Dublin’s records above tells you you’re looking at the Rodney Dangerfield of District -1 football. Talk about a team that gets no respect! All they’ve done is win district titles three of the last six years. And they’ve garnered more wins in the district the last 10 years than Downingtown East (83), Downingtown West (72), Neshaminy (82) and all others except G-Val, Coatesville, Academy Park and North Penn. In 2015 (4A, largest class) they beat Garnet Valley 35-3, Upper Darby 45-14, Pennsbury 24-14 then North Penn in the final 42-21. In 2018 they defeated Unionville 40-7 and Rustin 35-28 in the 5A title game. Last year saw them beat Kennett by forfeit before winning another 5A title vs Rustin 29-8. 5A looks like a crowded field with the Cardinals sitting pretty with so many returning players and maybe some attitude losing to Covid-19 last year, denying them a trip to the PIAA 5A semifinal against Cathedral Prep.

8 Spring Ford 6-1 6A (86-27, 37-15, 22-7)
The Rams return enough pieces to challenge for their 3rd consecutive PAC title and more although the defense doesn’t look to be as strong as last year’s record setting group that allowed 10ppg. DL/E’s Don Nicoline (6-2, 210, sr, 1St Team PAC) and Gavin Shafer (6-1, 205, sr) are back with top tackler LB Ryan Horvath (5-9, 175, sr, 1st Team PAC). Look for impact from last year’s sophomores Will Fish (5-9, 180), Ryan Wilson (6-0, 180) and Zach Zollers (6-1, 190), all linebackers who Coach Brubaker is high on. All got time. Last year’s defense was big and hit hard, separated from the district final by a 27-24 loss to Souderton. The offense returns good numbers plus the quarterback and OTs Ian Harvie (6-0, 250, sr, 1st Team PAC) and John Kaputa (6-2, 280, sr). Wilson is not on the schedule this year but they get Perkiomen Valley on the road. Plus, Boyertown and OJR return veteran teams that could surprise.

9 Souderton 7-1 6A (51-51. 28-22, 19-10)
Defending district champ Souderton returns a good core on both sides of the ball and will be a tough out if they fill the quarterback slot. But they’ll get two of their toughest conference opponents on the road having played both Quakertown and Upper Dublin in Souderton last year. With good numbers returning, especially LBs Nick Curroto (5-11, 195, sr, 2nd Team OL/LB), Luke Pollack (5-11, 205, sr, 1st Team), CBs Shaun Purvy (5-10, 155, sr, 1st Team) and Elijah Goods (5-9, 150, sr, 2nd Team), the D should improve from last year’s that allowed 19ppg while defeating Qtown 28-23, Upper Dublin 28-7 at home and both Spring Ford 27-24 and Pennridge 31-17 on the road. That is….if they get reasonable production from the quarterback position. Lineman Adam Alfonsi (6-1, 265, sr) and Gabe Epps (6-3, 230, sr, 1st Team) are back. All offense, skill returns in RB Brayden Porter (612ry, 1st Team), WRs Shaun Purvy (283py), Bob Kyle (195py, 2nd Team), Sean McGoldrick (101ry, 53py) and OL Sean Barrera (5-7, 230). All except quarterback Evan Kutzler (62%, 718py, 6/1 ratio, 2nd Team) return. Solid stats for a first year starter following the graduation of 3 year starter (co in 2017) Andrew Vince, so it’s a concern,

10 Quakertown 5-3 6A (63-52, 30-25, 16-15)
Really strange putting these guys here until you review last year’s stats and scores to see what a decent team they were….with many of last year’s parts back in the fold. Remember, their losses were competitive losses, losing to Souderton (7-1) in the opener 28-23 (Q leading 17-12 at ½), Perk Val (6-2) 35-28, PV scoring 21 unanswered pts, and the 91st Thanksgiving Day annual toss-up with Pennridge (7-1) 21-14 where the Rams scored 14 4th quarter points for the win. And, they were a young group last year in a lot of positions their skill people including quarterback Will Steich (5-11, 160, sr, 56%, 1135, 16/2, 1st Team Continental) and RB/CB Tyler Woodman (5-9, 175, sr, 69/430, 1st Team) and Zach Fondl (6-0, 180, sr, 22/330, 2nd Team). OL/DL Fred Retter (6-2, 235, sr) and OL Anthony Schiller (6-2, 260, sr) return to the lines with LB Kaden Roesener (5-11, 195, sr, 51 tackles), LB/DB Tyler Woodman (28 tackles), LB Dylan Harrison (6-3, 175, sr, 17 tackles) also back. They look to be able to survive graduations with enough coming back. And if QB Steich picks up where he left off!

Others:

Neshaminy 5-1 6A
(82-33, 39-13, 18-10)….10 year, 5 year, 3 year won-loss.
Tough 2021 schedule; Wood and Souderton at home, Pennridge, North Penn, Quakertown, Abington away. Roll Tribe!
Central Bucks West 2-4 6A (50-52, 26-23, 16-12)
Beaucoup bodies back but lots of work being outscored by Pennridge, North Penn and Neshaminy 109-49.
Pennridge 7-1 6A (74-44, 32-24, 15-15)
Big grad losses but have some parts and not likely to go away quietly. Return a lot of experience to the D, LBs McGowan, Picciotti and OL/DLs Reutlinger and Fish.
Upper Moreland 5-2 4A (59-53, 29-25, 14-16)
Lost by one point to 10-1 Oil City in 4A semifinal with essentially the same players back. Dual threat Byron Hopkins (21/33/312py, 35-133ry) and Cameryn Jackson (35/385ry) will keep them in many games.
OJR 3-3 6A (48-64, 32-19, 16-11)
Almost everyone returns, (graduate 8 seniors) including 1st Team PAC running back Avrey Grimm (5-9, 160, sr, 667ry) and 2nd teamers DL Jon Havrilak and LB Aston Shrum. Last year’s monster soph lineman Austin Ramsey (6-6, 320!) is also back.
Rustin 4-2 5A (75-31, 35-20, 23-9)
Only 12 seniors last year plus return Dayshawn Jacobs (5-9, 180, jr) who rushed for 258 yards vs Wissahickon with 5 tds, ending with 677ry and 857 total.
Ridley 3-3 6A (76-36, 35-19, 17-13)
Have some impressive skill returning and some serious graduations but a more favorable home schedule.
Haverford 5-2 6A (83-33, 41-16, 25-8)
Started off 4-0 last year with a nice core returning.
Strath Haven 5-1 5A (53-54, 29-23, 19-10)
Average score last year was 43-17 with a young D and most of that team returning including entire OL.
Springfield (D) 4-3 5A (78-36, 39-18, 14-15)
Two 3-point losses hurt. But big numbers return with a talented QB in Jake Fama, 6-1, 160, 698, 69%.
Academy Park (95-30, 53-13, 27-10)
Little info on Knights (spring ball) but history (see above) says they’ll be a factor.



Under the radar?

Upper Merion 2-3 5A
(29-75, 17-33, 13-14)
Finished with a flourish winning last 2 and return most of the offense headed by QB Nolan Clayton (6-5, 210, jr) and a slew of last year’s sophomores and juniors now a year older.
Don’t laugh, Bourbonic won the Kentucky Derby prep Wood Memorial at the Big A last week at 72-1!
Boyertown 2-5 6A (40-62, 14-34, 6-21)
Like Vikings above, won last 2 games beating Pottstown 33-6 and bitter rival Pottsgrove 20-9 after a 0-5 start for great momentum entering 2021. Many return plus last year’s freshman QB Ryder Gehris who got his first start game 6 vs Pottstown.
Plymouth Whitemarsh 2-3 5A (61-37, 21-24, 12-13)
Big losses at TE/DE Dylan Duran (6-1, 230), OL/DT Jack Hildebrand (5-11, 230), OL Dan Kahley (6-0, 240), but LB corps returns in RB/LB Nate Kern, QB/LB Chris McLaughlin, RB/LB Aiden O’Brien with most other skill pieces from last year.
Bishop Shanahan 4-0 4A (54-46, 30-20, 15-12)
Return most of last year’s team including QB Cooper Jordan, most of the skill plus lineman Dylan Jones (6-3, 275, sr), Mark Majasic (5-9, 250, sr), Lenny Kresefski (6-5, 225, sr), Jack Lyons (6-0, 225, sr) and Anthony Cipriano (6-0, 215, sr).

Fired Coach Kaspers Fanboy Thread

From HIRED...


to FIRED...



This is the thread for all your fanboy worship of Coach Kasperowicz.

Enjoy.

2021 District-3 Top 20

Here is updated information to go with previously posted notes (2020 review-2021 preview) of a few months ago. There are changes with a better understanding of personnel including transfers and scheduling.

What makes this season different from almost any other season in the district is all the power teams are playing each other early. Additionally, this season sees District-3 teams moving beyond district borders to play some of the top teams in other districts.

Here’s are some of the top inter-district games; Governor Mifflin plays Episcopal Academy, McDevitt plays LaSalle, York plays Coatesville, Manheim Central plays Perkiomen Valley, Harrisburg plays Pine Richland, Berks Catholic plays Malvern Prep, Manheim Township plays Spring Ford, Cumberland Valley plays Spring Ford.
Here are some of the top inter-conference games; Central Dauphin at Wilson, Manheim Township at CD, Berks Catholic at CD, Cumberland Valley at Manheim Central, Central York at CV and Exeter, Cocalico at Cedar Cliff, Wilson at Governor Mifflin and Exeter.

How’s that for mixing it up with the rest of the state and district powers!

This is a year like the WPIAL of old where you’d be in real trouble judging a team by their record alone.

2021 District-3 Top 20
(last year's ranking in parenthesis)

1 Governor Mifflin 8-1 5A (1)
District 5A champion and last year’s Silver Medalist (if you believe the game with Pine Richland was the true final!?), starts off the 2021 season where they left off last year at the top, with one of the best running backs in the country in Nicholas Singleton (6-0, 205, sr, 107/1311ry, PSU commit) and his wingman fullback Trey Rock (6-1, 215, sr, 33/248). No one could stop Singleton last year. Against the best teams played, meaning Wilson 6-1, Exeter 6-2, Berks Catholic 5-3, Mechanicsburg 9-1 and 5A state champion Pine Richland 11-0 who have a combined won-loss of 37-7, he gained 915 yards on 88 carries. That’s 10.3ypc! Wilson held him to 165 yards (7.9ypc). Pine Richland did the best job holding him to 108 yards on 25 carries for a 4.3ypc average. Unique players like Singleton plus a decent core returning allow the Mustangs to hold their lofty rankings to open the 2021 season.
QB Delsin McNeil (5-10, 170, jr) should be the new Qb (?) with many other positions up for grabs. Aidan Young (6-0, 205, jr), Ayden Martin (5-11, 180, sr) and Braylon Stewart (6-2, 180, sr) will have major roles on offense and defense. Last year’s freshman TE/DE Bailey Ziolkowski (6-5, 190, so) will have to be worked in somewhere with spot appearances last season. Veteran TE/DE Nate Goodman (6-5, 235, sr, 17 tackles) will hold down one flank while DTs Jose Landrom (6-0, 240, sr) and Daxsen Washington (6-0, 250, sr) return to the trenches. Trey Rock is back at LB with Aiden Martin (5-11, 180, sr), Zander Zahasis (6-0, 195, sr), Eden Johnson (5-11, 190, sr) and Braylon Stewart (6-2, 180, sr) giving them an outstanding LB/Safety group. Singleton and Alonzo Anderson (6-1, 170, sr) return to the secondary where there are few worries with GM’s athleticism. NG Jamani Smith (6-1, 310, sr), Joey Laffey (6-0, 220, sr) and Jonah Naugle (6-3, 305, sr) are veteran lineman who got time last year or started. OL/DL Aidan Young (6-0, 205, jr) is highly regarded. The DB is stacked with line backing looking good as well. Another outstanding sophomore from last year returns in LB Clayton Reynolds (5-10, 195, jr).
No doubt the Mustangs graduated a pile of people especially the lines but return good numbers on both sides. Quarterback Connor Maryniak may prove to be a big loss as he was a fine all-around athlete who was instrumental getting them to the 5A state final. Sophomore Delsin McNeil who played in 7 games will likely do the same, running the Mid Line hopefully as well as Maryniak. A year after losing to Pine Richland in the 5A semi-final 48-44, the Mustangs still look like the team to beat in D3’s 5A classification and perhaps beyond. But….!....they must get past two of the top teams in the district with the season opener at York followed by their home opener to Wilson. Rarely have three of the best teams in the district met in the first two weeks of the season.
2 Central York 10-1 6A (2) Here’s another district champion and Silver Medalist who also returns a unique talent in senior quarterback Beau Pribula (2156, 68%, 34/7; 519ry, 14 Tds). Also back is his top receiver Parker Hines (6-0, 180, jr, 27/358) plus Treyshawn Smith (6-2, 180, 3/54, sr) and TE/DE/T Joseph Sevison (6-4, 225, jr). Raquel Dewitt (5-8, 180, 35/328, sr), Imeire Manigault (5-9, 175, jr, 14/177) and FB/MLB Trenton Dunnick (6-2, 230, jr) look to be the primary backs. They look ok along the line with seniors Zach Gaffney (6-0, 255, sr) and Alex West (6-0, 295, sr), plus juniors Danny Pham (6-1, 295) and Cody Gillio (5-11, 255). Top tackler and well underrated LB Carter Glassmyer (6-1, 220, 94 stops, missed 2 games, sr) is back with equally understated MLB (or DE) Trenton Dunnick (6-2, 230, 28 stops, sr) and Brandon Watson (5-11, 195, 17 stops, sr). Dewitt and Nigier Dewitt are back in the secondary with Kyaire Fulp. Central lost a wealth of firepower to graduate but many others got playing time. Whether they return enough to keep up with a loaded York High is the question, particularly as the schedule is aggressive. They open on the road at Exeter and Cumberland Valley to face their old coach Josh Oswalt the first two weeks of the season, then Hempfield in the home opener. Then comes another road trip against what should be a York-Adams challenger in Red Lion who has to be chomping at the bit after losing to Central in last year’s opener 55-0! Last year’s record setting offense averaged 49ppg and allowed 14. The team the year before scored 42ppg and allowed 12. With a 10-year, 5-year and 3-year records of 74-36, 40-14 and 27-6, look for the Panther’s to again field a big and explosive team with a quarterback like Beau Pribula under center to allow some of the new parts on defense to jell.
3 Bishop McDevitt 6-0 4A (7) McDevitt’s absence from the playoffs last year was glaring given the deep talent they had shown on both sides of the ball scoring 40ppg and allowing 8. But the playoff math left them short although they held a #4 ranking in the state at the time. This year sees most of last year’s team back in the fold. They have a stable full of running backs, some of the best in central Pennsylvania featuring last year’s sophomore standouts Marquese Williams (5-10, 190, 53/254), Cyncir Bowers (5-10, 175, 25/232) and freshman Ty Kephart (5-11, 190, 29/154). Notre Dame just offered Williams last week. The receiver corps is stacked with big time talent in seniors Kamil Foster (6-0, 190, 25/498) and Mario Easterly (6-0, 175, 35/268). Last year’s quarterback Lek Powell had an exceptional career and season, throwing for 1591 yards (6 games!), completing 67% of his passes with 20 touchdowns while throwing ZERO interceptions. That’s a lot to replace. But they have a kid who just completed middle school with his first offer (Michigan) in freshman Stone Saunders (6-1, 185). Coach Jeff Weachter calls his arm elite. It was announced August 11th that he’ll start. The line will be powerful led by one of last year’s super sophomore in Gabe Arena (6-5, 265) and Dimitri Chacon (6-4, 334). Other sophs from last year are Luke Nye (6-0, 270), Ty Jennings (6-5, 260), Luke Sellers (6-1, 260), Kam Zeangle (6-0, 255) and Ethan Straining (6-3, 235). Add Isaiah Robinson (5-11, 310, sr) and Odezhon Troublefield (6-0, 270, sr) to the returning starters/co-starters group to see they’re set there. Last year’s starting or pt sophomores at linebacker were Kade Wearner (6-0, 190, QB/LB), Tyshawn Russell (6-2, 180, LB/DB), Zach Hare (6-1, 215) and highly regarded Riley Robell (6-1, 225) who is also a top wrestler. They’re joined by seniors Jamani George-Heron (6-0, 225), Nate Kinsey (6-2, 215), Douglas Bardo (6-2, 225) and Ryan Russo (6-2, 210). All were starters or got time last year. The secondary is veteran featuring Kamil Foster, Ty Kephart and Mario Easterly from the offense. This is a team that on paper again looks like one of the top teams in the state. The problem with last year’s team is they lacked a good barometer opponent, decisively defeating teams with a combined record of 14-29, none above .500. Unfortunately, Covid cancelled games against city power/rival Harrisburg and St. Mary’s Ryken (1-4) of Maryland that would have revealed more. Tough year for the Knights but still a measuring stick playing and losing to OLGC 17-9, St. John’s 35-20, Zaga 12-9 and DeMatha 42-24. With the Crusaders appearing stacked at every position, all eyes will be on the freshman phenom to see what he can do. Any kind of decent quarterbacking (and health!) should see the Crusaders challenge for another state title. The schedule like many district three teams this year is front loaded, opening at home to LaSalle (5-1) of the Philadelphia Catholic League and Middletown (4-2) before playing at Harrisburg (4-0).
4 Wilson 6-1 6A (5) Once more the Bulldogs graduate most of the line and their quarterback, forcing the offense to rely on a running game. As mentioned in previous write ups, because they lacked a deep threat but had a superior athlete at quarterback in Kaleb Brown (PWO Penn St), the offensive burden fell largely on him, masking the diminished pass threat by leading the team in rushing with 746 yards. Fortunately, they have another superior athlete in Jadyn Jones, their bruiser of a fullback (6-0, 220, 75/519, sr) who will carry the load at least early. Gavin Lenart (5-9, 195, sr) is also a hard tackle and fierce hitter at LB with Jadyn Jones. OL’er back are Kyle Hassler (6-1, 260, sr) and highly regarded OT/DT sophomore Jack Dendall (6-1, 255). Jon Ramsey (6-2, 220, sr) will be the TE/LB with Josh Drake, TJ Flite and Sean Dendall are likely to fill the receiver positions. Gannon Brubaker (6-0, 190, jr) appears to be the new Qb with a rising star in Cam Jones (5-11, 180, jr) playing a larger role this year on both sides, especially offense where he could be worked in almost anywhere including quarterback. Eli Rodriguez (5-11, 255, sr) will spearhead the DL rebuild. Rodriguez, Jadyn Jones and Gavin Lenart are three of the top players in the LL. And they have lots of bodies that got time and a talented sophomore class to work with. Wilson lost but 21 games the last ten years and have 57 straight non-losing seasons. They enter this year on a 6 game winning streak. So look for them to again represent despite opening with Mid Penn mugger Central Dauphin (98-27 last 10) at home, then Governor Mifflin (86-30 last 10) down the road in Shillington then Exeter Township (78-33 last 10), also on the road.
5 Central Dauphin 5-1 6A (6) Central Dauphin returns a special player in quarterback Max Mosey (990py, 63%, 13/5 ratio, 33/161ry), back for his senior season and third year as a starter. His stats followed a sophomore season where he threw for 2062 yards at 61% with a 15/3 ratio. Max is the real deal and could come out smoking following the embarrassment of last year’s 42-15 shellacking by Central York in the district semifinal. He and the team! Much of his supporting cast is gone including running back Tim Smith (78-580r, 16-245p), wide-out Malachi Bowman (24-372p, 12-212r), RB/WR Shamarr Joppy (36-372r, 13-132p), FB/LB Dan Ficca (26-132r) plus the entire starting LB corps of Paul Clark, Smith, Ficca and Joppy. But, this is CD where they typically reload. Maybe with less fire power but always contending. OL/DLs Tommy McGovern (5-11, 230, jr), Kyle Yeager (6-4, 290, sr), Myles Wallace (6-1, 230, sr), Aaron Clark (6-0, 245, sr), Jamaal Belamy (6-2, 280, sr), Ben Stewart (6-2, 280, sr)….(italics = starters, co-starters) are back with Carson Cassel (6-1, 245, jr), Nate Rosa (6-2, 280, jr); perhaps one of their better lines with talented underclassman moving up. TE/DE Darrion Thomas (6-0, 225, sr) teams with last year’s D-Line (above) for a formidable front. O and D skill include Randy Ruby (5-11, 185, sr), Zion Allen (6-0, 180, sr) and Juice Selby (5-11, 185), a hard hitting bunch that return to the secondary with Safety Sam Sauers (6-0, 200, jr). DB/LB Xander Toland (5-10, 180, jr) and LB Tyrell English (6-0, 200, sr) return. They open with a front loaded 4-pack playing Wilson, Berks Catholic, Manheim Township and Harrisburg who combined have a 95-29 record the last three years. If they manage those four games, four of the remaining six are on the road, including conference challenges at State College and Cumberland Valley.
6 Manheim Township 5-2, 6A (11)
This is a team that despite graduations must be feeling positive with the way last year ended. They began the year with two straight losses, losing to LaSalle 35-27 and Wilson 31-28, before ratcheting it up to win their last 5 games, entering 2021 on a high note. Any team would be a factor with return/receiver Anthony Ivey (5-11, 180, 23-546p, 8 TDs, jr) back for his senior year. Anthony is 6 points waiting to happen on any possession! He’s listed as the 20th best in the nation depending on which site you view. He committed to Penn State with almost the entire country wanting him including LSU, Pitt, Auburn, etc. This season sees them with decent numbers returning on defense with 8 starters and co-starters back. Offensively, the receiver corps is Ivey, Elijah Fonseca (5-10, 150, 11/26, sr), Michael Heckman (5-10, 155, 12/218, sr) and Isaiah Jones RB/CB (5-9, 155, 5-8, 160, sr). The primary back is senior RB/LB Matt Torres (5-7, 190, 24/136). The line returns seniors C Mike O’Hara (5-11, 220), OT/DT Carter Rusnak (5-11, 250), OT/DT Wes Hoffman (6-4, 245), and OT/ DT Brady Rager (5-9, 265). OG/DT Sam North (5-11, 260, sr), OT/DT Alex Romano (6-0, 265, sr) and TE/LB Matt O’Gorman (5-9, 190, sr) are also back. Jackson Roach (6-1, 200, sr) will be OLB, perhaps DL with OLB/DE Quinn Kavanaugh (6-2, 210, sr), Gavin Glass (6-1, 190, jr) and Tyrese Washington (6-2, 215, sr) with his 49 taackles. The secondary’s losses were minimal making that a team strength.
They’ll be looking for a quarterback with first year starter Evan Clark (6-3, 210, 1505p, 340r, 70%, 18/0 ratio) graduating. He’s a preferred walk-on at Penn State and one of the top single year starting quarterbacks in Township history. One of the best kept secrets in the district is their under publicized tradition recently in developing quality signal callers. One possibility is committing to well-regarded sophomore Hayden Johnson (5-11, 175). It appears they have their backup with McCaskey transfer Eli Rodriguez (5-10, 160, soph, 60 tackles) penciled in and possibly starting in the secondary or linebacker. Nick Good (5-11, 175, soph) also transferred in from Red Land and may start at linebacker. Township’s schedule suggests a fast start opening at home to mystery team Central Dauphin East (0-7, key transfers at Qb, receiver), then four consecutive road games at Dallastown (1-6), Central Dauphin (5-1), Spring Ford (6-1) and Cocalico (4-4). The last three are favorites or co-favorites to win their respective conferences.
7 York (Wm. Penn) 7-1 6A (12) Until Central York grabbed everyone’s attention last season advancing to the PIAA 6A final, the York-Adams league had taken a back seat to the Mid Penn Conference, the Lancaster Lebanon League and the Berks Inter County conference as well. West York, Red Lion, Central York, Dallastown, Delone and York Catholic have had their moments for sure. Even York High back when Matt Ortega (Coatesville) ran the program fielded good teams. But no one got over the hump the way Central York did last year. But if York can get past serious speed bumps like Red Lion and of course Central York in conference action, the Bearcats might just make a run with their explosive offense that averaged 38ppg last year. There are holes to fill for sure but they return key offensive players in quarterback Sam Stoner (6-0, 200, 66/127-52%, 1268yds, 16/2 ratio, jr), and one of the top running backs in central PA in Jaheim White (5-9, 190, 138/1332, 16Tds, jr). That’s 9.7 yards per carry. The receivers can fly in Ja’Nas Simms (6-1, 180, 21/347, 16.5yds per catch, sr) and Jaquez Simmons (5-7, 130, 16/241, 15.7 yds per catch, jr). The O-Line took some hits but return their outstanding tackle Joden Nelson (6-4, 280, UConn, sr), OG Montress Jackson (5-10, 220, jr), DE/OL/MLB Steven Roland-Washington (6-0, 220, sr) and JaMari Sanchez (6-1, 230, sr). The D was hit hardest losing OL/DL Shakir Wright (6-2, 325) and Saumir DeShield (6-1, 240), 3 linebackers and half the secondary. Like all of last year’s successful teams, they played a lot of people. And because participation numbers are up, the expectation is they’ll fill vacancies. The scheduling should tell all as they play two of the top programs in the state the first three weeks of the season, opening with Governor Mifflin at home Aug 27th then at Coatesville Oct 10th. Wow! The Coatesville game will be a great opportunity for locals to see a field flooded with talented athletes and exciting teams. They close out the season on the road against Central York.
8 Manheim Central 3-5 5A (unranked) Last year’s team was a full rebuild having graduated 20 starters and their record setting quarterback Evan Simon (8038py, 930ry, Rutgers). The result was their first losing season since 1971 (3-7) with a super young team that returns almost intact. (Info from the great guys at Lancaster Online). Qb Judd Novak (6-0, 160, sr) had a strong first year, especially over the last 6 games completing 61% (65/107) for 1114 yards with a 16-3 ratio. The first three were a different story, completing 32 of 62 (52%) for 466 yards with a 5 to 4 ratio. Two 7-point losses at home to Solanco (3-4) 42-35 and Conestoga Valley (6-2) 41-35 prevented more. And that’s how the season went, putting up a lot of points with a defense that often came up short. But they ended strong, beating previously unbeaten Hershey (5-1) 24-21 in the finale. Besides Qb Novak, they return most of the skill people led by running backs Jaden Weit (6-0, 190, 47/281, jr), Larry Marley (6-0, 190, 63/261, sr) and Justine Hefferman (5-11, 180, 40/153, sr). Also back is leading receiver Owen Senseng (5-10, 165, 31/675, 21.8yds per catch, 11Tds, sr) and Brady Harbach (5-10, 170, 16/179, jr). They’ll have a nice line returning in Center/DT Ryland Fittery (5-11, 245, sr), OT/DT Gage Watt (5-10, 280, sr), OT/DT Tyler Fahnestock (6-1, 200, sr), OT/DE Wyatt Kupres (6-1, 230, jr), OG/DT Cole Groff (6-0, 250, jr) and TE/DE Logan Saunders (6-1, 190, sr). They return 8 starters to the defense with as many co-starters going both ways from their corresponding offensive positions. LB Rocco Daugherty (5-10, 190, jr) stood out with 47 tackles as a sophomore last year. Because the town of Manheim eats, sleeps and breathes football (think Aliquippa, Southern Columbia, Clairton), look for a HUGE response to the historic losing season with a group looking to make a statement and even some scores. All that sounds good until looking at the schedule to see they open with District-3 power Cumberland Valley and always competitive Hempfield at home before hitting the road for three weeks at Susquehanna Township, Perkiomen Valley and Wilson before coming home to Warwick. Because the remaining four aren’t auto wins, they need to come out of the first six 4-2 at worst. But there is good point potential since four of their opponents are 6As that should win some games this year.
9 Berks Catholic 5-3, 4A (14)
A typically rugged schedule reflecting their propensity to play anyone, anytime prevented Berks Catholic from being more last year. That included two of the best teams in the state and other teams that annually field strong teams. The groups consisted of Northwestern Lehigh (7-2, Dist-12) and District-3 powers Cedar Cliff (4-4), Harrisburg (4-0), Exeter Twp (6-2) and Governor Mifflin (8-1). They were not good enough to compete with the Harrisburgs and Governor Mifflins of the state, losing 61-28 and 62-7 respectively. Few were. But they were good enough for the rest beating Northwestern 56-35 and Exeter 56-28 on the road, and losing a 35-34 nail biter at Cedar Cliff’s West Shore Stadium in double overtime, stopped inches from the goal line as time expired. Minus the Harrisburg and Governor Mifflin results, they averaged 46ppg while allowing 22. Not bad for a young group. The Saints will play anyone as evidenced by recent games with Central Dauphin, Malvern Prep, McDonogh School and last year playing one of Harrisburg’s strongest teams. This season they return QB/DB Brad Hoffman (6-2, 215, 45%, 603, 8/3 ratio, jr) and RB/DB Christian Cacchione (6-2, 185, 562r, 10-292py, sr), along with WR/DB Josiah Jordan (5-11, 165,15-195ry, sr), RB/LB Aiden Gallen (5-10, 195, 15-95ry, sr), WR/LB Trace Brown (6-2, 180, 10-212, sr) and CB Isaac Pichardo (6-3, 185, sr). Also back is OL/DE Jackson Huddleson (6-2, 230, sr), OL/DE Luke Hughes (6-2, 230, sr), OT/DT Jacob Collazo (6-3, 310, sr), DE Alex Witmer (6-3, 255, sr), Ty Barrtto (6-0, 235, jr), Luke Bennethum (5-11, 230, sr), Reed Lawhorne (6-1, 225, sr) and Xavier Cifredo (5-10, 250, sr). Mark McFadden (6-2, 265), Chris Kochel (6-1, 290) and OL/DE Ryan Wethey (6-0, 215) will be missed with RB/LB Justin Small and RB Colby Newton. But, six All-Stars from the Berks 1st or 2nd D teams are back in the fold. This year’s schedule is again challenging with non-conference games against Central Dauphin, Malvern Prep and Pope John Paul II in addition to conference foes Exeter and Governor Mifflin.
10 Harrisburg 4-0 6A (3)
District 3’s top seeded playoff team Harrisburg was denied a chance at a deep run in the post season when Covid knocked them out of a highly anticipated game with 4th seeded York who went on to get crushed by Central York in the district final 48-21. Many of us in the district felt Harrisburg would have taken care of youthful York then defeated Central York. Some back and forth on that one depending on the number of brews involved. But, year in and year out, Harrisburg’s goal is always to win a state title. They enter this year with a lot of question marks because of severe grad losses including quarterback Jon McNeil (566PY, 67%), running backs Jaylon Johnson and Kiev Gregg plus OGs Nate Bruce (6-5, 325), James Murray (6-2, 250), Jamear Henderson (6-0, 240), and OT Layne Brannon (6-5, 280). Seniors Tyshawn Black (6-1, 285), Ray Irvin (6-2, 295) and Tyrell Young are back. DT Tariq Hughes (5-11, 220, sr) will help solidify the line with DE Jamari Heron (6-0, 225, sr). They return good talent but with Coach still maintaining all positions are up for grabs, assignments are still a mystery. Do know last year they had real talent particularly in their line backing corps with Anthony Day, Mahkai Hopkins, Nayguan Prather and Jamari Heron. DE Terrell Reynolds (6-2, 215, jr) could be special. Kyle Williams (6-0, 180, jr) is here or the secondary and a force at receiver. He’s talented enough to play many positions, perhaps competing with Shawn Lee for the quarterback spot. The secondary should be filled out well with Carlos Baskerville (5-10, 175), Justin Cook (5-9, 170, sr), Raytel Bryant (5-7, 170, so), Marki Strawbridge (5-8, 160, jr) and Damaris Waters. The season could be further compromised with so many graduations AND only four games played last year. Depth could be a real issue competing in the Mid Penn-Commonwealth playing Cumberland Valley, Central Dauphin, State College, Carlisle, etc….big, physical teams….and non-conference games against Pine Richland of District-7. Also play their bitter rival Bishop McDevitt. Like all the power teams in the district, the schedule is front loaded, opening at Pine Richland then Hazleton before coming home to play a loaded McDevitt team and their other bitter Harrisburg rival Central Dauphin.
11 Steelton Highspire 10-0 1A (8)
How about them Rollers, winning their third state championship in the last 14 years while going undefeated in the most trying of circumstance. They’ve had their down cycles for sure but not lately with last year’s sophomore and freshman class playing like a bunch of seniors. They look ready to make another run this year. Here are some notes, stats, etc that also incorporate 2021’s preview done a few months ago that will shed more light on them. This year sees most of last year’s team returning with the big losses being running back Odell Green’s 1549 yards, wide out Mehki Flowers (6-2, 195, PSU) 1006 yards in receptions (60, 15Tds) transferring to Central Dauphin East and WR Damein Hammond graduating with 752py.
Last year’s team started 4 freshmen; QB Alex Erby 6-4 210 (2735py, 35Tds), LBs Jerion Perry 6-0 185 and DE Eugene Green 6-3, 210, LB Amari Williams 6-2, 205….a sophomore DE Tyshaun Holland-Ali 6-1 225 and 4 juniors; DT Andrew Erby 6-4, 275, WRs Mehki Flowers 6-2 195, Tyrone Moore 6-2 180 (27/479py) and LB/DB Davion Pryor 5-9 160). Others back include FB/DT Taeyon Brotton (5-11, 225), OT. Marlyn Davis (6-3, 295, sr) and FS Rell Ceasar (6-0, 155, so) who could replace Flowers. Those of you with some familiarity of smaller programs around the state know what a difficult group the Rollers defeated in the postseason beating D-3 Delone Catholic (6-1) 23-13; D-4 Muncy (7-2) 50-43; D-2 Old Forge (5-1) 39-36; D-6 Bishop Guilfoyle (7-3) 16-14 and D-7 Jeannette (10-2) 32-20. Those programs won 226 games and lost 62 (78.4%) the last 5 years, breaking down as follows. Muncy 39-17, Delone 40-11, Old Forge 36-15, BS Guilfoyle 54-11 and Jeannette 57-8. They start this season on the road in District 1 playing Morrisville, then home for Belmont Charter, Newport and Juniata, the latter two being veteran teams. Look for them to again challenge not only for districts but for another Class 1A state championship.
12 Exeter Township 6-2 5A (20)
Here’s a team that looks like they could be significantly improved with almost all of last year’s squad back. At 23ppg, they were a liability on defense. Because of this, they couldn’t hang with the big boys losing to Berks Conference rivals Governor Mifflin 56-14 and Berks Catholic 56-28. But on the other side, they fielded their best unit in six years, averaging 35ppg and won their last 3 games. That was with quarterback Gavin McCusker who threw 10 interceptions to 8 Tds. He also threw for 1170 yards. Not bad in an 8 game campaign. Colin Payne looks to be the heir apparent with some pt last year completing 4 of 5 for 120 yards and rushing for 76 yards. As a 6-3, 185 senior, he definitely looks the part. All of last year’s key contributors return, headed by running backs Eric Nagle (5-10, 175, 124/782ry, 7/92yp, sr), Ty Yonis (5-11, 180, 35/245, jr), RB/LB J.R. Strauss (6-2, 220, 12/132ry, 12/182py, sr) and RB/LB Tyler Yocum (6-1, 225, 23/77ry, 6/110py, sr). Their leading receivers are back in TE/DE/S Joey Schlaffer (6-6, 215, sr) with 19 receptions for 444 yards and Carson Schmidt (5-11, 170, 20/351, sr). The D returns 8 full time starters and a pile of co-starters led by LBs Strauss, Yocum and Lucas Palange (6-2, 215, sr) with 57, 71 and 56 tackles respectively. DE Richie Karstien (6-3, 220, jr) plus Kyle Lash DT/G (6-1, 210) are back with NG Jack Renski (6-1, 300, sr) plugging the middle, Joey Schlaffer (6-6, 220, jr) and Anthony Caccese (6-7, 279, sr), Jovan Hollis (6-1, 180, jr), Jacob Wolfe (6-0, 170, sr) are back with Hollis and Payne I believe in the secondary. They get the opportunity to show their stuff in the opener entertaining powerful Central York, then Boyertown before coming home to play Wilson! By then we’ll know what the Eagles have and what they’re capable of.
13 Cumberland Valley 3-5 6A (25)
Following four successful years as head coach at Central York, Josh Oswalt enters his second year after replacing Michael Whitehead who was let go at the end of 2019 following a 59-28 slate since 2013. What an emotional move for Oswalt who graduated from Cumberland Valley in 2004 and went on to play/coach at Shippensburg before taking over at Carlisle and Central York. He has a strong record of developing quarterbacks at both schools, turning Billy Burger and Eric Harris at Carlisle into legit Mid Penn Qbs. He did the same at Central York working with Cade and Beau Pribula. All that meant CV’s famed Wing-T was destined for the scrap heap. So it was a tough transition made more difficult with Covid and the abbreviated season. Plus, they were coming off rare back-to-back losing seasons. While they struggled, they didn’t cave, starting off 1-5 but showing signs at Spring Ford (6-1), losing 20-14 before winning their last two at Carlisle (3-3) 20-14 and Cedar Cliff (4-4) 24-20. The Eagles gutted out some games showing Coach had them all in. Like McDevitt, Manheim Central, ELCO and others, they played a lot of underclassman and have decent numbers returning. Coach went young at many skill positions starting sophomores at Qb Issac Sines (5-9, 180, 56/126/760/44%, 7/4, 82/125ry), RB/LB Bryce Beutle (5-11, 215), JD Hunter (5-10, 175, 59/188ry, 14/98py) and WR/DB Griffin Huffman (6-0, 185, 11/288py). All started on defense plus Qb Sines at CB along with soph DL Ridge Crispino (6- 0, 220, 23 tackles). Juniors Max Wilken (6-1, 185, 45 stops) was a key linebacker with junior and multi-talented Troy Collard (6-3, 230, 42 tackles, 6/142py, Air Force) playing everywhere; DE/L/TE/RB. And a freshman named Alex Sauve (5-11, 175) made a splash with 37 tackles. They should be significantly improved this year. But the schedule may not broadcast it starting off away at Manheim Central then home for Central York (!) and Spring Ford. How about that opener, two of the storied programs in central Pennsylvania facing off while coming off losing seasons.
14 Warwick 8-0 5A (4)
The Lititz gang forfeited the much anticipated district final showdown with Governor Mifflin last year because of Covid. Too bad as it was a highly anticipated game with Warwick’s balance and abundance of D1 talent. They were not unlike Pine Richland. For this season they face a MAJOR rebuild, losing D1 talents at OL Nolan Rucci-Wis and WR Caleb Schmitz-Cin, plus FB Colton Miller-college? (6-4, 220, 880 ry), his brother TE/DE Thatcher to Cornell and QB Joey McCracken-Ship (6154 career py, 65/11 ratio). So it’s truly a major rebuild after graduating their best team ever with exceptional talent over the last few years going 41-13 since 2016. Doesn’t mean they’ll be without talent. In fact, much is expected from junior Jack Reed (6-1, 180, 21/38, 320py) who started two games last year when McCracken was rehabbing. Plus, they return a nice tailback in Christian Royer (5-10, 190, sr, 56/282). RB/LB Brendon Snyder (6-0, 180, sr), WR/DB Cooper Eckert (5-9, 170, sr, 12/96), WR/CB Tanner Weik (5-11, 180, jr), OT/NG Nate Young (6-2, 245, sr), C/LB Aaron Hess (5-11, 210, 75 tackles, sr), and OL/DEs Cole Detter (6-4, 240, sr) and Cody Miller (5-11, 235, jr). The schedule looks doable but dangerous, opening with Lampeter Strasburg then road trips to CD East and Ephrata before homers against Penn Manor and Hempfield. There are a lot of 50-50 games in there!
15 Conrad Weiser 6-1 4A (15)
Conrad Weiser had an exciting team last year that tore through regular season opponents by an average score of 40-9. Problem is, teams had a combined record of 12-28 and not a winner among them. Although the Scouts have some weapons they didn’t have enough for Lampeter Strasburg in the 4A semifinal, losing in a shootout to the top seeded Pioneers 56-35. As exciting as the Scouts were last year with a dual threat like senior Logan Klitsch (6-3, 195, 1st team All Berks), look for them to be more with much of last year’s skill returning including Klitsch. He finished with impressive stats; 83/140/1336/59%, Td-Pick ratio 15/3, rushing 69/428, 10 Tds, making him one of the more underrated quarterbacks in central PA. Also back is 1st team All-Berks receiver Aanjay Feliciano (6-2, 170, sr, 28/596), Trey Dianna (5-10, 165, 10/94, jr) and Evan Traynor (6-2, 170, sr). Speedsters Cole Rothermel (5-9, 160, 27/162ry, sr) and Cam Jomes ()5-9, 165, 15/112ry, sr) return. The line lost some people, C Luke Capozzi (5-10, 200), G Max Pacheco (6-0, 255, 1st team All Berks), TE Ty Kissling (5-11, 170) and defensive standouts LBs Eric Moyer (6-0, 210, 34 tackles, 1st team All Berks) and Gabe Trevena (38 stops). They’ll build around Eric Nelson (6-2, 270, sr), Cam Swanson (5-9, 240, sr), Ethan Rex (5-10, 250, sr) and others. Super bad Brett Organtini is back at NG after collecting 48 tackles at 5-8, 165 pounds. You got to love that! The skill spots are stocked, suggesting the defense can improve. On paper they will be a force in their classification if they negotiate an opening schedule that includes Cocalico and ELCO in the first three weeks of the season. And with Wyomissing (3A silver medalist) graduating one of their best teams ever, Weiser is the clear favorite to win the Berks Inter County Section Two in its final year before merging with the Lancaster Lebanon League next season.
16 ELCO 7-1 4A (18)
Eastern Lebanon County or ELCO as its officially named and recognized has a good looking group returning from last season that on average crushed all comers by an average score of 38-13 before Lampeter Strasburg beat them 20-3 in the district final. The difference between last year’s and this is they had an established quarterback in Braden Bohannon (5-11, 180, Lebanon Val Col) who was the top rusher in the LL with 990 yards. To say he was key in the Raiders’ Veer is putting it mildly. He was a superior athlete, dividing his time between the gridiron, basketball (20ppg avg) and baseball/track. It looks like they have a solid replacement in Cole Thomas (6-0, 205, sr) who also excels on defense with 30 tackles as an OLB. He’s a power runner tho not as quick as Bohannon. With 39 tackles, Bohannon was a load at FS too, with CB Reilly Peiffer’s 37 stops. The DL loses Logan Tice (5-11, 250, 25 tackles), Ben Wargo (6-0, 240, 23 stops) and DE Owen Kahl (6-0, 195, 34 tackles). Yet the cast around the new Qb is a respectable core led by RBs Jake Williams (5-10, 160, 63/660, so) and brother Luke Williams (6-2, 200, jr, 62/451, jr) who have 25 and 91 tackles respectively as linebackers. Luke is a hitter! Aiden Fitsch (6-0, 185, 24 stops, jr) also returns to the corps and TE. The lines should be good with OT/DT Colin Daub (6-4, 285, jr), Cody Sky (5-11, 240, sr) and Nate Henson (6-1, 205, sr) back. The schedule is friendly at the start opening at home against Susquenita then Schuylkill Valley away. Then comes a game that will tell us much at Conrad Weiser.
17 Hempfield 4-4 6A (13)
The Black Knights must deal with serious grad losses but do have a core, however small, returning to keep them competitive. That starts with returning quarterback Cam Harbaugh (6-1, 210, 82/138/1173/59%, 8/1, sr). He’ll miss receivers Jadin Jimenez (28/326), David Almodovar (23/185) and RB Tanner Hess (116/663) for sure, but return WR/DBs Eli Hinton (5-9, 160, sr, 5/131) and WR/LB Tom Minnich (6-0, 195, sr, 2/18). Don’t be surprised to see marked improvement with Harbaugh after reviewing stats to see he completed 57 for 92 (61%) against the best teams on the schedule; Manheim Township, Wilson, Warwick, Cocalico and Exeter. Impressive!
Other starters back are OL Lucas Miller (6-0, 220, sr) and OL/LB Kaleb Elslager (6-0, 185, sr). DE Max Grube (6-0, 210, sr, 29 tackles) and LB Dylan Bard (5-11, 160, sr, 25 tackles) also return. So the cupboard is not bare. And there are some young ones coming up that could help along the lines in juniors Nicky Bruno (6-0, 225), Deyvid Palepale (6-1, 250), Caleb Mussmon (6-2, 250), LoShyne Stewart (6-2, 220) and Max Hostetter (6-3, 240). They look strong at the linebacker position.
Whether that’s enough will be revealed against a difficult schedule of Exeter, Manheim Central, Central York and Warwick in the first 5 games.
18 Central Dauphin East 0-7 (unranked)
The big news at East High is Qb Tony Powell (6-4, 215, sr) transferring in from Middletown. He was out last year with an injury after throwing for 1415 yards as a sophomore with 18 Tds. He’s the real deal. Also in via transfer from Steel High is one of the top receivers in the country in Mehki Flowers (6-2 195, 60/1006, 15 Tds, PSU). He’ll team with Tymere Thornton (6-5, 215, sr) to give them a feared passing attack. Three veteran lineman return in Andre Howerton (6-2, 275, sr), Cameron Livingston (6-1, 265, sr), Travis Armstrong (5-11, 230, sr) to give them great potential for a solid ground game (and protection) realizing Flowers is out there on the flank. Other starters or co-starters at OL/ DT were Izaiah Scott (6-3, 240, sr) and Marcario Clark (6-4, 230, sr). Aidan Chandler (5-10, 185, Sr.) also goes both ways at RB/CB with LB Justice Jennings (6-0, 200, Sr.) also returning. Flowers will join Chandler in the secondary. Longtime assistant Lance Stone takes over as the new coach for Aaron Blanding who retired after 8 seasons. Stone is a McDevitt grad and served as a McDevitt assistant prior to taking over Steel High’s defense last year. Like most of the large schools in the district, East also plays a front loaded schedule with Manheim Township in the opener on the road followed by home games against Warwick and Cedar Cliff.
19 Cocalico 4-4 4A (unranked)
Cocalico started off last year on fire, going 4-1 with a 35-19 win against Manheim Central. Then it fell apart playing better comp losing to Warwick 49-14, Manheim Township 41-7 and Hempfield 51-28. It was quite a reality check playing literally the big boys of the LL with their super quick but light Flex Bone attack. The backs are good but on the small side featuring Anthony Bourassa (5-8, 170, sr, 757ry), Brycen Flinton (5-9, 150, sr, 201ry ), Stephen Flinton (5-0, 165, sr, 468ry, 353py) and FB Austin Vang (5-8, 180, jr, 77ry) and projected quarterback Blayke Taddei (5-10, 165, sr). With the Flex, the line size isn’t as great an issue tho it is sizeable enough headed by South Carolina commit Ryan Brubaker (6-6, 285, sr). Others back are Chuckie Drain (6-1, 230, jr), center Jared Stauffer (6-3, 230, sr), Damien Wolf (6-0, 190, sr) and Chase Tucker (6-2, 220, jr). LB Luke Angstadt (5-9, 185, sr, 63 stops) and Austin Vang (51 tackles) are key starters returning to the defense. They return 18 or 19 starters but need a quarterback to manage the option attack. Big things are possible for the Eagles if they survive a brutal schedule up front playing Berks-II favorite Conrad Weiser with Wyomissing in a full rebuild, Cedar Cliff with their strong back and Governor Mifflin and their great back!
20 Lampeter Strasburg 9-1 4A (10)
LS is probably one of the best kept secrets in central Pennsylvania, winning consecutive district titles after defeating Berks Catholic 35-21 in 2019 and ELCO 20-3 last year. One of the reasons for their success is stability at the top where John Manion has been the head coach for 23 seasons with a 177-83 mark and only one losing season. That all came to an end with a 39-35 loss in the state semifinal to Jersey Shore (lost to TJ 21-14 in final) and Coach Manion retiring! Longtime assistant (2001) Victor Ridenour takes over after being D-Cord the last four years. This season will be a significant rebuild on offense, graduating record setting quarterback Sean McTaggart. He was the heart and soul of the team, throwing for 1866 yards (57%), with a 27/4 ratio and rushing for 400 yards on 90 carries with 5 more TDs. Berkeley Wagner (6-1, 185, sr) who started two years ago is the apparent successor. Three primary running backs also graduate, Drew Harris (92-447r, 6-59p), Alex Knapp (58-407r, 13-415p) and Owen Fikkert (38-248r, 9-109p). The receiver corps loses Ian Herr (23-506) and Austin Stoltzfus (13-414). TE/DE Beau Heyser (6-2, 235, 26-531, jr) is back as their leading receiver. The D also returns a strong nucleus featuring DL/LB Nick Del Grande (6-4, 260, jr, 69 tackles Coastal Carolina), DE Beau Heyser (44 tackles) and Evan Sellers (6-0, 260, jr, 29 tackles), DE Eric Lakusa (6-1, 220, sr, 22 tackles), FS Berkeley Wagner (6-1, 185, 69 stops). The schedule while not daunting opens with three teams not played last year. They open with Warwick who has a chip on their shoulder per covid denying a district finals appearance against Governor Mifflin last year. Then Penn Manor and Conestoga Valley making the schedule appear doable early.

Others:
Carlisle 3-3 6A (23)

The Herd returns a bunch of players centered around their O-Line of Eli Carothers (6-1, 260, sr), Hayden Mahr (6-1, 240, sr), Layton Schmick (6-2, 285), Thomas Nelson (6-4, 300, jr) and Charlie Dib (6-0, 245, jr). Junior Qb Ezeekai Thomas (6-0, 180) is a work in progress (18/63/164, 1 Td-4 Picks) starting as a sophomore in the Commonwealth. Not a good idea! But he can run, rushing for 455 yards on 88 carries. Last year’s D-yield was best since 2005. Sleeper team! Especially if they develop any kind of a passing attack. Tough opener at Mechanicsburg.
Susquehanna Township 2-5 3A (unranked)
Has some big stuff on the lines and good team speed to reverse last year’s campaign featuring OL/DL Freeman Wilson (6-2, 255, sr), Jamall Minifield (6-6, 330, sr) and Aubrey Carter (6-3, 265, sr). “Hanna” use to be a load, going 77-43 from 2006-2015 before sputtering to 24-25 the last 5 years. Winnable opener at Kennett and three straight homers to Milton Hershey, Manheim Central and Ship will test and reveal.
East Pennsboro 3-4 4A (unranked)
Return 4 to the OL/DL averaging 6 ¾ and 260 lbs, headed by Justin Moore 6-6 360 and Jacob Dein 6-3 260. That’s a nice duo to clear a path for Sy Burgos (5-7, 175, sr) who rambled for 1150 yards last year in seven games. He’s one of the top sprinters in the Mid Penn. Open at Suburban then home for a test against New Oxford.
Shippensburg 4-3 5A (unranked)
Like Cocalico, Lampeter Strasburg and a few others, “Ship” is one of the best kept secrets in the state, going 106-47 (69%) from 2007-2020. They look to replace 3-year starter Eric Manning who threw for 826 as a soph, 1054 as a junior and 955 last year. Good numbers return especially on defense that will be headed by Minnesota commit DE Anthony Smith (6-7, 275, 43 tackles, 14TFL, 9 sacks, sr). Could start out 3-0 at Hershey, at Big Spring’s vet group then home to Dover.
Mechanicsburg 8-1 5A (17)
The Wildcats return a pile of players and most of their OL/DL including the monster Talbot Reed-Jaquay (6-7, 330, sr) and Michael Jones (6-6, 275, sr). Problem is replacing super star (generational?) quarterback Micah Brubaker who finished the year passing for 1796 yards (67%, 18/5/ratio) and 707 yards rushing with another 15 TDs. Good measuring stick opener at home against Carlisle’s Thundering Herd.
Middletown 4-2 3A (16)
Things are always optimistic in Middletown with their usual array of talent, none more obvious than TE/DE Tajae Broadie (6-4, 240, sr, Syra, Pitt, Cin, Minn, UConn, etc) and a good core of returning starters, especially on the line where 4 return. The big question marks are with the new coach Scott Acri and the loss of senior Qb Tony Powell (6-4, 215, sr) who transferred to CD East. Open at home to Lower Dauphin then at Bishop McDevitt. Note: Coach Brett Myers retired after an 8 year run of 73-22 and 3 consecutive state finals appearances following stints as head coach at Pottstown and Exeter.
Cedar Cliff 4-4 5A (26)
Cedar Cliff is looking for a quarterback but return a typical Colt O-Line led by seniors Claude Godineaux (6-3, 310), Logan Heiple (6-2, 230) and Gabe Kocher (6-2, 230). Hunter Garced (6-3, 265, sr) is the big return on defense. Key to all this is the return to health of Rb Jontae Morris (5-11, 170, sr) from a ACL vs Berks Catholic game #1 last year that kept him out entire season. They open at Red Lion.
Boiling Springs 4-2 3A (27)
Have to give the Bubblers a mention hanging with Middletown last year, a huge step up in performance and going 4-2 with a young crew. Qb Colin Lunde and Rb Joey Menke are back plus good ones on the OL in Hunter Coyle (6-2, 280) and Dalton Ackley (6-0, 230, jr). Open at home to Littlestown who can be a tough nut to crack from the York-Adams.
Littlestown 4-3 3A (unranked)
0-2 start 4-1 finish with a big armed quarterback returning in Xavier Benner (6-3, 190, sr, 527py), top target Nate Thomas (6-3, 195, 16/232, sr) and three linemen of which two are 1st teamers in the York-Adams-3; Bryce Redding (6-2, 245, sr) and Reece Huth (5-10, 200, sr). Logan Lanning also back, 5-10, 210. Open at Boiling Springs.
Red Lion 5-2 5A (19)
Graduated duel threat quarterback Randy Fizer (870 yards-67%, 1057ry), a large part of an offense that scored 36ppg, their second highest average in over 20 years. That will be difficult to replace although most skill are back. Ryley Knaub (6-2, 175, sr) appears to be the starter after limited action last year. Serious D-front grads including C/DTs Kairen Gordon-Bey (6-2, 275, 24 tackles), Zane Clever (6-3, 330, 22 tackles), LBs Jae’mon Braxton (6-2, 235, 35 stops) and Davante Dennis (6-6, 215, 25 tackles). They open at home to Cedar Cliff, then trips to Waynesboro and Chambersburg before coming home for Central York.
Octorara 6-2 4A (30)
Came close last year with a 22-19 loss to LL-4 champ ELCO and loaded for bear again with most of that team back. Last year’s team was their first winning season since their inception in 2009. They went from 2-8 to 6-2, upgrading their offense 10ppg and the defense 9ppg. But, these guys are fly weights with but two starters over 210 pounds! Open at Kennard Dale.
New Oxford 6-1 5A (21)
The Colonials won the York Adams-2 then lost to heavily favored Warwick in the 3A first round 14-12. Warwick played in a covid-shortened week, getting in no practice time. Junior quarterback Connor Beans (6-0, 180, sr,1268, 57%) is back with wide out Connor Herring (5-9, 135, 34/506py, jr) and Ben Leese (6-0, 180, sr, 33/440). This is new territory for the Colonials having back-to-back winning seasons (7-5 last year), following a seven run of 14 wins and 57 losses, including three 0-10 campaigns. Open at home to Bermudian Springs facing their vet Qb Jay Martinez and running back Ricky Pacana’s 535ry.
Delone Catholic 6-1 1A (24)
The Squires graduated their York-Adams-3 OPY Tate Neiderer, but return 4 linemen that made his 866 rush yards possible; Trent Giraffa (6-2, 220, jr), Elijah Staub (6-4, 265, sr), Sam Scovitch (6-1, 220, sr) and Alex Timmins (6-0, 225, jr). It looks like 7 return to both sides. Delone is one of the few 1As to give Steel High a run for the money with any consistency, winning two of their three games, losing last year in the district final 23-13, and winning the previous two years 39-27 and 54-19. They are one of the winningest programs in south central PA at 71-35 the last 10 years, 39-12 the last 5 and 24-7 the last 3 years. Open at Trinity in Camp Hill.
**** Sorry, I cut off York Catholic.
York Catholic 6-2 2A (unranked)
The Fighting Irish have almost their entire team back minus their excellent Rb De’Kzeon Wyche (964ry, 14Tds) and wide out Brennen Witmer (418py). And while they have a team that looks stocked with talent, Coach Depew might do better if he didn’t boast they’d win the York-Adams-III last season. Delone beat them 28-10. In 2019 he said Delone’s title was a fluke. Delone beat them that year 23-7. They have a vet line with TE Landen Eckert (6-1, 200, sr), Ryan Tully (5-9, 250, jr), Nick Casagrande (5-9, 210, sr) and Wyatt Wells (5-11, 200, jr). The Qb is a work in progress in Levan McFadden (6-0, 200, 37/97/38% - 780py, 11/1, jr). So if the coach can button up and the Qb improve his passing percentage, they might be able to hang with Delone. I guarantee you they will be eagerly awaiting the Irish in McSherrystown under the lights October 22nd.

PSU new approach to recruiting in Philly

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. — The conversations that transpired between Penn State defensive recruiting coordinator Terry Smith and head coaches at some of Philadelphia’s powerhouse high school programs in the past year can best be described by those involved as brutally honest.

What Penn State once thought it could achieve in the talent-rich Philadelphia region was being hampered by what some high school coaches said was the Nittany Lions waiting too long to offer scholarships to some of the region’s top prospects.

“At the end of the day, when we went to Philly, we hadn’t recruited Philly great. You know, we just hadn’t,” Smith said. “… Some of those kids were having a hard time because they’d have an offer from Georgia and yet they don’t have an in-state offer from Penn State.”

Whether they commit or not, players often remember their early scholarship offers. To some, it’s a sign that a coaching staff believed in them early on, much like new offensive coordinator Mike Yurcich did with 2022 QB commit Drew Allar. Even as Allar’s profile rose, Yurcich’s longtime pursuit mattered to Allar. That early belief is one of the biggest reasons the Ohio standout plans on one day running out of the Beaver Stadium tunnel.

Philadelphia-area high school coaches relayed the late-offers issue their players had with Penn State to Smith. After a 2021 recruiting cycle in which 12 of the top 13 players in the state in the 247Sports Composite — four of whom were from the Philadelphia region — headed elsewhere, Penn State was open to changing its approach to recruit Philadelphia.

Smith is a former Penn State wide receiver who was the head coach at Gateway High School near Pittsburgh from 2002 to ’12 before spending one season on the Temple staff in 2013. James Franklin assigned Smith to recruit Philadelphia along with graduate assistant and North Philadelphia native Deion Barnes. Penn State put one of its best recruiters and a graduate assistant with a plethora of connections to his home city in place to try to make amends and create an open dialogue with high school coaches.

More than the relationships with the prospects or with the high school programs, Smith now believes waiting to offer was Penn State’s biggest deterrent in the state’s most talented region.

“There’s a hard line of when you offer a prospect. Do you offer them too soon? Too late?” Smith said. “It’s hard. If you offer a kid too soon, then later in their senior year you don’t really want that prospect, how do you get out of it? That affects relationships. So it was a fine line because we wanted to be late rather than early, and as we talked to those guys and communicated more with the coaches and all the handlers in Philly, they thought it’s better to come in early on our guys. So, we changed our philosophy. And, man, it’s made an impact immediately.”

The top 2023 prospect in the state, safety Rahmir Stewart of Imhotep Charter, has held a Penn State offer since Jan. 9, 2020, the same day Georgia offered him. Expect to see earlier offers going out well beyond that as PSU looks to make a favorable early impression even in 2024.

A bounce-back season on the field would help with that impression, as does a 2022 class currently ranked No. 1 nationally in the 247Sports Composite. While much will change between now and the early signing period in December, this class still has pieces to become one of the best Penn State has signed in the modern recruiting era. A part of the success with that class dates back to when this staff identified and connected with these prospects.

“The relationships that have been built with that ’22 class started early,” said Taylor Stubblefield, Penn State’s offensive recruiting coordinator and wide receivers coach. “I think that that’s probably the biggest thing that I can see is just, we’ve literally had relationships with these recruits for a long time.”

The top player in Pennsylvania this cycle, Enai White of Philadelphia’s Imhotep Charter, does not have Penn State among his four finalists, but the Nittany Lions have commitments from La Salle College High School linebacker Abdul Carter and Northeast edge rusher Ken Talley. Getting a foot in the door at these places and having dialogue is of the utmost importance.

This push for success in Philadelphia will only be magnified as Greg Schiano and nearby Rutgers get in the mix with the likes of Georgia, Alabama, Clemson, Ohio State, Florida, Texas A&M and Cincinnati — all schools that regularly are recruiting the area. Rutgers picked up a commitment from four-star linebacker Anthony Johnson this cycle, as the Neumann Goretti prospect picked the Scarlet Knights over Alabama, Auburn and Oregon.

“I’ve had the same cell number for 20 years, so if (high school coaches) got an issue, they’ll call me and I got no problem answering that call and we’ll talk it out,” Schiano said last month at Big Ten media days. “… I really believe when you recruit, you recruit the entire community. You don’t just recruit the player, the coach. You better understand the whole structure, however you wanna call it, in that community. Who are the important people to know? Who are the important people who can give you the information you need to have?”

While Penn State is getting better at getting that information in Philadelphia, it also might have to one day figure out what to do if the result of too many early offers leads to a class being too full too soon. The 2022 class has verbal commitments from 24 players with room for “maybe one, two or three” more players, according to Smith. The Nittany Lions get to be ultra-selective with a class with this much talent.

“We talk about numbers, but I know this: We’re not going to pass up on a great player,” Stubblefield said. “Coach Franklin does an unbelievable job communicating to the recruits and the families that we’re going to be loyal to you and we expect you to be to us. That’s that whole commitment process (and surrendering other official visits once they commit to Penn State). So we are committed to our guys. And, if there is a great player, we typically leave a little bit of wiggle room so that we can add him.”

Said Smith: “Coach Franklin always tells us to make him make tough decisions. So as a recruiting staff, we’re gonna keep recruiting and hopefully we get some more and have some tough decisions.”

(Photo of Terry Smith: Matthew O’Haren / USA Today)

Ewers saga..

Thought some of the group would have discussed this by now? I'm sure his decision had to be vetted through the hierarchy @ OSU before it was made. I understand there's some peripheral discussion of NIL application, this is not a family desperate for money or to "cash in" early.

The young man is obviously very confident in his skill set and where he'll position himself, in what will be a VERY crowded Frosh/Soph class of QB's there... including McCord. Already hearing some rumblings/rumors regarding that as well..



LaSalle schedule

LaSalle has to have one of if not the toughest schedule this year. McDevitt Harrisburg, Haverford, Malvern Prep,McDonough ,Imhotep and the PCL guys St Joe Prep. Wood ,Roman Father Judge . That is one difficult task for sure. Sam Brown/Rutgers and Abdul Carter /Penn State will have to lead the way. The Explorers usually have a solid passing game and good line play. This will certainly put them to the test week after week.
  • Like
Reactions: bucksftball

Mike Ricci retires....Garnet Valley Football Coach

High School Football: Garnet Valley's Mike Ricci decides 2021 will be his last year​


1 of 2
Garnet Valley Ricci

MEDIANEWS GROUP FILE
Mike Ricci talks to his team after a game. Ricci confirmed that the 2021 season will be his last as the head football coach at Garnet Valley.



Garnet- LM

Garnet Valley football coach Mike Ricci looks on from the sideline during a game against Lower Merion in 2019. The 2021 season will be his last as the Jaguars' head coach.



One by one the old guard of Delaware County high school football coaches is moving on.
Mike Ricci, the second-winningest football boss in county history, confirmed Friday that the 2021 season will be his last as head coach at Garnet Valley.
This is Ricci’s 35th season as the head coach for the Jaguars, his 37th with the program and 38th overall as a coach. He was a volunteer assistant coach for two seasons at Garnet Valley before being named head coach in 1986. He spent the 1992 season as an assistant coach at Widener.


“I think 38 years is a pretty good run,” Ricci said when reached by phone.
Ricci said the timing was right to move on to the next chapter in his life.
“I’ll retire from teaching in June,” said Ricci, 59, who teaches English at the high school. “My son, Jon, will be a senior at the University of Delaware, where he plays football, that fall. I’ll be able to go to all his home and away games. My daughters, Theresa and Natalie, they play field hockey. They’ll be seniors at Garnet Valley that following year. I’ll get to go to their games. I could never get to their games now. And my son, Matt (an All-Delco wrestler), is likely going to end up at the Naval Academy or West Point and I want to be involved with that so family timing was the reason.”
Ricci's 246 career victories going into the season ranks second in county history behind Strath Haven’s Kevin Clancy (319 and counting). Steve Lennox retired at Interboro following the 2019 season with 313 career wins, but 84 of those came at Dickinson High School in Delaware. Lennox won 229 games in 27 seasons as the Bucs’ head coach.

Ricci’s overall record is 246-124-1 for a 66.4 career winning percentage. In his time at Garnet Valley he has seen the school grow from a small, Class 2A school in the 1980s to a Class 6A school today. And he has turned the Jaguars into a Central League, District 1 and state power during the course of his career. Garnet Valley has won seven Central League titles, six outright and one shared, since joining the league in 2008, including the last three in a row. The Jaguars bring a 25-game league winning streak into the season and are 104-12 since joining the league.
The Jaguars have also fared well at the district and state level during Ricci’s watch. They won District 1 Class 3A titles in 2006 and 2007 and reached the PIAA 3A title game in 2007. Since the PIAA went to six classifications in 2016 the Jaguars have played for the District 1 title in 2016 and '17 and reached the semifinals in 2018 and '19. The semifinal and championship rounds of the District 1 tournament are considered the first and second rounds of the state tournament. The Central League did not take part in the playoffs during the COVID-shortened season last year. In all, the Jaguars have made the state playoffs seven times since 2006.
“The memories to me are the kids who have been through the program and the families who have been through the program and through the school district,” Ricci said. “It’s just been spectacular. Our whole philosophy and our program is oneness and selflessness and the kids in our program have bought into that and really believed in that and lived that and it’s just made coaching an enjoyable venture.
“Of course, you think back to the team that went to the state championship back in 2007 but there’s been several teams that have become as good as we were capable of becoming, which is how we measure our success. It’s not really numbers of wins or losses, it’s can we take what we have and make it as good as we think we can be? And we’ve had several teams that I think have done that.”
Ricci said he would like to see the job go to one of his assistant coaches. Most of them have been with him for a decade or longer.
“It was a very tough decision,” Ricci said. “I started thinking about it last year and I just think it’s time. I don’t want to be one of those guys that hangs around and people are saying, ‘When’s this guy going to go?’ I feel like it’s a good time to go. We have great coaches at Garnet Valley. The program’s in great hands.”

Olympics

Last night, former Bethlehem Catholic offensive tackle Joe Kovacs won his second Olympic silver medal, taking second in the shot put, behind fellow American Ryan Crouser. Kovacs throw bested the prior Olympic record and is the fourth farthest throw of all time, behind Crouser’s winning throw at the Olympics, his world record from Olympic Trials, and one other.

Kovacs was an All State offensive lineman for the Hawks in 2006, leading a Becahi squad that finished ranked in the top 5 in 3A that year and beat 4A finalist Liberty. Kovacs was the PIAA champ in both the discus and the shot put that spring, setting the 2A meet record in the shot. He also broke the D11 mark in the shot set by future Chicago Bear Mike Hartenstine, the longest standing track record in the district. As a junior, Kovacs was state runner up in the discus and seventh in the shot put.

After Becahi, Kovacs was a four-time All American thrower at Penn State, with two bronze medals in the shot put at NCAA Outdoor championships. As a pro, Kovacs has won world championships in the shot put in 2015 and 2019 and a world silver in 2017 to go with his Olympic silvers in 2016 and 2021.

The Recruiting Zone (August 9th, 2021)

Find out what colleges are recruiting Andrew Massucci, Ryan Waters, Brayden Kunselman, Matt Buchman, and Andrew Nesler now!


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


Q&A with Peters Township kicker Andrew Massucci​


Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I would like to play a sport in college as of right now though I do not know which one yet.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“A lot of d3 schools have been talking to me for soccer but nothing for football yet.”

Have you made any college trips yet? Do you have plans for more trips soon?
“I have not made any trips yet, but I am planning on going on a lot this summer.”

Have you done any camps this off-season? How do you feel you performed?
“Yes, I did a kicking camp which I performed pretty good at.”

Do you have any plans for camps ahead?
“I have been looking at going to some other camps but do not know for sure which ones I’ll go to.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Not really.”


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


Q&A with Downingtown West linebacker Ryan Waters​


Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yes, it is my dream to play football.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“ODU, Valparaiso, Bryant, Lafayette most of the PSAC.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“Valpo.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“Yes, Valpo and ODU.”

What camps did you attend this summer? How did the camps go overall?
“Villanova, Valpo, East Stroudsburg, Bryant and West Chester.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“WVU because my dad went there.”


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


Q&A with Brookville safety Brayden Kunselman​


Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“It would be a dream for me to play football in a college that truly wants me and believes in me.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I currently don’t have any colleges recruiting me but I’m hoping that changes after this season.”

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

What camps did you attend this summer? How did the camps go overall?
“I attended the National Preps Collegiate Showcase and felt like I was able to show some of my skills there.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Throughout my life I’ve always been a huge Ohio State and Coastal Carolina fan.”


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


Q&A with Hazleton Area running back Matt Buchman​


Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I want to play sports in college, and I have no preferences as to where.”

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

Have you made any college trips yet?
“No.”

What camps did you attend this summer? How did the camps go overall?
“I attended the Rutgers football camp and the ESU Football Camp. I feel the camps went great overall.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up has always been Notre Dame.”


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


Q&A with Franklin Regional defensive tackle Andrew Nesler​


Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yes, my main goal in life as of right now is to make it to playing Division 1 football. I also enjoy track & field as a shot put and discus thrower.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I’ve been speaking to a couple D2 programs and turning some heads at camps this year but nothing I want to boast about yet.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“I won’t say “recruiting me the hardest” but the school that definitely has my most attention is Liberty University. I love they’re faith focused culture that they have going on over there.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“Not as of yet however I am speaking to coach king will of Liberty about coming to visit in November.”

What camps did you attend this summer? How did the camps go overall?
“I went to Duquesne, Liberty, Villanova, Bucknell, Penn State as well as Narduzzi’s elite camp at Pitt to name a few. I felt as though my performances were good, but not reflective as to how capable of a player I am. Unfortunately, however at Pitt (the one I was most interested in) I pulled a hamstring in the very first drill that put me out of commission for a couple weeks. I think however I did turn some heads at the ones I was able to perform at and hopefully more will come of it.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“That’s a tough one, I’d say either Pitt probably because Aaron Donald has been an inspiration to me since midget league."


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

Q&A with Franklin Regional defensive tackle Andrew Nesler

What have you and your team been doing as of late to get ready for the fall?
“This off-season has been like nothing I’ve ever experienced. With Coach Getsy taking the helm as head coach the weight room production and agility on the team has increased tenfold. I assure you we are across the board one of the best conditioned teams in the WPIAL.”

What do you feel you have improved on the most since football ended?
“Definitely my explosiveness and quickness. I endured a pretty bad injury (which required Tommy John surgery on my right arm) in the final week of last season against PT, so I was pretty restrictive as to what I was able to work on for the following months since I was basically restricted to having one arm. Field work was all I could do pretty much. I owe a great deal of that progression to Tim Cortazzo of FSQ and Coach Russ of Swarm412.”

How do you feel your team will do this football season?
“Franklin is going to be the unexpected powerhouse this year. Although we may not be as gifted as a lot of schools when it comes to size, we are strong with athleticism as well as heart.”

What team do you feel will be the toughest competition on your schedule?
“Probably PT. Last year we had our biggest loss against PT and ever since, that has been one of our teams' biggest motivations is that we NEED to beat PT to prove we are not some 2nd class football teams. Cade Yacamelli and that huge OL combo is going to be deadly, but I know we can persevere.”

Who is the toughest individual player your team will face off against?
“Brad Birch is up there. That kid is beyond gifted in his position. All that does however is just motivate me even more to make sacks against Gateway this year.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yes, my main goal in life as of right now is to make it to playing Division 1 football. I also enjoy track & field as a shot put and discus thrower.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I’ve been speaking to a couple D2 programs and turning some heads at camps this year but nothing I want to boast about yet.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“I won’t say “recruiting me the hardest” but the school that definitely has my most attention is Liberty University. I love they’re faith focused culture that they have going on over there.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“Not as of yet however I am speaking to coach king will of Liberty about coming to visit in November.”

What camps did you attend this summer? How did the camps go overall?
“I went to Duquesne, Liberty, Villanova, Bucknell, Penn State as well as Narduzzi’s elite camp at Pitt to name a few. I felt as though my performances were good, but not reflective as to how capable of a player I am. Unfortunately, however at Pitt (the one I was most interested in) I pulled a hamstring in the very first drill that put me out of commission for a couple weeks. I think however I did turn some heads at the ones I was able to perform at and hopefully more will come of it.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“That’s a tough one, I’d say either Pitt probably because Aaron Donald has been an inspiration to me since midget league."
  • Like
Reactions: AndrewNesler

Q&A with Hazleton Area running back Matt Buchman

What have you and your team been doing as of late to get ready for the fall?
“My team has been working extremely hard on the field as well as in the weight room, to be ready for the fall season. “

What do you feel you have improved on the most since football ended?
“Since last season I feel I have improved most on my strength and vision.”

How do you feel your team will do this football season?
“I feel my team this year will be a very tough team and be successful.”

What team do you feel will be the toughest competition on your schedule?
“I feel our week 2 game against Harrisburg will be our toughest competition.”

Who is the toughest individual player your team will face off against?
“I see no individual player we play against a greater threat than the next.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I want to play sports in college, and I have no preferences as to where.”

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

Have you made any college trips yet?
“No.”

What camps did you attend this summer? How did the camps go overall?
“I attended the Rutgers football camp and the ESU Football Camp. I feel the camps went great overall.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up has always been Notre Dame.”

Q&A with Brookville safety Brayden Kunselman

What have you and your team been doing as of late to get ready for the fall?
“The team and I just finished up the 7v7 season and have been having offseason practices focusing on both sides of the ball and trying to get into the weight room as much as possible.”

What do you feel you have improved on the most since football ended?
“Since football ended, I think I’ve really improved on my footwork and my releases of the line of scrimmage.”

How do you feel your team will do this football season?
“I think me and my team will compete to bring back a district title to Brookville.”

What team do you feel will be the toughest competition on your schedule?
“The team I feel will be the toughest on our schedule will probably be the team we lost to in the district title game last year, Karns City.”

Who is the toughest individual player your team will face off against?
“One individual I’ve thought will make Karns City one of the biggest threats is Luke Garing.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“It would be a dream for me to play football in a college that truly wants me and believes in me.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I currently don’t have any colleges recruiting me but I’m hoping that changes after this season.”

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

What camps did you attend this summer? How did the camps go overall?
“I attended the National Preps Collegiate Showcase and felt like I was able to show some of my skills there.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Throughout my life I’ve always been a huge Ohio State and Coastal Carolina fan.”

Q&A with Downingtown West linebacker Ryan Waters

What have you and your team been doing as of late to get ready for the fall?
“Working out 4 days a week with 7v7’s mixed in. We leave for a team camp at Shippensburg next week for 4 days.”

What do you feel you have improved on the most since football ended?
“Playing fast at 210 Lbs.”

How do you feel your team will do this football season?
“I have super high expectations for this team. Many of us have played together since flag football as kids. We have a monster OL that averages over 285 lbs. With Shelt coming back, that gives us another boost.”

What team do you feel will be the toughest competition on your schedule?
“We are loaded with tough games, but week 1 against GV is the one I have circled. We find out right away how good we are going to be.”

Who is the toughest individual player your team will face off against?
“There are a lot of tough players and I respect them all. I honestly couldn’t name one because there are a lot to credit. 6A Pennsylvania football is full of tough players!”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yes, it is my dream to play football.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“ODU, Valparaiso, Bryant, Lafayette most of the PSAC.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“Valpo.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“Yes, Valpo and ODU.”

What camps did you attend this summer? How did the camps go overall?
“Villanova, Valpo, East Stroudsburg, Bryant and West Chester.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“WVU because my dad went there.”

Q&A with Peters Township kicker Andrew Massucci

What have you been doing as of late with off-season workouts?
“I have been kicking on days that I don’t have football practice with the team and lifting and running some.”

What do you feel you have improved on most this off-season?
“I feel like I have improved my leg strength the most this off-season.”

How do you feel your team will do this football season?
“I feel like our team will be very successful this year and hopefully make our 3rd WPIAL final in a row.”

What team do you feel will be the toughest competition on your schedule?
“I feel like the toughest competition will be Upper St Clair.”

Who is the toughest individual player your team will face off against?
“I do not know if there are a lot of good players in our conference.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I would like to play a sport in college as of right now though I do not know which one yet.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“A lot of d3 schools have been talking to me for soccer but nothing for football yet.”

Have you made any college trips yet? Do you have plans for more trips soon?
“I have not made any trips yet, but I am planning on going on a lot this summer.”

Have you done any camps this off-season? How do you feel you performed?
“Yes, I did a kicking camp which I performed pretty good at.”

Do you have any plans for camps ahead?
“I have been looking at going to some other camps but do not know for sure which ones I’ll go to.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Not really.”

Covid 2021

This is a topic no one will want to consider, but it's going to have to be addressed by schools, teams, and leagues very soon.

With cases rising and much evidence that the delta variant is affecting more young people, sometimes quite severely, will players be encouraged or required to be vaccinated? I wouldn't worry much at all about transmission between players during a game, but I would certainly worry if my son were going to a team camp for a week and the kid in the next bed was unvaccinated. I wouldn't worry so much about my vaccinated son--though I'd worry some--but since even fully vaccinated people can be very effective vectors of this variant, he could easily transit the virus to a younger sibling.

Also, I'm not sure how schools that mandate masks are going to say it's OK for, say, players on a team bus to go unmasked.
ADVERTISEMENT

Filter

ADVERTISEMENT