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Q&A with Berks Catholic safety Justin Small

How did the football season go overall?
“Pretty good. I just wished we made playoffs.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“I feel we’re a complete team and just fixing the little mistakes.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“Playing with pride and giving it our all.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I want continue on with my football career.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“A couple of coaches are in contact with me. I am just waiting on that one big offer.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“Yes, a couple in-state schools and out of state schools.”1

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“Due to COVID, I don’t think too many schools are allowing it.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Coastal Carolina. I took a visit there pre-COVID-19.”

The Recruiting Zone (November 23rd, 2020)

Find out what colleges are recruiting Justin Small, Jeff Nyamekye, Judd Novak, Sam Penna, and Haden Sierocky now!


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Berks Catholic safety Justin Small

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I want continue on with my football career.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“A couple of coaches are in contact with me. I am just waiting on that one big offer.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“Yes, a couple in-state schools and out of state schools.”1

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“Due to COVID, I don’t think too many schools are allowing it.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Coastal Carolina. I took a visit there pre-COVID-19.”


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Red Lion wide receiver Jeff Nyamekye

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I haven’t gotten much noise from any colleges as of right now.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“I was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, so I always loved Ohio State.”


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Manheim Central quarterback Judd Novak

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“None so far.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“Yes.”

Do you have plans for more trips soon?
“In the spring I do.”

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


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Richland wide receiver Sam Penna

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“My goal my whole life has been to be a D1 athlete. I play 3 sports and would gladly play any of them in college, but if I had to choose one, it would probably be football.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I haven’t had any real college attention. It has just been invites to camps and things like that.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I have not been on any visits or anything, but I go to college games often.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“I have been a Notre Dame fan since I was very little. I have gone to a Notre Dame game almost every year.”


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Ligonier Valley quarterback Haden Sierocky

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yeah, that’s the plan. I hope to either play football or baseball.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I have no interests at the moment.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Growing up, I’ve always been a Pitt fan. Just being around the city and growing up around here makes it special.”


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PIAA 6A State Bracket

Round 1:

10-1. McDowell over 10-2. Erie - McD already beat them decisively twice this season.

7-3. Pittsburgh Central Catholic over 7-1. North Allegheny - PCC gets them in the rematch.

2-1. Delaware Valley over 6-1. Altoona Area - Could be a good one? DV hasn't had a tough game in weeks, while Altoona has had some tests.

3-3. Central York over 3-4. William Penn - The battle of York might not be much of a battle. One of the best players in PA make CY a threat.

12-1. St Joe's Prep - Quarantine is only thing that could stop SJP.

1-4. Coatesville over 1-1. Pennridge - Red Raider LBs will be all over the Ram's DW.

1-2. Spring-Ford over 1-3. Souderton - Don't know much about either team this year, but playing two 0-5 teams the past 2 weeks can't help SD.

Round 2:

7-3. Pittsburgh Central Catholic over 10-1. McDowell

3-3. Central York over 2-1. Delaware Valley

12-1. St Joe's Prep

1-4. Coatesville over 1-2. Spring-Ford

Semi-finals:

7-3. Pittsburgh Central Catholic over 3-3. Central York

12-1. St Joe's Prep over 1-4. Coatesville

Final:

12-1. St Joe's Prep over 7-3. Pittsburgh Central Catholic
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District 11 6A Finals: Freedom vs. Nazareth

#1 Nazareth Blue Eagles vs. #3 Freedom Patriots
Last Time: Nazareth 21-7 (week 3): Matt Bugbee threw for 270 yards and three touchdowns, with both Jaden Cabrera and Joe Capobianco going over 100 yards in a week three win. Freedom was dealt a blow during the week when starting QB Brian Taylor was declared ineligible on Wednesday, and Ethan Neidig was thrust into a starting role. The results weren't gerat, as Nazareth held Freedom scoreless until the final drive of the game.


Nazareth
Head Coach: Tom Falzone (8th year at Nazareth 43-33; 84-50 overall)
District Titles: 1988 (3A), 1989 (3A), 2011, 2019
District Finals: 1987, 2011, 2019

Offense
Nazareth graduated one of the best senior classes in school history and was expected to be in a rebuilding year. However, Tom Falzone’s offense has barely missed a beat, with senior quarterback Matt Bugbee (Sr. 6’4 205) taking over and having an all conference season, throwing for 1,338 yards and 10 TDs against just one pick in seven starts. Bugbee makes great decisions and gets the ball out quickly, with enough arm strength to keep defenses honest over the top. He’s also one of the best place kickers in the area and is getting looks as a place kicker in college. Jaiden Cabrera (Sr. 5’9 155) leads the EPC in catches with 39 in seven games for 579 yards. They’ve run the ball better than in years past, with Tyler Rohn (Jr. 5’10 200) going for 516 yards in his second year as a starter. The offensive line has been pretty well reconstructed, led by four year starter Cody Breidenbach (Sr. 6’4 300) at center. He’s getting recruited by Division I track and field programs as a thrower, but would be an FCS prospect at football too. They’re massive up front with Breidenbach, Matt Burton (Jr. 6’1 275), Levi LaRochell (Sr. 6’2 265), Braden Saylor (Sr. 6’2 230) and Sean Kinney (Fr. 6’1 295) Kinney at left tackle has all the makings of a high, high level FBS prospect on the offensive line and is one of the top upper weight wrestling prospects in the country (I think he was a 2x junior high state champ at heavyweight).

Defense
Just like on offense, Nazareth had a major rebuilding job on defense, with the graduation of All State defensive end Jake Wilson (Penn State) and safety Nate Stefanik (Princeton – wrestling), plus a slew of front 7 guys. But still, they’re giving up 10.7 points per game with a pair of shutouts and have been consistently solid on the defensive side of the ball. Safety Andrew Wells has really stepped up in his second year as a starter with five interceptions and a team high 48 tackles. LInebacker Joe Capobianco, Broc Bender, and Chase Levey have been a really solid unit and give them three versatile, almost safety hybrid players to defend the spread. Saylor and Breidenbach are both two-way linemen, with Saylor leading the Blue Eagles in sacks.

Freedom
Head Coach: Jason Roeder (16th year; 109-68)
District Titles: 2018
District Finals: 2008, 2016, 2017, 2018

Offense
Freedom’s offense took a major shift after week 2 when Brian Taylor was declared ineligible for not living in the Freedom portion of the Bethlehem School District. In stepped sophomore Ethan Neidig (So. 6’3 185), who had some growing pains in his first start against Nazareth, but has sharped over his last five starts. They Patriots are averaging 32.7 points per game, including rolling up 42 and 37 in their playoff wins over Pocono Mountain West and Easton. Neiding is 32-52 for 433 and 5 TDs and has leaned on an experienced group of upperclassmen receivers led by AJ Fletcher (Sr. 5’11 175). But the strength of Freedom’s offense is the running game, with a big, physical offensive line, anchored by FBS prospect Kaelin Moore (Jr. 6’4 275) at tackle. Matty Russin (Sr. 5’7 175) ran for over 800 yards as a junior change-of-pace back, and has been excellent this season when healthy, rushing for 477 yards on 84 carries. However, he was out last week against Easton with an undisclosed injury, though word is he will play tonight. His back up, junior Deante Crawford (Jr. 5’7 165), has run for 455 yards on 66 carries.

Defense
Freedom’s defense has been their calling card and they’re again one of the best in the Lehigh Valley. They’re giving up 9.6 points per game and have a pair of shutouts on the year. Moore has exceled as their nose guard in their 3-3-5 alignment and frees up room for the back 8 to fly around. Marcus Kreidler (Sr. 6’1 220) is having an all state caliber year at outside linebacker and Fletcher is one of the best corners in the Valley. They’re consistently one of the best programs in the EPC at forcing turnovers and have allowed some breathing room for their Neiding to settle in.


The Pick
It’s not a surprise that in the year of COVID, the two programs that have the best coaching, if not the best talent, are in the championship game. Roeder and Falzone have really separated themselves with the way they run their programs and both have really exceeded expecatations this year. Both teams are really good on the lines, and while not as explosive as in years past at the skill spots, make up for that with really good scheme and execution. Freedom has a couple more playmakers in the backfield with Russin and Crawford, and I and continuity at the quarterback position that they didn't have in week one. Freedom 21 Nazareth 17
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Bishop McDevitt shutting down for good at years end

I am so bummed and very annoyed at the powers to be for announcing this 4 days before the state semi final football game . Although they are heavy underdogs by almost every HS football expert, I for one believe they have a shot to win if the refs call a fair game. McD has many good underclass players that will be looking for a new home. LBs Bridgeman and Pergine are both studs and Emmanual seiu is a super receiver. Some team will be glad to welcome them and a slew of others . So damn sad.
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District 3 Top 25: Nov 18, 2020

District 3 Top 25: Nov 18, 2020



District-3 Playoff picture.

6A Central York defeated Delaware Valley 48-27 in the quarterfinals
5A Governor Mifflin declared champ, forfeit win vs Warwick
4A Lampeter Strasburg defeated ELCO 20-3 in the District-3 final
3A Wyomissing defeated Lakeland 47-0 in the quarterfinals
2A Camp Hill lost to Bishop McDevitt (Wyncote) 26-14 in the quarterfinals
1A Steel High defeated Old Forge 39-36 in the quarterfinals

1 Central York 9-0, 6A
You might think a 49-27 score reflects a blowout. In reality Central York was stressed to the point of having to play a four quarter football game to beat Delaware Valley in the Class 6A quarterfinal on DV’s home field. Home field was a factor as the Warriors came out pumped against the well touted Panthers. Taking a closer look at the game; the first quarter was scoreless, but saw the Warriors serve notice picking off Beau Pribula on the first play of the game. They traded scores in the second quarter with DV hitting pay dirt first on an Aiden Oliver to Jason Henderson 17 yard score. Pribula followed suit connecting with Judah Tomb for a six yard score at the 9:01 mark. Oliver followed this with a 27 yarder to Henderson again with Pribula doing the same on a 22 yard toss to Tomb near the end of the second quarter. They again traded scores entering the third quarter where DV took a 21-20 lead after blocking an extra point attempt. And that’s as good as it got for the Warriors. Like the Rollers of Steelton Highspire, trading points with Central York is a bad idea as they simply have too many weapons. That was the case here. The Panther explosion started when Judah Tomb, one of the top receivers in the state, returned a punt 82 yards near the end of the third, followed by Beau Pribula engineering a few quick drives, scoring on 13 and 2 yard runs to open a 42-21 lead with 9:47 left in the game. Talk about flipping a switch! A 3 yard run by Paulie Weinrick pulled DV to 42-27 (missed extra point) before Pribula got loose again for a back breaking 75 yard touchdown sprint. He finished the game with 118 yards rushing, scoring on runs of 1, 13, 1 and 75 yards. He also completed 10 of 16 passes for 116 yards with touchdowns of 6 and 22 yards. Not a bad day. Judah Tomb had a great game, catching five passes for 68 yards including both of Pribula’s touchdowns. He also had a 35 yard punt return that set up a second half score, an interception and the recovery of a second half onside kick! Isaiah Sturgis had a quiet 105 yards on 15 carries. They advance to play McDowell (7-0, D-10) who hasn’t played since Oct 30th. Covid related issues caused the cancellation of games with both Erie High and Pittsburgh Central Catholic, meaning they advanced to the state semifinal on the strength or rather weakness of two forfeit wins. What a strange season this has become. The Trojans are a balanced offense with solid quarterbacking from Chris Juchno (6-2, 210, sr) who if I got this right from a few online sites completed 80 of 117 passes for 928 yards, a 68% clip. Justo Rivera and Taha Ramahi are the primary rushers. Their last game was against Cathedral Prep, a 24-6 win, where Juchno completed 20 of 26 for 182 yards with Rivera rushing for 81 yards. Rashawn Tate ran a kickoff back 92 yards for a score while Ramahi ran for two scores. The defense was impressive, holding Cathedral Prep (6-2) to 195 total yards. It’s hard getting a fix on McDowell who only played Baldwin, then Erie and Cathedral twice each. Same with Erie High and Cathedral as their season was in fact a Erie city round-robin. That’s not the case with Central York who crushed all the quality teams on their schedule; Red Lion (5-2) 55-0, Central Dauphin (5-1) 42-15, York High (7-1) 48-21 and Delaware Valley (5-2) 49-27. The game is at Mansion Park Stadium in Altoona, Saturday at 1PM. It’s always fun playing at the Mansion on their fast carpet where both teams will put a lot of athletes on the field to light up the scoreboard.
2 Harrisburg 4-1, 6A.
Barring a late scheduled game, Harrisburg’s season is over.
3 Governor Mifflin 8-0, 5A
Unfortunately for Warwick, the game with Governor Mifflin was cancelled per covid issues, allowing Mifflin to advance by way of a forfeit win while Pine Richland (9-0) was defeating Peters Township 35-0 to win another WPIAL title. It’s probably fair to say covid affects not only the team knocked out of the playoffs but also the one not playing. We’ll see Saturday at 1 in Hollidaysburg where they meet in the Class 5A state semifinal. Governor Mifflin has been discussed through the year so here’s some information on the Rams. They are a veteran group with size and good team speed. Like other great teams, they’ve won their games so effortlessly as to create the impression they play a weak schedule. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Any other year would see Penn Trafford (6-2), Peters Township (8-1), maybe USC (5-2) sitting where Pine is now. But they’re not here because the Rams walloped all three by a combined score of 118-13. They did it with real talent, depth and veterans on both sides of the ball. Offensively, they throw multiple weapons at you in the form of a backfield stocked with four good ball carriers used in a variety of combinations and three good receivers, especially Eli Jochem. At quarterback, who would have thought in 2018 that anyone could fill the void left by Phil Jurkovec’s graduation? Entering Saturday’s game, here we are in 2020 with quarterback Cole Spencer, who at well north of 6000 yards, has done just that. He’s matured from a solid sophomore in 2018 (1469, 57%) to a soaring talent this year, completing 73% of his passes for 2196 yards. He threw for 2294 at 68% last year. In a nutshell, that’s Mifflin’s problem. No matter how good they are, there’s Cole Spencer’s skills plus the multitude of diverse weapons he can distribute to. All this operates behind a veteran and sizeable line that averages 6-1, 260 (Hays, Jackson, Swisher, King, Kearns). Defensively, they are big and mobile with an excellent front seven that’s allowed 82 points all year. That’s key against Mifflin’s Mid Line where Pine looks particularly strong and fast. From the little I’ve actually seen of them, Miller, Halsey and Waranka look good, active, as does the line of Domer, Schurman, Lenz, Jackson. They should be difficult to run against especially rotating in with good depth on offense and defense. They’ll be fresh. Importantly, they have a great staff that might just be too modern for the likes of traditional WPIAL powers like Central Catholic and North Allegheny to keep up with. We’ll see if Governor Mifflin can.
**** West guys, jump in with any corrections and opinions that are welcomed.
4 Warwick 8-1, 5A.
Warwick’s game with Governor Mifflin was cancelling per covid and concludes their highly successful season where they won the LL-Section Three title. It would have been nice seeing a Warwick-Governor Mifflin district final between the two best teams (arguably?) each has ever suited up. Next year will see a major rebuild with the graduation of key components to Warwick’s success. Gone are quarterback Joey McCracken, fullback Colton Miller, wide out Caleb Schmitz, tight end Thatcher Miller and one of the top lineman in the country, Nolan Rucci. The defense graduates well over 300 tackles. If history means anything, they’ll rebuild well although they are graduating exceptional talent.
5 Central Dauphin 5-1, 6A
Season over
6 Wyomissing 9-0, 3A
Wyomissing caught Lakeland way off guard on the opening kickoff with a pooch kick they recovered at the Chiefs 35 yard line to signal the beginning of the end for Lakeland. Seven plays later saw Evan Niedrowski (6-2, 240) blast in from the 1 yard line. Two more turnovers led directly to scores and a 14-0 first quarter lead that ballooned to 33-0 at the half. Despite the game being at Lakeland, they made it easier than it should have been with six turnovers, one being a second quarter Pick-Six by LB Darren Brunner. The bottom line was a 47-0 rout of a decent Lakeland team. Apart from Lakeland miscues, the Spartans had too much athleticism, too much size and way too much speed throughout their team for the Chiefs to manage. Wyo has size and power where they need it; egs….in OT Seamus Filoon (6-4, 310), OT/DT Rashad Williams (6-5, 315), TE Aiden Mack (6-4, 220), FB/MLB Evan Niedrowski and NG Steven Olexy (6-0, 240). Spelling them are OT/DT Garrett Metzger (6-4, 260), OT/DT Jevin Williams (6-4, 280), OT/DT Preston Aikman (5-11, 225), C Alexander Kauffman (6-2, 230), OL/DL Pacen Ziegler (6-3, 230). Their inside starters are C Owen Scargle (6-0, 190), OG/LB Jack Freighter (6-0, 200), OG Mahe Salha (6-1, 175) with great speed to pull and trap. I’ll stop there but all the above played against Lakeland. All their skill people are quick and sure handed, headed by RB/CB Amory Thompson, JRB/SS Jordan Auman and WR/LB Darren Brunner. They’ll attack the perimeter with Thompson and Auman then blast it up the gut with Niedrowski. QB/FS Zach Zechman (6-1, 180) is the complete athlete, recovering a fumble, throwing and running for a touchdown and intercepting a pass against Lakeland! He can fling it (waggle, flood patterns) as needed, completing 65% (37/57, 10-1 ratio) for 465 yards. Danville (8-1, D4) is next in the Class 3A quarterfinals after disposing of Archbishop Carroll (2-3, D12) 42-21. The defense sacked quarterback Nick Lamey 8 times. Danville Qb KJ Riley (6-2, 200, sr, +7000 career yards) hurt the Patriots up top, completing 18 of 32 passes for 269 yards and 3 touchdowns. To date he’s thrown for 1867 yards (62%, 25/6 ratio), often to sophomore Carson Persing (5-8, 155) who can scoot with 50 receptions for 868 yards. He will not likely find that level of success against Wyomissing’s first-team defense and athletic secondary that has not allowed a touchdown all year. The game is Saturday at 1 on Wyomissing’s A-Field where the Spartans are hard to beat.
7 Lampeter Strasburg 9-0, 4A
Once again Lampeter Strasburg fought off a determined foe when ELCO paid a visit looking for a fight. They got one! This one came on the heels of last week’s 56-35 shootout against Conrad Weiser where the Scouts jumped the Pioneers early, trailing 35-28 in the third quarter. ELCO also came out breathing fire, but in a defensive struggle, holding a 3-0 lead at the half. Unfortunately for the Raiders, Rheece Shuey’s 25 yard field goal in the second quarter was all they could get. As a veer team, a ground game and a stiff defense pretty much sizes them up, along with a lot of heart. ELCO couldn’t muster much, completing three passes for 48 yards while rushing for 164. Same with LS who didn’t put anything together until Andrew Reidenbaugh booted 27 and 25 yard field goals in the third quarter for a 6-3 lead. With little help from the offense, ELCO’s defense was stressed, allowing quarterback Sean McTaggart to find Beau Heyser and Austin Stoltzfus against a tiring secondary for scores of 17 and 72 yards in the fourth quarter to put it away. This was a well fought contest between two Lancaster Lebanon League Section champions who played like it. LS moves on to the PIAA semifinal at home against Jersey Shore (9-0, D4) who beat previously undefeated Crestwood (8-1, D2) 26-14.
8 Bishop McDevitt 6-0, 4A
McDevitt’s game with Hershey that would have decided the Mid Penn-Keystone Division was cancelled by Hershey for covid related issues. Barring a late addition to the schedule, that will close out a season that was both successful and frustrating with one of McDevitt’s more exciting teams missing the playoffs. But don’t worry about these guys with a 118-26 won/loss since 2010 and 19 consecutive winning seasons. They graduate Qb Lek Powell who is being recruited by Cornell, Harvard, Holy Cross, Penn, LIU, New Hampshire et al. But when haven’t they had solid quarterbacking? Add in super soph running back Marquese Williams (53/248, injured), promising Cyncir Bowers, another soph, and freshman Ty Kephart. Two outstanding receivers return in Kamil Foster (35/502) and Mario Easterly (34/465). A defense that returns nearly intact that allowed 8ppg will give next year’s offense and new quarterback every chance to develop.
9 Wilson 6-1, 6A
The season is over but what a great recovery from the opening loss at home to Governor Mifflin, winning their last six games scoring 36ppg with a defense allowing 14, minus Mifflin. This was not your typical Bulldog team with a deep threat passing attack. Fortunately, they had an athlete under center in Kaleb Brown who softened the impact of that with his rushing ability, leading the team in rushing at 746 yards on 66 carries. He completed 50 of 94 passes for 567 yards. Next year’s offense will build around their bruising running back Jadyn Jones (6-0, 220, 75/519). Gannon Brubaker may get the nod at quarterback or two sophomores in the hunt. And you’ll see more of sophomore Cam Jones who is a special talent that can play multiple positions. The defense returns a few. Not having a losing season since 1963 says they’ll be back like they were this year after graduating big numbers and their entire line.
10 Steelton Highspire 8-0, 1A
In one of the most exciting games of the postseason, Steelton Highspire rallied from a nine point deficit (36-27) to get the winning score on an untimed down following a holding penalty on the game’s final play. Given a second chance, freshman Alex Erby hit Mehki Flowers on a 5 yard toss to ease past Old Forge 39-36. On the previous play that seemed like the last play of the game with 9 seconds remaining, Erby’s throw into the end zone was batted away with the Old Forge crowd and players erupting, thinking the game was won. But the excitement was short lived, with the penalty giving the Rollers another opportunity. What a comeback, scoring two touchdowns in the final 3 minutes of the game! Looking at the video, it was quite a catch with Flowers leaping high while twisting just enough to get his feet inside the baseline. How about freshman Alex Erby leading the Rollers on a 87 yard drive (1:28 on clock) to the Blue Devil’s 5 yard line after what looked like a game winning punt by Michael Di Gregorio pinned the Rollers on their 8 yard line. What a punt! But Erby is special, completing 17 of 29 for 228 yards with touchdowns of 22, 5, 19 and 40 yards. Not bad for a freshman on the road. Receivers Damein Hammonds (7/79pass yds), Mehki Flowers (4/58py) and Tyrone Moore (2/46py) all had touchdowns, plus running back Odell Green who rushed for 84 yards. Flowers also had an 85 yard kickoff return. Old Forge was a typical District 2 bruiser, gouging Steelton for 235 rush yards, led by fullback Colin Holzman’s 166 yards. Their pass offense was nonexistent, completing 2 of 5 passes for 36 yards. The Rollers were held to 85 yards rushing but kept them honest the entire game after Odell Green had a 75 yard touchdown on the second play from scrimmage. The win earns them a trip to the Class A state semifinals to play perennial powerhouse Bishop Guilfoyle (7-2, D6). The Marauders have been a force from Altoona for years, with consecutive state titles from 2014 through 2016, going 16-0, 16-0 and 15-0. The 2019 edition (12-3) lost in the semifinal to Farrell (14-2) 10-7 in overtime. This year’s team lost to Richland Township (8-2) 19-10 in the opener plus the forfeit loss to Forest Hills. They play out of the Laurel Highland League with teams like Chestnut Ridge, Bedford and Richland Township. This year’s team is veteran, 8 returning to the offense, 10 to the defense. In part this explains their 37ppg average on offense and eye catching 8ppg on defense. Head coach Justin Wheeler is well respected throughout the state, winning the Pa Sports Writers Coach of the Year Award multiple times. Got his 100th win this year! Steel High gets a break this year (per covid) with the semifinal played at their place, Saturday at 1 where they’ll need a disciplined performance against a poised group from Altoona.
11 Manheim Township 5-2, 6A
Township’s game with State College did not materialize last week so that’s a wrap unless a late game is found. Looking ahead to 2021, any team would be a factor with receiver Anthony Ivey (5-11, 180, jr) returning to the fold. He’s listed as the 6th receiver in the state and 20th 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, Arizona State, etc. The way Penn State is plummeting, 5-14 vs Michigan, OSU, MSU under Franklin, who’d be surprised if he de-commits for another school. Next year sees the Blue Streaks with decent numbers returning on defense and a receiver corps of Ivey, Elijah Fonseca and Michael Heckman. They’ll be looking for a quarterback with first year starter Evan Clark (6-3, 210, 1505p, 340r, 70%, 18/0 ratio….no picks!) graduating. Nice stats for seven games! He’s one of the more under rated single year starting quarterbacks at Township. One of the best kept secrets is their under publicized tradition recently that rivals Wilson’s in developing quality signal callers.
12 York High 7-1, 6A
Season over.
13 Hempfield 4-4, 6A
First year Coach George Eager, the youngest coach in the LL at 33 had a decent first year, building a solid staff in part from his connections at F&M where he was a standout. They also showed clear progress negotiating a difficult schedule that had them on the road at Exeter, a 41-34 overtime loss, and Wilson where they lost competitively 27-12. At 3-1 they got Manheim Township’s full attention in a 49-7 blowout before the Wilson loss, and a deceptive 34-20 loss to Warwick. They finished the year at home routing Cocalico 51-28. They’ll rebuild next year with one of the top junior quarterbacks in central PA, Cameron Harbaugh (6-1, 200). He completed 8 of 138 passes for 1173 yards with an 8/1 Td-Pick ratio and 59% completion rate. Maybe Eager’s the one to awaken the sleeping giant at Landisville.
14 Berks Catholic 5-3, 4A
Season over.
15 New Oxford 6-1, 4A
.
Season over.
16 Conrad Weiser 6-1, 4A
Season over.
17 Middletown 4-2, 3A
Season over.
18 ELCO 7-1, 4A
Rheece Shuey’s 25-yard field goal was all the Raiders had at Lampeter Strasburg in a losing 20-3 effort on the road. The thing is, LS couldn’t do much either. But they were the first team of the year to have a total yardage advantage over the Raiders at 398-212. ELCO came in with a 2694 to 1312 total yardage advantage over previous opponents, but hadn’t played a complete team like LS. For next season, ELCO graduates quarterback Braden Bohannon (265py, 975ry, 20 TDs) but return just about everyone else including kicker Rheece Shuey, running backs Jake Williams (64/671), Luke Williams (62/449), Cole Thomas (37/225), Cam Martin (31/225) and good numbers on defense.
19 Red Lion 5-2, 6A
Season over
20 Exeter Township 6-2, 5A
Season over.
21 Mechanicsburg 7-1, 5A
The Wildcats got a much needed win Thursday evening at Central Dauphin East defeating the Panthers 40-20. This was great tonic following last week’s 68-14 playoff loss at Governor Mifflin. Senior Micah Brubaker had a career game, completing 12 of 17 passes for 211 yards with touchdowns of 13, 39 and 2 yards. He rushed for 114 yards and two more scores on 63 and 2 yard runs. They’re home vs Northern (5-3) Friday where a win clinches the Mid Penn-Colonial Division outright. Then they finish up Thanksgiving Day against the other Mechanicsburg team in what should be a good one at Cumberland Valley (3-5).
22 Carlisle 3-3, 6A
Season over
23 Cedar Cliff 4-4, 5A
Season over
24 Conestoga Valley 6-2, 5A
Nothing like going out a winner with five straight W’s after beginning the season 1-2 with non-competitive losses to Warwick 41-0 and Cocalico 33-7. The streak began five weeks ago with a 41-35 win at Manheim Central. Big plays dominated, with the Bucks scoring on 69 and 81 yard runs and a 44 and 60 yard pass. Nate Heck booted field goals of 27 and 39 yards. The win seemed to ignite the Bucks who defeated their last four opponents by an average score of 29-7, including Boone last week 21-7. Once again Booper Johnson (great name) was the go-to back, rushing for 102 yards on 17 carries, taking his season total to 621. Quarterback Macoy Kneisley had a strange outing completing just 7 of 21 passes where three went for touchdowns of 49, 23 and 27 yards. He’s back next year plus a decent core to see if they can build on this year’s success; their first winning season since 2009.
25 Boiling Springs 4-2, 3A
Season over
TIE
Delone Catholic 6-1, 1A

Season over

Q&A with Central quarterback Jeff Hoenstine

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“Our team has been playing well and getting better each week. Hopefully we can continue with this. We are a very close group that have each other’s backs.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“We can keep working hard in practice. We are still relatively young, but a lot of guys have stepped up this year.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“We need to continue to play team football and everyone do their job every play.”

What are your goals for the rest of the season?
“Our goal is to win districts and then a state championship in AAA.”

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
”Many schools have been recruiting me for baseball since last spring.”

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

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“Not at this time with COVID.”

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

Q&A with Clearfield quarterback Oliver Billotte

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“Obviously not a normal season and we have had our ups and downs. Lost most of our season due to COVID, but we have been turning it on and playing well now.”

Have you been pleased with how you have played this season?
“My game has been decent this year, but it was a little off to start. Along with that, I have been dealing with a hamstring tear that has finally gotten better. But right now, it is one game at a time as I have improved. My best is still to come.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“Our team needs to eliminate stupid penalties like offsides and false starts. We give way too many free first downs and it is just the small things.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“The keys for our team going to that next level is going to let loose, play the game, and fly around. Sometimes we get too caught up in doing our job that we don’t play fast enough, me included. If we can trust that we know our job and fly around, I think we have something special.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I do want to play a sport in college. Ever since I was 6, my main goal has been be a division 1 athlete for either football or wrestling.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“For football, a couple of schools have talked to me like Villanova and Albany. For wrestling, I have been getting looked at and recruited pretty hard for heavyweight by Bucknell, Penn, Buffalo, VMI and a few others.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“Like I said for football, right now it has just been small talk but for wrestling it has been Bucknell.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“No, I have made zero college visits due to COVID and the dead period.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up
“I have some family that went to Clemson. Because of that, ever since I was 5 or 6, I have been a big Clemson fan.”

Q&A with Minersville wide receiver Gabe Davis

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“Not as well as I had hoped for, but it is picking up.”

Have you been pleased with how you have played this season?
“Absolutely, I go out there and give it my all whether we are winning or losing.”

How do you feel your team has played this fall?
“Well, we lost our starting quarterback to a knee injury in a scrimmage before the season even started. Our starting quarterback is now a freshman, but he’s gotten more comfortable in the position since our first game. We have quite a few freshmen starters, so we are in a rebuilding phase. Overall, we are doing the best we can with what we have.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“The team, as a whole, basically needs more experience.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“We definitely need to stick together as a team to stop the opposing team’s offense.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yes, it would be great to be able to play football at the next level.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I am currently being recruited by several colleges including Bloomsburg, Millersville, Shippensburg, Lycoming, and Misericordia.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“As of right now, Lycoming and Bloomsburg.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“Yes, I have made trips to both Bloomsburg and Lycoming. I have a few more set up in the next few weeks too.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up was and is Penn State.”

Q&A with Jersey Shore wide receiver Cayden Hess

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“Our team has taken everything going on very well and we are staying focused on our main goal for this year.”

Have you been pleased with how you have played this season?
“I think I have done pretty well. I am not to the level I want to be, but I still have been working on all the small things and trying to make myself stronger and improve my game.”

How do you feel your team has played this fall?
“Our team so far this year has done been doing good, but there are many areas to improve on to better ourselves for the playoffs coming up.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“There are many things we have to improve on before playoffs, but right now, the small things are so key to our success. We have to keep making sure everyone on the field is doing everything to our best abilities.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“As long as our whole team, coaches and players stay focused on what we want to accomplish, we will get there. We all got to pull the rope in the same direction.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I would like to continue my football career in college at Penn State.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“So far, I have had quite a few colleges reach out such as Pitt, Penn State, Princeton, Columbia, Kutztown, Temple, Akron, Liberty, Duke, and Ohio.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I took my first Visit to Kutztown University.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“I have colleges interested in meeting with me for game day visits, but no official visits yet.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up was Penn State by far. It still is to this day as well as my whole families.”

Q&A with Central Valley running back Landon Alexander

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“To be honest, everything with the football season has been great. At this point with everything going on, I’m just glad to be having a season.”

Have you been pleased with how you have played this season?
“Yes. Coming in as a junior, I knew I had a big responsibility to be able to carry the ball effectively for the team, which I believe I’m doing well in that area.”

How do you feel your team has played this fall?
“I feel that we play and are playing extremely well together right now. Our chemistry as a team is really what helps on those Friday nights. We all know that when we step on the field, we have each other’s backs. We all grew up in little league playing together. I’d say this is more than a brotherhood and we consider each other family.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“As a team, we don’t get a lot of penalties, but I’d like to see those penalties get reduced significantly.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“Coach Mark Lyons and the rest of the coaching staff does a tremendous job on breaking down film and film after film and implicating in on the field through drill work. They keep us humble and modest throughout the weeks. They really are huge help in our success moving week to week.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yes, playing college ball is a big dream of mine that I would love to accomplish. I’d love to compete in college football.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“Just coming in as a junior, I’m still relatively new and open to the recruiting process. Recently, I’ve received messages and follows from coaches on twitter that make comments on my athletic ability, my film, and hoping to get to know me more.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“No, not as of right now.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“No, not as of right now, but as the season goes on and interest from colleges and personal connections grow, I’ll be extremely excited to go on college game day trips.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Yes, growing up I loved the Pitt Panthers.”

The Recruiting Zone (November 16th, 2020)

Find out what colleges are recruiting Landon Alexander, Cayden Hess, Gabe Davis, Oliver Billotte, and Jeff Hoenstine now!


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Central Valley running back Landon Alexander

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yes, playing college ball is a big dream of mine that I would love to accomplish. I’d love to compete in college football.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“Just coming in as a junior, I’m still relatively new and open to the recruiting process. Recently, I’ve received messages and follows from coaches on twitter that make comments on my athletic ability, my film, and hoping to get to know me more.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“No, not as of right now.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“No, not as of right now, but as the season goes on and interest from colleges and personal connections grow, I’ll be extremely excited to go on college game day trips.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Yes, growing up I loved the Pitt Panthers.”


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Jersey Shore wide receiver Cayden Hess

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I would like to continue my football career in college at Penn State.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“So far, I have had quite a few colleges reach out such as Pitt, Penn State, Princeton, Columbia, Kutztown, Temple, Akron, Liberty, Duke, and Ohio.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I took my first Visit to Kutztown University.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“I have colleges interested in meeting with me for game day visits, but no official visits yet.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up was Penn State by far. It still is to this day as well as my whole families.”


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Minersville wide receiver Gabe Davis

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yes, it would be great to be able to play football at the next level.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I am currently being recruited by several colleges including Bloomsburg, Millersville, Shippensburg, Lycoming, and Misericordia.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“As of right now, Lycoming and Bloomsburg.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“Yes, I have made trips to both Bloomsburg and Lycoming. I have a few more set up in the next few weeks too.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up was and is Penn State.”


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Clearfield quarterback Oliver Billotte

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I do want to play a sport in college. Ever since I was 6, my main goal has been be a division 1 athlete for either football or wrestling.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“For football, a couple of schools have talked to me like Villanova and Albany. For wrestling, I have been getting looked at and recruited pretty hard for heavyweight by Bucknell, Penn, Buffalo, VMI and a few others.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“Like I said for football, right now it has just been small talk but for wrestling it has been Bucknell.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“No, I have made zero college visits due to COVID and the dead period.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up
“I have some family that went to Clemson. Because of that, ever since I was 5 or 6, I have been a big Clemson fan.”


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Central quarterback Jeff Hoenstine

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
”Many schools have been recruiting me for baseball since last spring.”

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

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“Not at this time with COVID.”

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


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District 11 6A Playoffs

Two of tonight’s have been cancelled for COVID outbreaks at Stroudsburg and Nazareth.

Stroudsburg was set to play Parkland in the 4/5 game, instead the Trojans move on to semifinals.

Nazareth was undefeated and the top seed as well as the defending champ. Tough end to their season. Eighth seeded Pleasant Valley moves into semis against Parkland.

The other half features #7 Easton/#2 Emmaus and #3 Freedom/#6 Pocono Mountain West. Winners will meet in semis next week.

District 3 Top 25; Nov 11, 2020


District 3 Top 25: Nov 11, 2020

District-3 Playoff picture.
6A Central York
defeated York 48-21 in final
5A Governor Mifflin
declared champ, forfeit win vs Warwick
4A District Final #1 Lampeter Strasburg (8-0) vs #2 ELCO (7-0)
3A Wyomissing defeated Middletown 38-16 in the final
2A Camp Hill defeated York Catholic 21-7 in the final
1A Steel High defeated Delone Catholic 23-13 in the final 2 weeks ago

1 Central York 8-0 (5), 6A
Quarterback Beau Pribula connected with Judah Tomb for a 72 yard score on the first play from scrimmage as Central York got past conference rival York High 48-21 in the District-3 final. Both play in the York Adams-1. As two of the more explosive teams in the state, this one featured big plays from both. Central York scored on runs of 25 yards by running back Isaiah Sturgis, 33 and 5 yard runs by Raquel Dewitt, a 9 yard burst by Qb Pribula plus touchdown passes of 72, 20 and 12 yards. York High scored on a 2 yard run by leading rusher Jaheim White (29/107), and scoring strikes of 34 and 50 yards from Qb Sam Stoner to Jaquez Simmons (4/82) and Rashim Lee (2/57) respectively. Stoner went 14 of 33 for 245 yards. Pribula completed 13 of 19 for 205 yards. It was a tight game until CY broke out from a 28-14 halftime lead to a 42-21 advantage by the end of the third. Still, with York’s speed, receivers and explosiveness, you felt they could score at any moment; one of those games you never feel comfortable with any lead. York drops to 7-1 with a young team while the Panthers advance to the PIAA quarterfinals against Delaware Valley (5-1). Talk about dominance by the Mid Penn Conference, to a lesser degree by the Lancaster-Lebanon League, this is the first time a York County team ever won a big school title. About Del Val, they’re on a five game streak since losing the opener at home to LaSalle College (5-1) 27-23. They have no notable wins on a schedule where they’ve averaged 36ppg and allowed 14. They’re home, but will have difficulty managing Central’s diverse offense that averages 56ppg with wins against Red Lion (5-2) 55-0, Central Dauphin (5-1) 42-15 and last week against the 7-1 Bearcats, 48-21. They have not played a team with Central’s balance and team speed (both sides) including LaSalle.

2 Harrisburg 4-1 (2), 6A
The loss shown is a forfeit loss per Covid the week of the York High game. They’re idle this week.

3 Governor Mifflin 7-0 (3), 5A
Mifflin’s Mustangs stampeded Mechanicsburg right out the gate with three quick first quarter touchdowns followed by three more in the second quarter on the way to a 68-14 blowout of previously undefeated Mechanicsburg. Nick Singleton rushed for 218 yards on 15 carries (more yards than M-burg), scoring on runs of 49, 54, 5 and 3 yards. He and fullback Brandon Strausser, who rushed for 102 yards (9 carries, 38 and 4 yard touchdowns), did most of their damage the first half. So make that four solid teams they’ve trampled this year, beginning with Wilson (6-1) in the opener 48-7, then Exeter (5-2) 56-14 and Berks Catholic (5-3) 62-7 and now Mechanicsburg (6-1). Not a bad slate. Where Strausser sets up much of their offense (Mid Line Option) that rushed for 432 yards this week, their suffocating defense sets all of it up, in this case holding Mechanicsburg to negative 5 yards rushing on 33 carries. Quarterback Micah Brubaker was sacked 9 times with too many TFLs to count at negative 12 yards on his 15 carries. Rutgers recruit TE/DE Cam’Ron Stewart (6-5, 245) caught two passes for 76 yards including a 37 yard Td from Connor Maryniak who completed 3 of 4 passes for 122 yards. Have to mention sophomore Delsin McNeil (5-10, 165) getting 78 yards on three carries and junior Braylor Stewart getting a 63 yards Pick Six. With undefeated and No.2 seed Warwick opting out of the postseason per covid, Governor Mifflin was awarded the district championship. They will play the winner of the Pine Richland (8-0)-Peters Township (8-0) game that will decide the WPIAL title.

4 Warwick 8-0 (4), 5A.
Opted out of playoffs per covid, see article posted 11/9.

No. 3 seeded New Oxford stunned the rusty Warriors, scoring on their first two possessions but missing their extra points to take a surprising 12-0 lead in Lititz! Second seeded Warwick was unable to practice as a team last week because of Covid-19 closing the school, resulting in the game being rescheduled to Saturday. Talk about a team out of sync! But the Colonials were the undefeated York Adams-2 champ, coming in with no fear, playing the Warriors far tougher than any team this season. Quarterback Connor Beans completed 18 of 30 passes for 244 yards to keep Warwick off balance throughout the game. Wide out Connor Herring (6/96) pulled in two for scores of 36 and 6 yards. But three turnovers, including an interception in the end zone by Adam Martin after they had a first and goal at the 1 yard line ended New Oxford’s hopes. Warwick’s bruising fullback Colton Miller (6-4, 215) also wore them down with 112 hard yards on 30 carries, scoring on two 1 yard plunges. Warwick had to shake off a week’s worth of rust but credit New Oxford for coming to play, out gaining Warwick 284 yards to 270. The semifinal win moves Warwick to a much anticipated district final with undefeated Governor Mifflin Friday at Shillington where the Mustangs will be hard to beat.

5 Central Dauphin 5-1 (5), 6A
Talk about a thud heard around the state. No one expected Central York to come to Landis Field and blow out Central Dauphin 42-15 in the 6A semifinal. But, there it is. All eyes now turn to 2021 where the Rams will feature quarterback Max Mosey in his senior year and another cast of Rams looking to play some football.

6 Wyomissing 7-0 (9), 3A
No. 2 seeded Wyomissing won their second straight district title (9 total), defeating Middletown in Middletown 38-16. Their size that mimics a 6A and speed were way too much for the top seeded Blue Raiders who were held to 8 first downs, 86 yards rushing and 148 total yards of offense. Few do that to Middletown. This resulted in Wyomissing catapulting three teams to move from ninth to sixth in the rankings. For a Wing-T team, Wyo showed balance with Zack Zechman completing 6 of 10 passes for 52 yards. His touchdown pass went to fullback Evan Niedrowski (6-4, 240) who also rushed for 172 yards, scoring on runs of 13 and 3 yards on 19 carries. This was the fifth straight year the two met in the playoffs. Middletown concludes their season at 4-2 with satisfying wins over Juniata (5-2) 54-19 and Boiling Springs (4-2) 20-14, but disappointing losses to Steelton Highspire (7-0) 43-21 and Wyomissing. The Spartans advance to States against District-2 champ Lakeland (5-0). Lakeland is a serious team, wholly veteran with 19 returning starters including the entire defense. The OL goes 6-0, 242 with a first year Qb running the Spread, averaging 33ppg. The D (4-4) hasn’t been tested by anything like Wyomissing, knowing Dunmore (3-3) is down this year and 6A Wilkes Barre (3-3) who they beat by a point, was drubbed by Williamsport (6-2, 6A) 26-0 and Dallas (4-4, 4A) 34-13 who is also having a down year. Lakeland will likely muscle up to Wyo but not have their speed or anything like FB Niedrowski, quarterback Zack Zechman or their line featuring veterans like Seamas Filoon (6-4, 280), Rushard Williams (6-4, 290), Steve Olexy (6-0, 240) and TE Aiden Mack (6-4, 210). Mack is a monster blocking TE. It’s at Lakeland so look for a well contested game.

7 Lampeter Strasburg 8-0 (6), 4A
Lampeter Strasburg seemed on their way to an easy win, opening up a 35-0 lead in the first half against undefeated Conrad Weiser. Sean McTaggart connected with five different receivers for touchdowns of 70, 16, 20, 21 and 76 yards. That’s depressing. But it seemed to inspire the Scouts who responded with a 28-0 outburst of their own, pulling within a score at 35-28 early in the third quarter. Weiser showed they have some weapons of their own, namely dual threat quarterback Logan Klitsch (15 of 36) who brought them back with 53 and 61 yard scoring runs, and touchdown tosses of 39 and 22 yards. Talk about lighting up the scoreboard. Klitsch ended the game with 233 yards passing and three touchdowns, plus 74 yards rushing on 16 carries with two scores for a combined 307 total yards. Across the field, Sean McTaggart (17 of 24) ended the game with 353 yards and seven touchdowns. Add in 51 yards rushing for 404 total yards. All totaled, the quarterbacks alone combined for 711 total yards of offense. LS tacked on three more touchdowns to Weiser’s one for a final score of 56-35. Unless they can schedule another game this week, Weiser’s season is over at 6-1. Top seeded LS of Section-3 moves on to the District-3 Final against No. 2 seed ELCO (7-0, Eastern Lebanon Cty, Section-4 champ), fresh off a 42-7 pounding of Northern last week. This is a great final for the league pitting two Lancaster Lebanon League Section champs against each other; one from Lebanon County (ELCO), one from Lancaster County (LS).

8 Bishop McDevitt 6-0 (7), 4A
McDevitt stayed perfect at 6-0 with another blowout win last week, this time defeating Palmyra (2-5) 40-7. Quarterback Lek Powell (Dayton offer) was again outstanding, completing 18 of 21 passes for 275 yards. His favorite target was Mario Easterly who had seven receptions for 114 yards and two touchdowns. He also had a 66 yard punt return for another score. The win puts them in Hershey (5-1, 5A) Friday to play the Trojans who had their perfect season ruined last week on the road by Manheim Central (3-5) 24-21. Logan Shull’s 31 yard field goal was the difference. This is still a significant game for both teams who just missed the playoffs since they are tied atop the Mid Penn-Keystone Division with 5-0 records.

9 Wilson 6-1 (8), 6A
The season is over but what a great recovery from the opening loss at home to Governor Mifflin, then winning their last six games. The following week saw them win at Manheim Township 31-28 after the devastating loss to Mifflin. Next year’s offense will build around their bruising running back Jadyn Jones (6-0, 220, 75/519). Gannon Brubaker may get the nod at quarterback or two sophomores in the hunt. The defense returns a few. Not having a losing season since 1963 says they’ll be back in the hunt as they were this year after graduating big numbers and their entire line.

10 Steelton Highspire 7-0 (10), 1A
Steelton’s game against Muncy was something like Lampeter Strasburg vs Conrad Weiser with the Rollers jumping out to a 43-14 lead, then holding off a terrific Muncy rally to edge the Indians 50-43. This was a full on aerial assault with Alex Erby of Steelton completing 24 of 35 passes for 422 yards, while Branson Eyer of Muncy connected on 10 of 16 throws for 245 yards. Erby threw six touchdowns, Eyer had four. Roller running back Odell Green had 242 yards rushing and a touchdown, while Damein Hammonds had 10 receptions for 260 yards with touchdowns of 35, 59, 22 and 23 yards! Mehki Flowers had five receptions for 130 yards. Bottom line stats show Steel High with 656 yards and Muncy with 456. The Rollers roll on to the quarterfinals against powerhouse Old Forge (5-0), the District 1-2 champ who routed Bristol 48-0 last week. Old Forge is a District-2 historic power with trips to the state final in 2013 and the semifinal in 2015. Their ten year won-loss is 91-22. Once again they are explosive, scoring 43ppg, allowing 7. The line averages 6-1, 247 lbs with a 4 year starting quarterback in Dante Lucarelli (6-1, 205). Also play James Sobol under center. They play hard-nosed football in District-2 with standouts like Berwick, Delaware Valley, Dunmore, Scranton Prep and Wyoming Area. Steel High needs to be ready here for one of their most physical games of the year, with hitting like that against bitter conference rival Middletown and playoff rival Delone in the district final. The game is in Old Forge where the Blue Devils will be pumped and hard to beat.

11 Manheim Township 5-2, 6A
The Blue Streaks are at State College (3-3, D6) Friday in a rare non-conference inter-district game. Both had last week off with the Streaks looking to extend their five game winning streak. State High is coming off a 42-35 ot win at Chambersburg (2-4), looking to get above .500 before closing out at home against D6 rival Hollidaysburg (4-3, 5A).

12 York High 7-1, 6A
The Bearcats lost to conference rival Central York in the District-3 final 48-21 but had a fine season with a young group you’ll be hearing from next year. Coach Russ Stoner has turned the program around since his hire in 2016, going 1-9, 9-2, 11-2, 7-4 and 7-1 this year. The program languished for seven years with the departure of Matt Ortega (43-23, 2004-2008) to Coatesville but is on firm ground now.

13 Hempfield 4-4, 6A
The Black Knights came close this year, losing the opener at Exeter in ot then jelling with competitive losses to Wilson and Warwick before routing Cocalico last week 51-28 in their final game. They’ll rebuild next year with one of the top junior quarterbacks in central PA, Cameron Harbaugh (6-1, 200). He completed 82 of 138 passes for 1173 yards with an 8/1 Td-Pick ratio and 59% completion rate.

14 Berks Catholic 5-3, 4A
Berks Catholic ended their erratic season with a 35-14 non-league win at Donegal (3-4). Christian Cacchione scored on runs of 20, 2 and 58 yards while Brad Hoffman threw darts, completing 5 of 6 passes for 181 yards. Hats off to the Saints for helping Harrisburg with scheduling, knowing a second loss would knock them out of the postseason with the overtime loss at Cedar Cliff taking them to 2-1 two weeks earlier. The Saints will play anyone as evidenced by recent non-conference games with Central Dauphin, Malvern Prep, McDonogh School and this year playing one of Harrisburg’s strongest teams. They return good numbers next year, especially their skill plus much of the defense.

15 New Oxford 6-1, 4A
The Colonials won the York Adams-2 then lost a heartbreaker to heavily favored Warwick in the 3A first round 14-12. (See Warwick above) Junior quarterback Connor Beans had no trouble finding his receivers completing 18 of 30 for 244 yards, keeping Warwick off balance all night. Wide out Connor Herring caught six passes for 96 yards, pulling in two for scores of 36 and 6 yards.

16 Conrad Weiser 6-1, 4A
Conrad Weiser made things exciting in the 4A semifinal, falling to top seeded and highly ranked Lampeter Strasburg in a 56-35 shootout at Lampeter. (See LS above). As exciting as the Scouts were this year with a dual threat quarterback like Logan Klitsch, look for them to be more next year with much of this year’s skill returning along with Klitsch. He finished the year with impressive stats; 83/140/1336/59%, Td-Pick ratio 15/3, rushing 69/428, 10 Tds.

17 Middletown 4-2, 3A
Middletown routed Bermudian Springs in the 3A semifinal before getting rocked at home by Wyomissing 38-16 in the final. Not the best of seasons for them with the preseason injury to quarterback Tony Powell influencing. He returned for last week’s game but was rusty (first start of year) completing 7 of 17 passes for 62 yards and two interceptions. With a record of 56-8 the last five years, look for them to challenge again next year.

18 ELCO 7-0, 4A
The Raiders’ Veer offense ran all over Northern York County in the 4A semifinal last week gaining 370 rush yards, led by quarterback Braden Bohannon’s 136 yards, Jake Williams’ 132 yards, and brother Luke’s 86 yards. All three had long scoring runs with Bohannon going 50 yards to set the tone in their first possession, Luke Williams getting a 64 yarder and Jake Williams going 47 yards for a score, plus returning a blocked field goal 80 yards for another. The 42-7 win moves them to the final where they’ll play a near mirror image of themselves at Lampeter Strasburg with one exception. LS has quarterback Sean McTaggart.

19 Cedar Cliff 4-3, 5A
It was close but no cigar for the Colts who won overtime games against Berks Catholic and Mifflin County, with seven point losses at Hershey and Carlisle and a misleading 40-28 loss to Bishop McDevitt. The Colts are home vs Cumberland Valley (2-5) Friday who is struggling. They’re going through the growing pains of a new coach, new system and another losing season, their third in a row. The good news is they won a tough one last week at revitalized Carlisle (3-3) 20-14. The week before that they lost narrowly at Spring Ford (6-1) by the same score. So, maybe the turnaround has started and will continue this week as the Colts have been erratic.

20 Red Lion 5-2, 6A
Red Lion had a competitive team this year (as always) that was overshadowed by Central York and York. Central took them apart in the opener 55-0. But it was the York game that hurt the most allowing the Bearcats to come back from a 22 point deficit to snatch a 34-30 win….in Red Lion. Quarterback Randy Fizer graduates, taking with him 870 yards passing and 1057 rushing. That’s 69% of all their yardage meaning they have a monster hole to fill.

21 Exeter Township 6-2, 5A
Exeter lost to power teams Governor Mifflin 56-14 and Berks Catholic 56-28 but routed all others by an average score of 40-12. They return much of their skill minus the quarterback. But their ten year 78-33 record says they’ll be heard from again next season.

22 Mechanicsburg 6-1, 5A
The Wildcats went undefeated in the regular season, bouncing back from a 6-5 campaign last year before losing in the 5A opener to Governor Mifflin 68-14. Their twelve wins the last two years exceed their won-loss from the five preceding years where they went 8-42. It would be good having the Wildcats back, making the MP-Keystone that much more competitive. But it’s difficult in a division where Bishop McDevitt (111-23 last 10) and Cedar Cliff (79-31 last 10) have dominated. They're at CD East (0-7) Thursday 11/12,

23 Carlisle 3-3, 6A
This once proud program regained its footing this year, fielding a vastly improved group with a “competitive loss” to State College 38-29 and a road win at Cedar Cliff 35-28. Against the Colts, running back Sean Thomas rushed for 334 yards, scoring on runs of 63, 11, 8 and 41 yards. He finished with 1024 yards….in six games. Sophomore quarterback Ezeeka Thomas is a work in progress but had 456 rush yards. The Herd posted numbers like that because of a legitimate Mid Penn OL that projects to be decent again next year.

24 Conestoga Valley 5-2, 5A
CV snuck up on many of us this year (last winning season 2009), earning a second place tie in the LL-2 with Cocalico and Solanco behind Warwick. They are currently on a four game winning streak hosting Daniel Boone (2-5) whose going the opposite direction with a five game losing streak.

25 Boiling Springs 4-2, 3A
Heck of a rebound from 0-10 last year and 3-7, 0-10, 0-10 the preceding three years to make the playoffs. That, plus walloping Camp Hill 35-0 and hanging with Steel High, losing 20-16 shows something is in the water (springs?). And with key personnel returning like quarterback Colin Lunde, RB/LB Joey Menke and LB Carson Garvey and others, they’re looking to keep it going next year.
TIE
Delone Catholic 6-1, 1A

The Squires were perfect in the regular season, winning the York-Adams-3 division for the second straight year before losing the 1A opener to Steelton Highspire 23-13. Delone is one of the best small school programs in central Pennsylvania, with a 109-45 record the last 14 years.
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PennLive Week 10 Rankings

By Eric F. Epler | eepler@pennlive.com
Below are PennLive’s updated high school football state rankings through Nov. 9. PennLive will publish rankings each Tuesday through the PIAA Championships later this month. Teams are listed with district, overall record and previous rank.
CLASS 6ARECORDPREVIOUS RANK
1. St. Joseph’s Prep (12)4-01
2. McDowell (10)6-03
3. Central York (3)8-05
4. Pittsburgh C.C. (7)6-210
5. La Salle College HS (12)5-14
6. North Allegheny (7)6-12
7. Delaware Valley (2)5-16
8. Harrisburg (3)4-18
9. Pennridge (1)6-09
10. Souderton (1)6-0NR
Honorable mention: Central Dauphin (3) 5-1,
Nazareth (11) 6-1, Spring-Ford (1) 6-1, Wilson (3) 6-1,
York High (3) 7-1
CLASS 5ARECORDPREVIOUS RANK
1. Pine-Richland (7)8-01
2. Peters Township (7)8-04
3. Warwick (3)8-02
4. Governor Mifflin (3)7-05
5. Cathedral Prep (10)5-28
6. Gateway (7)5-13
7. East Stroudsburg South (11)4-06
8. Upper Dublin (1)5-110
9. West Chester Rustin (1)4-1NR
10. Mechanicsburg (3)6-19
Honorable mention: New Oxford (3) 6-1,
Penn-Trafford (7) 6-2, Southern Lehigh (11) 4-1,
Unionville (1) 3-1
CLASS 4ARECORDPREVIOUS RANK
1. Jersey Shore (4)9-01
2. Lampeter-Strasburg (3)8-02
3. Aliquippa (7)9-03
4. Thomas Jefferson (7)7-14
5. Oil City (10)9-05
6. Bishop McDevitt (3)6-06
7. Crestwood (2)8-09
8. ELCO (3)7-0NR
9. Plum (7)8-18
10. Belle Vernon (7)6-27
Honorable mention: Conrad Weiser (3) 6-1,
Harbor Creek (10) 7-1, Juniata (3) 5-2,
McKeesport (7) 6-2, Upper Moreland (1) 5-1
CLASS 3ARECORDPREVIOUS RANK
1. Central Valley (7)9-01
2. Wyomissing (3)7-02
3. Hickory (10)8-03
4. Bedford (5)9-05
5. Lakeland (2)5-09
6. Danville (4)8-110
7. Notre Dame-Green Pond (11)7-08
8. Elizabeth-Forward (7)7-0NR
9. Montoursville (4)8-14
10. North Catholic (7)8-16
Honorable mention: Archbishop Carroll (12) 2-2,
Central Martinsburg (6) 8-1, Lake-Lehman (2) 7-2,
Middletown (3) 4-2, North Schuylkill (11) 6-0, Tyrone (6) 6-1
CLASS 2ARECORDPREVIOUS RANK
1. Southern Columbia (4)8-01
2. Wilmington (10)8-02
3. Beaver Falls (7)9-04
4. Sto-Rox (7)8-15
5. Richland (6)8-16
6. Chestnut Ridge (5)7-2NR
7. Berlin-Brothersvalley (5)8-13
8. Apollo-Ridge (7)6-17
9. Bishop McDevitt (12)4-1NR
10. Camp Hill (3)3-2NR
Honorable mention: Bellwood-Antis (6) 6-1,
Brookville (9) 7-1, Farrell (10) 5-3, South Williamsport (4) 5-2,
York Catholic (3) 6-2
CLASS 1ARECORDPREVIOUS RANK
1. Clairton (7)7-01
2. Old Forge (2)5-02
3. Jeannette (7)8-13
4. Steel-High (3)7-04
5. Williams Valley (11)8-15
6. Reynolds (10)8-06
7. Bishop Guilfoyle (6)6-28
8. Muncy (4)7-27
9. Tri-Valley (11)5-19
10. Redbank Valley (9)7-0NR
Honorable mention: Canton (4) 4-1,
Delone Catholic (3) 6-1, Homer-Center (6) 6-1,
Juniata Valley (6) 6-3, Rochester (7) 7-2
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