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Mid-State Rankings, Week 8 Oct 16, 2019:

(All classes are 6A and District 3 teams unless otherwise shown; Districts 3, 4, 5, 6, 9)

1 Manheim Township (8-0)
State College’s 21 point loss at home to Central Dauphin paved the way for Manheim Township’s move to the top spot in the Mid-State rankings, aided by their 62-0 dismantling of Cedar Crest (6-2). This was their first shutout of the season where they’ve allowed just 55 points. The schedule hasn’t been a cakewalk either with quality wins against Central Dauphin (6-2) 10-7, Wilson (7-1) 30-14, Warwick (6-2) and now Cedar Crest. That’s quite a listing knowing CD defeated Harrisburg and State College, Wilson defeated Central Dauphin, Manheim Central, Warwick and Spring Ford, while Warwick handled Manheim Central 37-7 before last week’s 14-7 loss at Wilson. About last week, the Blue Streaks put on a show, dominating all aspects of the game with a 21-0 first quarter followed by a 24-0 second quarter. Cedar Crest has a nice team but showed they weren’t ready for this level of competition. Their 34-14 loss the week before at Warwick demonstrated as much. The Blue Streaks defense put on another clinic, holding the Falcons to 63 yards of offense with 4 interceptions, one a Pick-6 by Jon Engel of 51 yards before the half. Backups played much of the second half with eight running backs accounting for 248 yards. Harrison Kirk completed 4 of 6 passes for 80 yards and a score. He was their leading rusher with 58 yards and another touchdown. They move on to play winless McCaskey (0-8), then close at home against rival Hempfield, where they’ll end the regular season undefeated. Barring a total collapse, they’ll enter the District-3 playoffs with the top seed where they’ll encounter formidable opposition from Wilson, Harrisburg, Central Dauphin, Chambersburg and Central York.
2 Central Dauphin (6-2)
Central Dauphin has been on a roll since losing at Manheim Township 10-7 six weeks ago, winning their last five games by an average score of 37-10. Impressive stuff knowing this included road wins at Harrisburg 15-14 three weeks ago and last week at State College 34-13. Last week’s win stood out, with their well-regarded defense winning the game. It was another typical Mid Penn defensive slugfest, between the two best teams in the conference. The score was 13-13 well into the 4th quarter when a CD blitz sacked-stripped Qb Brady Dorner in his end zone with defensive end Jackson Talbott (6-3, 225, sr) falling on it with under seven minutes left in the game. On their next possession, Dorner was again feeling pressure at his 36 yard line, lofting an errant throw Malachi Bowman got under, returning it 48 yards for a 27-13 lead. These two scores happened in a span of two and a half minutes! A subsequent pick deep in Lion territory set up the final touchdown by Timmy Smith with just under two minutes to seal the win. Talk about a wild finish! 28 unanswered points in the final seven minutes saw Central Dauphin get 2 sacks, 3 picks, a fumble and a blocked extra point. Strange saying…. ‘the defense blew this one wide open’. Like Harrisburg two week before, State College marched up and down the field piling up yards (230 rushing, 188 passing) but not points. CD had 233 total yards. Harrisburg did the same thing, outgaining the Rams 397 yards to 189. It’s no secret Central Dauphin’s active and relentless defense covers shortcomings of the offense. But at 30ppg average, it’d be a mistake calling it pedestrian, despite taking a back seat to defense. Coach McNamee never hid the fact the best athletes go to defense. Harrisburg’s team scoring efficiency was poor at 28.35 yards per point. SC’s was worse at 32.15 yards to get a single point. The Rams were a cool 6.85yyp. The win puts them in sole possession of first place with a very good Chambersburg (5-3) team up next coming off their close call 27-25 loss to Harrisburg.
3 State College (7-1, D6)
State College’s undefeated season came to a sudden conclusion last week losing a key conference game to Central Dauphin 34-13. The loss drops them into second place at 4-1 a game behind CD at 5-0 with two games left. The record books would likely show this to be one of the very few occasions where State lost a game, especially at home, after piling up 418 yards of offense to the other team’s 233 yards. Rarer still is an SC defense allowing a visitor to put up 28 unanswered fourth quarter points while blowing a 13-7 lead. But they looked good with sophomore Dresyn Green gaining 110 yards and Isaiah Edwards having a strong game with 155 total yards. Unfortunately, Brady Dorner had a rough game, completing 15 of 25 passes for 180 yards with 3 interceptions. He was also the victim of a hard hit and strip by Shamar Joppy that was recovered by Jackson Talbott to launch Central Dauphin’s fourth quarter explosion. Altoona (1-7) is next before closing out at home against Cumberland Valley.
4 Wilson (7-1)
Wilson got their revenge last week defeating Warwick 14-7 to erase the memory of last year’s 38-12 pounding at Warwick. After securing a somewhat safe looking 14-0 lead at the half that dwindled to 14-7 at the end of the third quarter, Wilson withstood a Warwick charge, making a goal line stand where LB Anthony Koper (5-11, 235, sr) stuffed Colton Miller (6-2, 205, jr) at the 2 yard line (3rd and goal), throwing him back as time expired. The Bulldogs contained Miller throughout the game, holding him to 60 yards on 20 carries. Joey McCracken was also checked, completing 13 of 26 passes for 128 yards. He was intercepted once. Mason Lenart was almost unstoppable (too quick), rushing for 129 yards on 7 carries. FB/LB Avanti Lockhart kept the chains moving on 16 carries for 47 hard yards. Versatile Qb Kaleb Brown did damage rushing for 72 yards while keeping Warwick on their heels with 8 completions for 62 yards. He survived 2 picks, the last being turned away with the goal line stand. The win was Coach Doug Dahm’s 152nd at Wilson, putting him at the top of the heap ahead of the legendary John Gurski, for whom the stadium is named. They move on to play Cedar Crest (6-2) then McCaskey before entering the postseason with the 2 seed behind Township as things stand now.
5 Harrisburg (5-3)
Harrisburg recovered from a 14-0 first quarter deficit against vastly improved Chambersburg with a 27-0 second quarter allowing them to get past the Trojans, 27-25. What a nightmare for Chambersburg, wilting against an explosive Cougar rally. They simply couldn’t handle John McNeil who threw for 246 yards and 3 touchdowns. Kamere Day caught 3 passes for 120 yards, two going for 29 and 80 yard scores with a now healthy Donte Kent scoring on a 64 yard touchdown. The win ended the two game losing streak to Central Dauphin and State College where they were held to 14 and 6 points respectively. They’ve had trouble being consistent this year, finding anything approaching a rhythm with teams like Coatesville, Archbishop Hoban, CD and State College on the docket. Who wouldn’t, especially on a team trying to replace quarterback Kane Everson’s 2734 pass yards and 1008 rush yards. Andre White (6-3, 255) will always be a hole at linebacker tho he will likely help Jimbo Fisher turn things around at Texas A&M. So they’ll take that 27 point second quarter outburst, their only scoring of the game even if it did all come in a single period. Qb McNeil completing 11 of 15 gets your attention with a ground game that finally got something going at 116 yards. Carlisle is next at 2-6 followed by Altoona at 1-7 where Harrisburg should breeze, getting healthy and rested for what promises to be a competitive postseason.
6 Southern Columbia (8-0, 2A, D4)
Southern Columbia won their 79th consecutive regular season game and 40th in a row overall with a 42-0 win against Wyoming Area (7-1). The Warriors where completely throttled, held to 46 yards rushing and 96 passing. Qb Dominic DeLuca was intercepted 6 times. It was SCA’s sixth shutout of the season. The offense had another big day, rushing for 274 yards (9.7ypc), led by the Garcia brothers; Gavin with 108 yards and Gaige with 72. Preston Zachman balanced things out completing 6 of 12 passes for 132 yards and a touchdown toss. He contributed as a stand out in the secondary with a Pick 6 in the third quarter. Up next is Montoursville (8-0, 3A), another Triple-A like Wyoming with a stronger history of success going 59-27 (69%) the last 7 years and 75-43 (64%) the last 10 against a similar schedule. They don’t appear to be any more of a threat than WA, but must be a prideful bunch with their tradition and the continued success of this year.
7 Warwick (6-2, 5A)
Warwick made a second half push against Wilson (see above) that fell short with a goal line stand by Wilson at the end of the game. The stand followed an interception thrown by Qb Kaleb Brown, his second of the night. Although the score was close at 14-7, Wilson did a number on Qb Joey McCracken, pressuring him throughout the game and limiting him to 126 yards passing and one touchdown. Where they iced it was taking Colton Miller out of the game, holding him to 60 yards on 20 carries and Warwick to 104 yards on 33 carries Miller came into the game averaging 92 yards a game (111/641) with 15 touchdowns averaging 5.7ypc after becoming their go to guy week three. Conversely, Warwick couldn’t slow Wilson’s running game (Mason Linart and Avanti Lockhart) that gained 248 yards. It was still a solid Warwick effort helped in part by Wilson turnovers. They currently hold the 6 seed, traveling to Conestoga Valley (2-6. 5A, LL-2) who is dangerous despite the record averaging 33ppg their last six, including 41 against Cocalico and 27 against Manheim Central.
8 Central York (7-1)
The Panthers won their sixth straight game since the 13-12 loss at Cumberland Valley six weeks ago, defeating Northeastern (6-2) 57-7. It was over at the half with Central up 43-0. Beau Pribula seems fully recovered from a shoulder injury after completing 10 of 13 passes for 190 yards and throwing 2 touchdown passes. He rushed for 60 yards and another score. Running backs Isiah Sturgis added 88 yards with Jahmar Simpson contributing 64 yards and 2 touchdowns. At 432 total yards, the offense is coming together, attempting to replace the production of senior quarterback Cade Pribula (2863 yards, 63%, 32/11 ratio) and others. The defense contributed with a 23 yard Pick-6, a 58 yard punt return and a 25 yard scoop and score, while holding the Bobcats to 172 total yards. Central moves on to play Dallastown (2-6) before deciding the York-Adams-1 championship at home against York High (6-2) where both are deadlocked at 5-0.
9 Chambersburg (5-3)
Two scores by Keyshawn Jones and a 14-0 lead weren’t enough at Harrisburg where the Chambersburg suffered a disappointing 27-25 loss. The Cougar’s defense was in lockdown mode most of the game, holding Jones to 64 yards rushing and Tyler Luther to 66 yards on 6 catches. Defensive lapses lost this one leaving Kamere Day totally uncovered for an 88 yard touchdown with no one within 20 yards of him, then a 29 yard strike catching him alone in the end zone for another score. Chambersburg battled back with Qb Brady Stumbaugh punching one in from the 1 yard line and Tyler Luther hitting a 37 yard field goal in the third quarter. Take away the busted coverage and it’s a whole new game. A road game is next at Landis field against Central Dauphin where a Friday night crowd will be boisterous, welcoming the Rams back from the big win at State College last week.
10 Manheim Central (6-2, 5A)
Manheim Central got off to an exciting start against Conestoga Valley when Owen Pappas returned the opening kickoff 80 yards for the score, followed by quarterback Evan Simon rushing for scores of 10 and 52 yards on the way to a 56-27 rout of Conestoga Valley. What a first quarter. By game’s end Simon had another incredible performance, completing 15 of 22 passes for 292 yards with touchdown tosses of 22, 26 and 77 yards. He also rushed for 138 yards, scoring on 1, 10 and 52 yard runs. His performance alone accounted for 430 of their 546 yards of offense, or 79%. Ben and Colby Wagner had 210 yards in receptions with Cole Lastinger at 56 yards on 3 receptions. For Conestoga Valley, a quarterback like Bradley Stoltzfus throwing for 1849 yards and rushing for 596 yards on the year, is hard to shut down. The Barons didn’t, with Stoltzfus completing 16 of 27 passes for 164 yards and 3 touchdowns, leading them in rushing with 99 yards. Too bad the Buckskins don’t have more to put around him. The win keeps Manheim Central atop the LL-2 at 4-0, a game ahead of Lampeter Strasburg and Cocalico at 3-1. They currently hold the 3rd seed behind York and Shippensburg with winless Garden Spot up next.
11 Susquehanna Township (7-1, 4A)
Susquehanna Township is on a seven game winning streak after thumping Red Land at West Shore Stadium last week 35-14. Although the Tribe had size and speed advantage, the Patriots battled, staying within a score, down 21-14 at the half. Ultimately Hanna’s size wore them down, holding them scoreless in the second half with a now healthy running back Jacob Seigle scoring twice to secure the win. Seigle had a strong outing, rushing for 186 yards, with scores of 1, 9, 11 and 30 yards. DE Armani Caraballo got in on the fun with a 5 yard scoop and score in the 1st quarter. So here they are tied with Cedar Cliff at 4-0 atop the Keystone Conference. Hanna returns to the West Shore Friday for a decisive game against Cedar Cliff where something has to break with the Colts on a five game winning streak. Rest assured the Tribe remembers last year’s 30-0 home loss that ended their six game winning streak. That was a young group (6-5) taking on a far more mature 10-3 Cedar Cliff team. The roles are reversed this year.
12 Shippensburg (8-0, 5A)
Dillsburg, home of the famous Pickle Drop witnessed a great game decided in the final moment when Isaiah Houser picked off Northern’s desperation pass as the game ended, allowing Shippensburg to escape with a 27-21 road win. Shippensburg knew they had to stop Northern’s all-time leading rusher Kyle Swartz and they did, sort of, holding him to 182 yards on 33 carries, 18 yards below his average. It was a great game between rivals locked in an old school ground and pound where each side lined up and went at it. Northern rushed for 222 yards on 42 carries, Shippensburg for 226 on 40 carries. Alex Sharrow was the man for the Greyhounds, rushing for 111 yards with FB Jacob Loy blasting for 76. In the end, with Northern knocking on the door, Swartz was turned away, stood up and stuffed on downs at Ship’s 8 yard line. The Greyhounds got out to the 31 with the clock running down when Northern stripped Loy but were picked off by Houser to end it. That’s how a game between conference co-leaders should go, down to the wire. Ship ends the season with home games against Red Land (crossover) Friday and Big Spring both 4-4, while Northern looks to win out against Big Spring and Waynesboro.
13 Milton Hershey (7-1, 5A)
Milton Hershey survived the letdown scare after beating Middletown by leading Palmyra (3-5) 25-7 at the half, then holding on as the Cougars clawed their way back before losing 45-30. The Spartans skill people were on display in this one with Tigere Mavesere turning heads passing for 255 yards (14/21-67%, 2 Tds) and rushing for 142 yards on 13 carries. One man show? The scary thing about that is…he is NOT a one man show, supported with multiple weapons to choose from. Super soph running back Dion Bryant rushed for 80 yards, getting touchdowns of 1, 6 and 7 yards while snagging 5 passes for 58 yards, one, a 44 yard touchdown. Big Josh Parra (6-4, 210) scorched Palmyra’s secondary, catching 4 passes for 140 yards with touchdowns of 30 and 72 yards. The Spartans (7-1, 5-0) looked special in winning, outgaining Palmyra 508 to 325 total yards. Camp Hill (2-6, 1-4) is next, with the real test coming the following week at home against Steelton Highspire (7-1, 4-1). A win by the explosive Rollers (40ppg) combined with a Middletown win sets up a 3 way tie in the Mid Penn-Capital Conference.
14 Middletown (7-1 3A)
Middletown got back on the winning track after losing to Milton Hershey two weeks ago by defeating Trinity in a lackluster 33-9 game. Their outstanding backs had notable games, with sophomore Tymir Jackson (5-10, 220….ouch!) running for 180 yards while all-everything Jose Lopez (5-11, 190) tacked on 159 yards. Middletown’s backs just beat you up. The big news is a strong game from sophomore quarterback Tony Powell (6-4, 190) who completed 7 of 10 passes for 215 yards, 106 caught by Chris Joseph for 2 touchdowns. In a run centric offense, Powell’s development as a sophomore Qb should pay real dividends in the postseason. They’ll win out from here with a home game against East Pennsboro (2-6) this week and the closer at Palmyra (3-5) the following week.
15 Berks Catholic (5-3, 4A)
The Saints have improved with three straight wins and the ongoing return to health of a talented backfield. Schuylkill Valley at 3-5 didn’t offer much resistance but it’s still good seeing Abdul MacFoy fully recovered, gaining 180 yards on 12 attempts with touchdowns of 4, 34 and 76 yards….and Colby Newton with 13 carries netting 145 yards with touchdown runs of 1 and 36 yards. Fullback CJ Carwll gained 59 yards on 3 totes with a 5 yard touchdown. Sometimes it just feel good thumping someone! The bottom line was a dominant 51-10 win were they outgained SV 495 to 120. The Berks-2 scheduling is perfect this year with 3-0 BC at home Friday against Fleetwood (7-1, 2-1) followed by Wyomissing (8-0, 3-0) in the closer at home. Although Fleetwood was crushed by Wyomissing three weeks ago, 35-7, BC can’t overlook them. They have enough talent in Christian Moreno with 970 rush yards and Qb Charlie Maddocks throwing for 1148 yards (68/147-47%) to make a game of it. Plus, the Berks-2 is still a three horse race with seeds on the line making every game a playoff game.
16 Cocalico (6-2, 5A)
Cocalico jumped on winless Garden Spot taking a 34-6 lead into the half then coasting home with a 54-13 win. A number of underclassman got significant time with sophomores Austin Vang (5-8, 170) getting 12 carries for 85 yards and Steven Flinton (5-8 155) with 9 carries for 72 yards and two touchdowns. Flinton has become a mainstay in their attack this year with 394 rush yards and four touchdowns. Juniors Micah Uysse (6-0, 165) had 62 yards on 10 carries with a touchdown while Carson Nash caught a 14 yard touchdown and ran for a 10 yard score. Cocalico’s Veer was purring (382yds) with Qb Noah Palm rushing for 140 yards on five carries for two scores. Ronald Zalm ended any hope of a comeback with a 2nd quarter 90 yard punt return, giving the Eagles a 34-0 lead. Solanco (5-3, 2-1) is next with their Triple-Option well suited for their entirely new O-Line made up of two juniors and three sophomores. They’re doing something right averaging 336 yards a game. Nick Yannutz leads the team with 1260 yards followed by Qb Grady Unger rushing for 669 yards. Cocalico allowed a lot of points recently at 56, 46 and 41 in three of their last four games? The Golden Mules shouldn’t surprise a Veer team but they could be stubborn and drag it out.
17 Wyomissing (8-0, 3A)
Wyomissing essentially emptied the bench in the first quarter, rotating everyone in on the way to a 44-7 halftime lead. Ten different players scored against a crippled Kutztown team playing without key players and their head coach who was suspended earlier in the week. Kutztown entered the game winless allowing 57ppg? Their game against Jim Thorpe (6-2, 3A, D-11) was called at the half with JT ahead 76-0. Against Wyomissing they failed to get a first down, did not throw a pass and ended the game with 8 total yards. Wyo moves on to play Schuylkill Valley (3-5, 1-2) who limps in off a 51-10 loss to Berks Catholic.
18 Exeter Township (6-2, 5A)
That’s four in a row for Exeter against the softer part of the schedule where they won by an average score of 39-9. Twin Valley (2-6, 5A) was woefully outmanned here, getting nine first downs and 206 yards (90 rushing) to Exeter’s 457 yards. Meanwhile Exeter established great balance rushing for 285 yards and passing for 172. Gavin McCusker connected on 5 of 9 passes and rushed for 55 more. The schedule ramps up Friday where things will be jumping in Shillington against the surging Governor Mifflin Mustangs who’ve won five straight. I had these guys way over rated, thinking they’d develop a credible passing attack with second year Kolbie Reeser under center and Nicholas Singleton (1180 rush yards this year) in the backfield. They haven’t. Few defenses feel threatened against a team completing 46% of their passes for 525 yards with a ratio of 4 to 5. But, with five straight wins, they come in hot like Exeter, averaging 49ppg allowing 11. And with a conference record of 78-7 since 2006, everyone in District-3 knows the conference title always goes through Governor Mifflin. They are to the Berks-1 what Cumberland Valley has been to the Mid Penn-Commonwealth, Wilson to the LL-Section One, St. Joseph’s to the PCL, North Penn to the Suburban One. With both Exeter and Mifflin tied at 4-0, the outcome essentially decides the Berks-1. And because both are 5A teams jockeying for higher seeds, there’s even more at stake.
19 Cedar Cliff (6-2, 5A)
Here’s another team on a roll with the Colts winning their last five games since losing to Harrisburg 41-7. For a team that lost a lot of bodies last year, they’ve proven to be resilient, finding themselves tied with Susquehanna Township atop the Mid Penn-Keystone at 4-0. Much of the Colts success can be attributed to their workhorse running back Jaheim Morris who has been almost unstoppable, rushing for 1584 yards after last week’s record setting 300 yards against Mechanicsburg. The Wildcats started James Anderson at quarterback for the injured Micah Brubaker who went down in the first half against Red Land two weeks ago. This is a great story with Anderson all of 5-8 and 145 pounds. He guided them to a 16-11 win against Red Land then almost pulled the stunner against the Colts last week, leading them to two scores in the fourth quarter to draw within seven before losing 31-24. The loss drops Mechanicsburg to 5-3 (2-2) while Cedar Cliff gets ready for Susquehanna Township (7-1, 4-0) in a game that will decide the conference championship.
20 Bishop McDevitt (5-3, 4A)
Bishop McDevitt began the year at #12 where they were stunned at home by Cumberland Valley 21-7. The following week saw them beat Gettysburg (6-2, 4A) 28-9, then lose again at home to Middletown (7-1, 3A) 6-2. This was big news in the Harrisburg area seeing the Crusaders at 1-2. A third loss, this time to conference rival Cedar Cliff dropped them to 2-3 and out of the Mid-State rankings. Since that point they’ve won the last three games, showing significant improvement (offense), albeit, against a weak slate of teams beating Waynesboro (4-4), Lower Dauphin (0-8) and Hershey (1-7) by an average score of 45-10. Great tonic for a young team! Leading rusher Marquese Williams (5-10, 170) is freshman, starting the last seven games with 607 yards at 7.9 ypc. He is highly regarded. Their top receiver is Mario Easterly (6-0, 170), a sophomore, with 43 receptions for 685 yards or 15.9 yards per reception. The quarterback is junior Lek Powell (5-10, 175) at 62% for 1288 yards with 13 touchdowns and 5 interceptions. The offense is a work in project as evidenced by no-shows against Cumberland Valley, Middletown and Cedar Cliff, scoring 7, 2 and 17 points respectively. But the veteran defense with seven returning starters has carried the team, allowing 11ppg. Any offense with that defense has them competitive with most teams in the district. They are still in the MP-Keystone race with Susquehanna Township and Cedar Cliff facing off Friday and McDevitt playing Susquehanna Township the following week.
Honorable Mention:
Cedar Crest (6-2)
home Wilson 7-1
York Suburban (8-0, 4A) at West York 1-7, 4A
Savion Harrison For YS had 325yds on 24 atps-4Tds in 31-19 win vs Gettysburg. Gbg's Ruger Pennington went 22/140 with Charles Warren at 152 tot yds.
Northern York (5-3, 5A) at Big Spring 4-4, 4A
York-William Penn (6-2, 5A) home Northeastern 6-2, 5A
Lampeter Strasburg (6-2, 4A) at Elizabethtown 3-5, 5A
Montoursville (8-0, 3A, D4) home Southern Columbia 8-0, 2A
Gettysburg (6-2, 4A) home Dover 2-6, 5A
Steelton Highspire (7-1, 2A) home Boiling Springs 0-8, 4A
Mount Carmel (6-2, 3A, D4) home Bloomsburg 3-5, 2A
Governor Mifflin (5-3, 5A) home Exeter Township 6-2, 5A
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West - NP

This is a huge game in District 1. I expect War Memorial to be packed. I haven’t seen much chatter about the game. It sounds like NP will be missing their starting QB and RB. If that’s the case, it will certainly help the Bucks. On the other side of the ball, will NP be able to stop West’s potent Wing T attack? I know NP’s defense has struggled most of the year. If their offensive weapons are healthy, I’d fully expect a shootout. But as it stands now, I’ll take West by a FG.
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Lehigh Valley Week 8

Weird slate of games this week. Lots of heavy favorites and only one match up of contenders, Easton and Bethlehem Catholic tonight.

Freedom was close early before turning on the jets in a 63-28 win over Emmaus. Freedom scored on all 9 possessions that did not end in kneel downs, making it 13 straight drives with a touchdown for the Patriots. Jared Jenkins set a school record with 426 yards on 25-29 passing. Gabe Caton and Vince Reph both had over 100 yards receiving, and Jalen Stewart set Freedoms career touchdown record with 33 after scoring three times last night. The defense did give up 157 yards to Brandon Camire who now is over 1,300 for the season for Emmaus.

In the other contenders games, Nazareth blew out Whitehall and Parkland stomped Stroudsburg in a cross division game.

Easton travels to BASD Stadium to take on Becahi tonight. It will be a great running back battle between Becahi’s Tavion Banks and Easton’s Nahjee Adams. Adams, a junior, leads 6A in rushing statewide and has been the breakout player in the Lehigh Valley while Banks is approaching his second straight 1,000 yard season and can set the Golden Hawks career touchdown record with two tonight. Banks is also looking to go 4-0 against his former Easton teammates.

Q&A with Central Bucks East defensive back Will Silverman

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“The season hasn’t gone as we expected so far. We started off 3-0, but then lost four straight. We still have a chance to make the playoffs.”

Who is your next opponent? What are your thoughts on them overall?
William Tennent. They’re a very talented team but just like South as long as everyone does their job we’ll be in good shape.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“Our team needs to improve on the defensive side. We’ve given up lots of points recently, so we just need to work harder on defense.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“We need to keep to our strengths and work on our weaknesses. As I said earlier our defense needs improvement which the coaches and the players both understand. Our strength so far has been our passing game, so were going to stick to that to be successful.”

What are your goals for the rest of the season?
“We plan on winning our next three games and making a playoff run. Personally, I hope to break the single season receiving yard record. I need about 200 yards in the next 3 games, which I think is definitely possible.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I want to play football at the D-1 level.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I haven’t been recruited by any colleges so far.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“I am taking a gameday visit to Villanova later this month with my quarterback.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up was Oregon University.”

Q&A with Avonworth defensive end Trevor Faulkner

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“My season has been great. The team is doing well, and I have become a pivotal role on both sides of the ball.”

Who is your next opponent? What are your thoughts on them overall?
“Our week 9 game is against McGuffey. In my opinion, they will be the best team that we face this year. We are going to bring a lot of energy to that game because it was one of our only losses last year.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“We are a pretty solid team, but there is always room to improve. I think the most important thing that we can work on is communication on the field. We integrate new things into our offense all the time and the only way to execute them is field communication.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“Our keys going forward are going to be staying focused on our goals and staying mentally tough throughout each playoff game.”

What are your goals for the rest of the season?
“Our goal is to win a WPIAL championship. It has been that since December and I think we have done a good job staying focused so far.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I would like to play football in college. If you look at student loan debt today, it is outrageous. So, a scholarship anywhere is my goal and I would get to continue playing football.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I had a very explosive off-season and am just beginning to receive some attention. Out of all the coaches I have sent my film to, Pennsylvania University is most interested. They were also the most helpful by giving me immediate feedback.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I have not attended any colleges so far.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall
“Pennsylvania University has invited me, so I plan to get there as soon as possible.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“I was raised around Pitt. My family has always been Pittsburgh fans.”

Q&A with Cathedral Prep quarterback Collin Johnson

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“It’s been great so far. We’re getting better every week and we’re looking to make another statement this year.”

Who is your next opponent? What are your thoughts on them overall?
“We play Erie High School and they’re another rival to us. They are very talented, but we can for sure compete with them.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“We can definitely improve on practice speed. We start practice slow and then we increase during it. but we need to start fast and finish it from there.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“If our offense and defense keeps doing their job, we will be very lethal.”

What are your goals for the rest of the season?
“Our team’s goal is to finish the season in Hershey and get another ring on our finger.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“If I get the opportunity to play at the next level, I’d love to play football in college.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I have made a few college visits, but I’m not positive where I’d like to go.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college team growing up to watch was Penn State because of the way they represent our state.”

Q&A with Peters Township safety Donovan McMillon

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“The season has started great. We are fighting through adversity with a few injuries, but it has been fun balling out. We want that 5A WPIAL championship.”

Who is your next opponent? What are your thoughts on them overall?
“Our next opponent would be Bethel. They are a very good football team and it should be a great game. Our main goals haven’t changed, it is to focus on going 1-0 each week.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“Every week, we look to improve as a team. Our recent loss gave us good indications of what we need to work on. With the recent return of some players to the starting lineup, we look to retool our already very good defensive schemes. Overall, I think we can rebound and be an even better team.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“We have three main factors we need to emphasize in order for us to go forward. One is to stay humble and focused on our goals. Two is to stay hungry and prepare like every game is the championship. Three is going 1-0 each week. We don’t look at our record or who we will have to play in the future, just focus on the team we have that week.”

What are your goals for the rest of the season?
“My goals are one to continue to ball out and focus on what’s at stake. I would like to play at the highest level of collegiate sports. I have to keep making big plays and help my team throughout the rest of the season. I want to finish with over 80 tackles and a few more sacks and an INT. Our goal as a team is to improve on both sides of the ball and win the WPIAL championship.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Of course. My goal ever since I can remember is to play in the National Football League. I want to play at the highest level on Saturdays. Wrestling has always had a major role of preparing me for any athletic contest, which will always be an option for me at the collegiate level.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I came into the recruiting process a tad late, but I’m striving to pick it up as fast as possible. Schools that I’ve been recruited by are Akron, Lehigh, and Bowling Green.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I have been fortunate to visit Akron.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“As I mentioned before, I visited Akron, and the game day atmosphere was electric. I am excited that Lehigh has also given me the opportunity to visit them on November 2nd.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college football program growing up was Florida State University. My aunts took me to the 2014 National Championship vs Auburn.”

Q&A with Schuylkill Haven running back Connor Goehring

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“The season is going good. We started out with some tough matchups, but we’ve been getting better every week. I am getting a lot of playing time as a freshman and have 7 total touchdowns so far this season with six being offensive and one being defensive.”

Who is your next opponent? What are your thoughts on them overall?
“We play Panther Valley and they always have tough kids. We have to bring it for that game.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“Our team can improve in every aspect. We just have to use every practice as an opportunity to get better.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“Continuing to improve every time we step on the field at practice and in games while also staying healthy are the two main things that will help us get to where we want to be at the end of the year.”

What are your goals for the rest of the season?
“Our goal for this year is to win sistricts and make some noise in states.”

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I have something possibly this fall at a D1 school, but nothing has been finalized yet.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Penn State has been my favorite team growing up.”

PA Preps Defensive Football Players of the Week - 10/16

PA Preps names our players of the week for this past weekend on the gridiron now!

Aasim Muhammad, Chester - 10 tackles and 5 TFLs
Alex Wecht, Fox Chapel - 9 tackles and 3 TFLs
Andrew Yanoshak, Bishop Guilfoyle - 10 tackles, 2 TFLs, and 1 Sack
Cameron Maloney, Bishop Guilfoyle - 10 tackles and 3 TFLs
Camron Sonnie, Central Mountain - 14 tackles
Chad Morningstar, Tussey Mountain - 14 tackles and 2 TFLs
Grant Bayesa, Camp Hill - 16 tackles and 1 TFL
Isaac Devault, Lakeview - 15 tackles and 2 TFLs
Nathan Schilling, Blacklick Valley - 19 tackles
Sean Pelkisson, Downingtown West - 10 tackles and 3 TFLs
Timothy Clifford, East - 15 tackles
Trent Cavanaugh, Bentworth - 14 tackles

Did we miss anyone? Reply here to add a top performance by an athlete!

PA Preps Offensive Football Players of the Week - 10/15

PA Preps names our players of the week for this past weekend on the gridiron now!

Amahd Pack, Sto-Rox - 177 yards receiving
Benjamin Jackson, West Greene - 158 yards rushing
Brycen Hassinger, Mifflin County - 3 TD passes and returned an interception 80-yard for a TD
Christian Coudriet, St. Marys - 374 yards passing
Cochise Ryan, California - 201 yards rushing
Cole Spencer, Pine-Richland - 308 yards passing
Daniel Grant, Brownsville - 217 yards rushing
Danny Scott, Trinity - 274 yards passing
Eric Wilson, Sto-Rox - 346 yards passing
Ian Sheehan, Neshaminy - 174 yards receiving
Imani Sanders, Jeannette - 211 yards rushing
Isaiah Beltram, Monessen - 225 yards passing and 145 yards rushing
Jack Salopek, Norwin - 304 yards passing
Jaheim Morris, Cedar Cliff - 300 yards rushing and scored four TDs
Jax Miller, Avonworth - 239 yards rushing
Jay’Von Jeter, Hopewell - 278 yards passing
Kenyon Johnson, West Perry - 220 yards rushing and three TDs
Kyle Swartz, Northern York - 192 yards rushing
Mario Easterly, Bishop McDevitt - 161 yards receiving and three TDs
Nate Sciarro, Riverside - 169 yards receiving
Nyles Jones, Steel-High - 369 total yards and 4 TDs
Riley Comforti, Southmoreland - 161 yards receiving
Ryan Angott, Canon-McMillan - 218 yards rushing
Savion Harrison, York Suburban - 324 yards rushing
Sean McGowan, Bethel Park - 201 yards rushing
Tanner Lorson, Jersey Shore - 402 yards passing
Zac Gordon, Franklin Regional - 230 yards rushing

Did we miss anyone? Reply here to add a top performance by an athlete!

The Recruiting Zone (October 14th, 2019)

Find out what colleges are recruiting Connor Goehring, Donovan McMillon, Collin Johnson, Trevor Faulkner, and Will Silverman now!

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Schuylkill Haven running back Connor Goehring
Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I would love to play football in college.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I have something possibly this fall at a D1 school, but nothing has been finalized yet.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Penn State has been my favorite team growing up.”
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Peters Township safety Donovan McMillon
Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Of course. My goal ever since I can remember is to play in the National Football League. I want to play at the highest level on Saturdays. Wrestling has always had a major role of preparing me for any athletic contest, which will always be an option for me at the collegiate level.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I came into the recruiting process a tad late, but I’m striving to pick it up as fast as possible. Schools that I’ve been recruited by are Akron, Lehigh, and Bowling Green.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I have been fortunate to visit Akron.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“As I mentioned before, I visited Akron, and the game day atmosphere was electric. I am excited that Lehigh has also given me the opportunity to visit them on November 2nd.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college football program growing up was Florida State University. My aunts took me to the 2014 National Championship vs Auburn.”

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Cathedral Prep quarterback Collin Johnson
Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“If I get the opportunity to play at the next level, I’d love to play football in college.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I have made a few college visits, but I’m not positive where I’d like to go.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college team growing up to watch was Penn State because of the way they represent our state.”

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Avonworth defensive end Trevor Faulkner
Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I would like to play football in college. If you look at student loan debt today, it is outrageous. So, a scholarship anywhere is my goal and I would get to continue playing football.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I had a very explosive off-season and am just beginning to receive some attention. Out of all the coaches I have sent my film to, Pennsylvania University is most interested. They were also the most helpful by giving me immediate feedback.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I have not attended any colleges so far.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall
“Pennsylvania University has invited me, so I plan to get there as soon as possible.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“I was raised around Pitt. My family has always been Pittsburgh fans.”

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Central Bucks East defensive back Will Silverman
Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I want to play football at the D-1 level.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I haven’t been recruited by any colleges so far.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“I am taking a gameday visit to Villanova later this month with my quarterback.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“My favorite college growing up was Oregon University.”

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Week Eight Football Game Predictions

Pa Preps predicts the big games this weekend. Our picks are denoted by asterik.

Bellwood-Antis* vs. Tussey Mountain
Berwick vs. Dallas*
Bishop Guilfoyle vs. Chestnut Ridge*
Blue Mountain vs. Pottsville*
Brentwood vs. Burgettstown*
Brookville* vs. Ridgway/Johnsonburg
Central Bucks West* vs. Souderton
Coatesville vs. Downingtown West*
Conneaut Area* vs. Conneaut
Coudersport vs. Smethport*
Donegal vs. Lancaster Catholic*
East vs. Bayard Rustin*
Freedom Area* vs. Apollo Ridge
Greensburg Central Catholic* vs. Cornell
Jersey Shore vs. Bald Eagle Area*
Jim Thorpe* vs. Tamaqua
Marple Newtown* vs. Haverford
McGuffey* vs. Avonworth
Meadville* vs. Grove City
North Penn vs. Central Bucks South*
Northeastern vs. William Penn*
Northwestern* vs. Reynolds
Notre Dame-Green Pond* vs. Saucon Valley
Peters Township* vs. Bethel Park
Pine Grove vs. Upper Dauphin Area*
Pope John Paul II* vs. Upper Merion Area
Shenango* vs. New Brighton
Southern Columbia Area* vs. Montoursville
Sto-Rox* vs. Laurel
Strath Haven vs. Garnet Valley*
Susquehanna Township vs. Cedar Cliff*
Upper Moreland vs. Cheltenham*
Valley View* vs. Scranton
Washington vs. Southmoreland*
West Catholic* vs. Neumann-Goretti
Wilmington vs. Hickory*
Wilson* vs. Cedar Crest

Top Football Performers - 10/10, 10/11, & 10/12

Add top performers by replying here!

Adam Thoman, West Perry 134 yards rushing and two TDs
Aiden Wardzinski, Brentwood 189 yards rushing
Alex Conrad, Charleroi 174 yards passing
Alex Obeldobel, Hopewell 100 yards receiving
Alex Sharrow, Shippensburg 121 yards rushing and a TD
Amahd Pack, Sto-Rox 177 yards receiving
Anthony Lento, Chartiers-Houston 172 yards passing
Antonio Quinn, Aliquippa 160 yards rushing
Ben Hughes, Riverside 197 yards passing
Ben Jackson, West Greene 158 yards rushing
Blake Remaley, Hempfield 190 yards passing
Braden Gennock, Neshannock 142 yards rushing
Brendan Parsons, Clairton 172 yards passing
Bryce Baker, CD East 131 yards rushing and 1 TD
Brycen Hassinger, Mifflin County 3 TD passes and returned an interception 80-yard for a TD
Chandler Thimmons, Highlands 168 yards passing
Chris Joseph, Middletown 104 yards receiving and a TD
Cochise Ryan, California 201 yards rushing
Cole Beck, Freedom 161 yards passing
Cole Spencer, Pine-Richland 308 yards passing
Curtis Foskey, North Hills 178 yards rushing
Daniel Grant, Brownsville 217 yards rushing
Darrell Johnson, Waynesburg 147 yards rushing
Denny Robinson, Rochester 179 yards rushing
Donovan Cutchember, Quaker Valley 139 yards rushing
Dresyn Green, State College 111 yards rushing, 1 TD, and 13 yards receiving
Eric Wilson, Sto-Rox 308 yards passing
Frank Shartle, Camp Hill 107 yards rushing and three TDs
Gabe Dunlap, Penn-Trafford 247 yards passing
Gavin Miller, West Allegheny 183 yards passing
Germar Howard, Penn Hills 152 yards rushing
Imani Sanders, Jeannette 211 yards rushing
Isaiah Beltram, Monessen 225 yards passing and 145 yards rushing
Isaiah Edwards, State College 163 total yards
Isaiah Langston, Cornell 204 yards receiving
Jack Fallon, Central Bucks West 2 TD runs
Jack Hollibaugh, Deer Lakes 105 yards receiving
Jack Salopek, Norwin 304 yards passing
Jacob Seigle, Susquehanna Township 185 yards rushing and four TDs
Jaheim Morris, Cedar Cliff 300 yards rushing and scored four TDs
Jake Blumer, Leechburg 173 yards rushing
Jamar Jeter Hopewell 116 yards receiving
Jared Gorman, East Pennsboro 195 yards passing and three TDs
Jason Kraner, Shenango 135 yards receiving
Jason Nativio, Neshannock 167 yards passing
Jax Miller, Avonworth 239 yards rushing
Jay Pearson, OLSH 147 yards rushing
Jay Rodriguez, Hershey 193 total yards and 1 TD
Jay’Von Jeter, Hopewell 278 yards passing
Joey Audia, South Fayette 134 yards receiving
Johnny Crise, Highlands 133 yards receiving
Jose Lopez, Middletown 158 yards rushing and a TD
Josh Hough, Beaver Falls 138 yards rushing
Justin Huss, Derry 190 yards rushing
Keese Demery, West Mifflin 124 yards receiving
Kenny Fine, Frazier 196 yards rushing
Kenyon Johnson, West Perry 220 yards rushing and three TDs
Khiyee Patterson, Fox Chapel 121 yards receiving
Kyle Swartz, Northern 189 yards rushing and two TDs
Lek Powell, Bishop McDevitt 231 yards passing and four TDs
Logan Harmon, Apollo-Ridge 138 yards rushing
Logan Pfeuffer, Peters Township 215 yards passing
Logan Shrubb, Keystone Oaks 179 yards passing
Luke Meckler, Pine-Richland 104 yards receiving
Malik Shannon, Imani Christian 158 yards passing
Mario Easterly, Bishop McDevitt 161 yards receiving and three TDs
Mark Hutchin, Keystone Oaks 136 yards receiving
Marquese Williams, Bishop McDevitt 195 yards rushing and two TDs
Mason Stahl, Baldwin 192 yards passing
Max Mosey, Central Dauphin 170 yards passing and 2 TDs
Mehki Flowers, Steel-High 144 yards receiving and two TDs
Melvin Redd, Aliquippa 126 yards rushing
Mikey Scherer, Burrell 181 yards rushing
Naman Alemada, South Fayette 255 yards passing
Naseer Penn, Baldwin 102 yards receiving
Nate Sciarro, Riverside 169 yards receiving
Nathan Roby, Hempfield 189 yards rushing
Nick Chimienti, Central Dauphin 102 yards receiving, a TD, and an INT on defense
Nyles Jones, Steel-High 369 total yards and 4 TDs
Park Penrod, Avonworth 155 yards passing
Pharoh Fisher, Imani Christian 128 yards receiving
Quinn Fuller, Mars 158 yards passing
Rashawn Reid, Rochester 152 yards rushing
Reiker Welling, Freedom 142 yards receiving
Reis Watkins, Shenango 189 yards rushing
Ricky Hunter, Freeport 146 yards rushing
Riley Comforti, Southmoreland 161 yards receiving
Roman Pellis, Hempfield 114 yards receiving
Ryan Angott, Canon-McMillan 218 yards rushing
Santino Campoli, Shenango 243 yards passing
Sean McGowan, Bethel Park 201 yards rushing
Shane Stump, Thomas Jefferson 195 yards passing
Shane Susnak, Fox Chapel 258 yards passing
Shawn Brown, CD East 190 yards rushing and 2 TDs
Shawn Dziak, Bentworth 226 yards passing
Tino Campoli, Shenango 243 yards passing
Tony Johnson, Brownsville 168 yards rushing
Tony Powell, Middletown 213 yards passing and three TDs
Trevor Brncic, Franklin Regional 186 yards passing
Tristyn Sulich, Carlisle 123 yards rushing
Troy Lanier, Westinghouse 129 yards rushing
Tyler Powell, Ellwood City 160 yards rushing
Tyler Ziggas, Beaver 158 yards passing
Tymir Jackson, Middletown 180 yards rushing and a TD
Vaughn Morris, Aliquippa 155 yards passing
William Clark, Woodland Hills 125 yards rushing
Zac Gordon, Franklin Regional 230 yards rushing
Zach Cernuto, Southmoreland 230 yards passing
Zack Swartz, Washington 125 yards rushing
Zaier Harrison, Cornell 266 yards passing

PA Preps Defensive Football Players of the Week - 10/9

PA Preps names our players of the week for this past weekend on the gridiron now!

Dillon Ferretti, Hempfield Area - 18 tackles and 5 TFLs

Gabe Watts, Ridgway/Johnsonburg - 9 tackles, 3 TFLs, and 2 sacks

Isaac Devault, Lakeview - 15 tackles and 1 TFL

Jason Henderson, Delaware Valley - 2 sacks and 7 tackles

Jaylin Miller, Exeter Township - 3 TFLs and 6 tackles

Jonathan Stochla, Wyoming Valley West - 16 tackles

Jordan Adams, Cathedral Prep - 2 INTs and 7 tackles

Luke Ohmann, Susquehannock - 18 tackles

Max Matolcsy, Plum - 18 tackles and 4 TFLs

Nathan Schilling, Blacklick Valley - 13 tackles and 1 TFL

Sean Pelkisson, Downingtown West - 7 tackles, 2 TFLs, and 1 sack

Trent Cavanaugh, Bentworth - 14 tackles

Did we miss anyone? Reply here to add a top performance by an athlete!

Mid-State Rankings, Week 7 Oct 9, 2019:

(All classes are 6A and District 3 teams unless otherwise shown; Districts 3, 4, 5, 6, 9)

1 State College (7-0, D6)
State College showed why they’ve been ranked #1 all year with a significant win over Harrisburg High in what was a typical Mid Penn heavyweight bout between two of the state’s top teams. SC started off with a 4 yard keeper by Qb Brady Dorner at the end of the 1st quarter, giving them a 7-0 lead. Harrisburg was moving the ball but like the Central Dauphin game two weeks ago, red zone turnovers plagued them, this time following a 58 yard completion to Kamere Day where Dresyn Green picked off Nicari Williams on SC’s 17 yard line. The half ended with State ahead 7-0. On Harrisburg’s second play of the 3rd quarter, Dresyn Green’s 14 yard Pick-6 ended another Harrisburg drive, sending Nicari Williams to the sidelines, replaced by John McNeil with State College up 14-0. It also shifted momentum. At some point the turnovers, especially in the red zone had the effect of gut punches. Green scored again early in the 4th quarter on a 6 yard run putting them up 21-0. The Cougars finally got on the board when Trevion Carey returned the subsequent kickoff 94 yards to the house. Dresyn Green was a one man wrecking machine in this one, rushing for 75 yards on 26 carries plus 26 receiving, getting two picks and having another batted away on 4th down to end a Harrisburg drive. Quarterback Brady Dorner had an outstanding game, completing 10 of 12 passes for 98 yards and rushing for 30. Bottom line, State limited Harrisburg in almost every area, holding them to 50 yards rushing and 132 passing. SC gouged them on the round, rushing for 213 yards on 41 attempts. Central Dauphin’s Rams are up next for a matchup conference co-leaders, both at 4-0 in what could be a classic. State features a robust offense scoring 36ppg with a defense allowing 10. CD’s offense is getting there at 29ppg with a defense allowing 9 against an arguably tougher schedule of Manheim Township 7-10, Wilson 13-21 and Harrisburg 15-14, compared to SC’s best being St. Augustine Prep-NJ 20-17, Chambersburg 27-17 and Harrisburg 21-6. CD will focus on Dresyn Green who had his coming out party last year in a 35-28 win as a sophomore with 211 total yards!
2 Manheim Township (7-0)
Manheim Township visited Warwick Friday in a game that paired District-3’s highest rated 6A team against the 5A leader. The encounter pulled in a large and loud crowd. But it didn’t prevent Township from asserting its alpha status, getting in Warwick’s head early with a 15 play, 80 yard opening drive that included a fake punt, and scoring the game’s opening touchdown. What a great start to launch a methodical first half that saw quarterback Harrison Kirk run in a keeper then hit Nathan Carpenter near the mid-point of the 2nd quarter from 13 out for a 21-0 half time lead. Warwick got on the board in the 3rd quarter when Colton Miller scored on a 4 yard run at the 2:45 mark of the 3rd quarter, making it a shaky 21-7 lead for Township that wasn’t secure until Jaden Floyd scored on a 5 yard burst with under a minute left in the game. Good game, with final statistics and a 28-7 score belying a competitive game. Township slowed Warwick, doing a good job keeping them out of the end zone. But it’s no easy task playing Township when they have it going with Jaden Floyd rushing for 134 yards and Harrison Kirk completing 15 of 22 passes for 132 yards and rushing for 86 yards. Township had 13 first downs and 360 total yards to 294 for Warwick, with only 86 rush yards. The win keeps them undefeated in first place a game ahead of Warwick, Wilson and Cedar Crest. Congratulations to the Streaks getting past Central Dauphin 10-7 at home, and winning road games at Cocalico (5-2, 5A) 56-7, Wilson (6-1) 30-14, and now Warwick (6-1, 5A) 28-7. Two challenges remain, one against upstart Cedar Crest (6-1, 5A) Friday then bitter rival Hempfield (2-5) at the end, with McCaskey (0-7) sandwiched between those two.
3 Central Dauphin (5-2)
Following games against Wilson, Manheim Township and Harrisburg, Central Dauphin needed the schedule break provided by Altoona who came limping in at 1-6 after rejoining the Mid Penn this year. Four conference games left them battered and bruised, getting outscored 190 to 53, including the 62-0 pasting by CD. Welcome to the bigs! After scoring on their initial possession with FB Marques Holton (6-2, 220) pounding in from the four yard line, they squirted the kickoff into a gap, recovered it and scored again with Holton getting the call from 5 yards out this time, ultimately opening the floodgates where the reserves rushed in after securing a 42-0 halftime lead. The Rams used 18 running backs and 8 receivers. Holton’s development at fullback isn’t making anyone forget the beast Adam Burkhart (5-11, 215) who had 1282 yards rushing and 80 tackles before moving on. But he’s getting the job done and is a real force at DE with 42 tackles. The other strong positive is the continued maturation of sophomore Max Mosey under center. He completed 6 of 10 passes for 102 yards and 2 touchdown. Despite reserves getting significant playing time, they outgained the Mountain Lions 446 yards to 25, with four touchdowns rushing, four passing and a Malachi Bowman 28 yard punt return for a special teams score. Next up is a game at State College against the conference co-leader who is coming off their 21-6 win against Harrisburg.
4 Wilson (6-1)
So much for Hempfield (2-5) continuing their comeback from a 1-4 start (upset Lampeter Strasburg 27-20) getting overwhelmed by Wilson 42-7 last week. Wilson, who came in with a pile of attitude after losing at home to Manheim Township 30-14, jumped on the Knights right away when speedster Mason Lenart dashed 73 yards for the score to set the tone. FB Avanti Lockhart followed with two more scores, each from a yard out as the Bulldogs ran up a 21-0 first quarter lead. They continued punishing the Knights on the ground with 56 carries netting 456 yards! Tack on 116 passing for 572 total yards against a completely broken Black Knight defense. Held to 6 first downs, the Knights mustered a mere 94 yards of offense. Maybe they should make another team their homecoming opponent next year, like this week’s opponent 0-7 McCaskey High. Wilson returns to the comfortable confines of Gurski Stadium for some major payback against Warwick who stunned them in Lititz last year 38-12. Tough spot for Warwick coming off home games against Cedar Crest and Manheim Township, and now traveling to West Lawn for their toughest away game of the year.
5 Harrisburg (4-3)
Harrisburg has not fared well since opening with a 14-6 win at Coatesville, losing to an increasingly difficult slate of teams including Archbishop Hoban (5-1) of Ohio 42-12, Central Dauphin (5-2) 15-14 and last week at State College (7-0) where they dropped a 21-6 decision. Except for Hoban, they could have won all three were it not for unending miscues and turnovers. Two picks, one a Pick-6, 3 sacks and multiple hurries doomed them against hard charging SC who got a critical conference win. State locked them down pretty good, holding Jahmir Plant to 30 yards on 12 carries. Up next is Chambersburg who could be a load at 5-2 overall and 3-1 in conference action, a game behind State College and CD. Harrisburg is 2-2 with the 6th seed just ahead of Chambersburg. We’ll see if Harrisburg is damaged goods following successive losses to CD and SC, and how that might affect their performance. Chambersburg will be a handful but are still new to this level of success. Harrisburg needs to punch these guys in the mouth at the start or it’s going to be another long and frustrating day.
6 Southern Columbia (7-0, 2A, D4)
Southern is so profound on both sides of the ball they make everyone look bad, including decent, veteran teams like Jersey Shore (4-3). Same with Hammond-SC (5-2) losing 36-0 and Mount Carmel (5-2), crushed 48-0. Coach Roth said as much, saying Jersey Shore was “one of the better teams we played”. For the Tigers, it was another typical game, gaining 576 yards of offense while holding Jersey to 230 total yards. Considering the opponent was SCA, 230 was a decent number until seeing that was all passing yards, 288, before subtracting negative 58 yards rushing. And talk about a decent number. Southern had four players over 100 yards of total offense; running backs Gaige Garcia at 173 yards with 2 touchdowns, Gavin Garcia with 104 yards and 2 scores, Qb Preston Zachman at 174 yards and 3 touchdowns and wide out Julian Fleming at 126 yards with 2 touchdowns. It was 56-0 at the half and 56-14 when it was all mercifully over.
Wyoming Area (7-0, 3A, D2) is next. They play in the Wyoming Valley 3A, scoring 42ppg, allowing 11. Offensively they’ll line up and come right at you behind a sizeable line, running the ball 75% of the time. This year’s team came into the season with a veteran group, good skill depth and five, four year players, notably Qb/SS Dominic Deluca, Rb/Lb Corey Mruk and D1 prospect lineman Sam Solomon (6-4, 295, sr), with offers from BC, Temple, Rutgers and others. Unfortunately, they lost Corey Mruk (5-9, 190) with a knee vs Northwest week-3, a big loss. Other standouts are lineman Nicholas Elko (6-3, 290, so), Tom Wycoski (6-3, 295, sr), DE Derek Ambrosino (6-3, 220, sr), and Lb F.J. Braccini (5-8, 185, sr) who looks like he’s all over the field at the same time. Qb Dominic Deluca (6-1, 195, sr, 640p, 518r) has a strong arm and is a fierce hitter at SS. Their 10 year won-loss is 60-51 with five winning season and five losing seasons. They’ll come out all fired up before the home crowd with the question being, can they sustain that through 4 quarters against a thoroughbred like Southern Columbia once the reality of what they’re up against sets in.
7 Warwick (6-1, 5A)
Warwick’s Joey McCracken completed just 11 of 34 passes (32%) for 90 yards as the Warriors fell to Manheim Township 28-7 in a key LL-1 game for their first loss of the season. Township’s pressure and coverage held Justin Gerhart to 4 catches for 41 yards and Conor Adams to 6 completions for 46 yards. Warwick came into the game averaging 280 yards passing a game. They stayed within reach of the Blue Streaks, down 21-7 late in the 4th quarter when a final touchdown by the visitors sealed it. Township’s defense was simply too dominating, holding them to 86 yards rushing on 26 carries. The loss knocked them out of first place at 2-1 behind Township at 3-0. So they’ll need a little help catching them. Problem there is a road trip to Wilson Friday who is in the same predicament at 2-1, trying to catch Township while running out of games.
8 Central York (6-1)
Once again the Panthers walloped an overmatched Spring Grove (2-5) team with a 17-0 first half followed by a 35-0 second half. In 2018 they beat them 58-14 and again in 2017 55-14, showing the gap between the two schools. The win extends Central’s winning streak to 5 games, keeping them deadlocked at 4-0 atop the York-Adams league with another exciting edition at York High. Since opening with a 42-7 disaster against Pittsburgh Central Catholic, the Bearcats (5-2, 5A) have been on a roll. They’ll meet in the regular season final. What many may not have noticed about Central York is an outstanding defense that is strangling opponents. With an offense averaging 43 points per game, its easy overlooking a defense that held 6 teams to 7 points or less along with 2 shutouts. The Northeastern Bobcats (6-1) are next at 3-1, a game behind Central High and York. They have a lot of bodies back from last year’s 5-6 group that got your attention with a mid-year upset of Red Lion (8-3) and a 6-0 loss to Shippensburg (10-2) in the first round. Central York should prevail but the Bobcats score points, 36 a game and are no slouch. Zech Sanderson (6-4, 200, sr, 1124 yards) can sling it and he doesn’t throw picks.
9 Chambersburg (5-2)
Central Dauphin East hung out with Chambersburg last week, enjoying the beautiful stadium and nearby mountains while actually giving the Trojans a game, trailing 14-10 at the half. Isaiah Abraham had a 15 yard fumble return with Miles Mims booting a 42 yard field goal to account for their early scoring. Bryce Baker did his part contributing 88 yards on 26 carries. But 5 turnovers did them in, plus a 17-6 Chambersburg second half as the Trojans prevailed 31-16. Keyshawn Jones had a terrific game, rushing for 192 yards on 18 carries. Their other talented back Jayden Jones, added 86 yards on 4 carries. Brady Stumbaugh completed 6 of 10 passes for 54 yards and a touchdown and rushed for another 68 yads. Tyler Luther caught the 20 yard scoring toss and kicked a 45 yard field goal. East High got pushed around for 328 rush yards while the Trojans held them to 132 yards rushing and 73 passing. Harrisburg is next. But with Harrisburg coming off consecutive losses, there are probably better places to be than Severance Field on a Saturday afternoon against what could be a focused bunch of Cougars.
10 Manheim Central (5-2, 5A)
Manheim Central and Lampeter Strasburg got into a good one last week where another misleading score tells the wrong story. 33-14 looks convincing, and the final score is all that matters. The hidden story is MC holding a slim 20-14 lead with just under 7 minutes left in the game. These old LL-2 adversaries went at it long and hard, battling deep into the 4th quarter on an equal footing. Final stats showed both with 16 first downs, MC with 150 rush yards, LS with 180. The real difference was MC’s quarterback Evan Simon’s ability to make the big play. LS held him to 20 yards rushing as he completed 14 on 32 attempts. Bad throws, drops? But when they connected it produced 224 yards in receptions with a touchdown of 25 yards to Colby Wagner and a 1 yard keeper by Simons. Colby had an exceptional game with 8 receptions for 145 yards while rushing for 129 yards on 12 carries for 3 more touchdowns. Talk about a weapon. Guess who scored the 26 and 21 yard touchdowns late in the 4th quarter? Conestoga Valley (2-5) is next, with a coach in Gerad Novak and quarterback in Bradley Stoltzfus who never saw a down or distance that couldn’t be approached with a pass. Stoltzfus can get it out there with a 69% completion rate, generating 1688 yards with an 18/3 ratio. He rushed for 498 yards. Pretty nice for a 2-5 team. The rebuilt line still has issues but not at center where Joshua Mathiot (6-2, 270, sr) makes life much easier for Stoltzfus. The Barons should roll but Stoltzfus is a weapon.
11 Shippensburg (7-0, 5A)
Shippensburg’s terror tandem of Alex Sharrow (5-5, 140) and fullback Jacob Loy (6-0, 195) dominated West Perry as Sharrow motored for 132 yards on 12 carries with touchdown runs of 56, 38 and 5 yards. Loy contributed with 102 yards on 15 carries, blasting in for touchdowns of 4 and 2 yards. Sprinter Isaiah Houser (5-9, 140) got it all going, returning the opening kickoff 95 yards as the Greyhounds powered over the Mustangs 39-13. The Perry county squad was held to 125 total yards. Northern (5-2, 5A) is next. For all intents and purposes, they’d be off the radar except for the exploits of running back Kyle Swartz. He’s a 6 foot 210 pound senior who has 1340 yards rushing in just 5 games, and the reason the Polar Bears are tied with Shippensburg atop the Mid Penn-Colonial. Dillsburg loves their football and will be pumped for the super quick Hounds with a powerful ground game trying to slow things down, supported by a full house. Nice seeing Shippensburg’s Jacob Loy on the field with Swartz of Northern.
12 Susquehanna Township (6-1, 4A)
Jacob Seigle returned from the injured list to help the Tribe defeat 3-4 Conrad Weiser 24-7. His return was integral to the win, gaining 156 yards rushing and catching 3 passes for 25 yards. Quarterback Rahsaan Carlton had one of his better games of the season completing 15 of 22 passes for 184 yards, spreading those receptions out to 7 different receivers. He threw 3 touchdown passes. Their defense dominated the slower Scouts, holding them to 4 first downs and 70 total yards of offense to Hanna’s 364 total yards. They move on to play Red Land (4-3, 2-2, 5A) before decisive conference games against Cedar Cliff (7-1, 3-0, 5A) and Bishop McDevitt (4-3, 2-1, 4A), games that will decide the conference championship and postseason playoff positions.
13 Milton Hershey (6-1, 5A)
Milton Hershey soared in the ranking from 17th after defeating previously unbeaten Middletown 33-21 who was ranked 8th. Their rise and Middletown’s precipitous fall was based on the Blue Raider’s losing at home to Milton Hershey and an overall reassessment of team performances. The game put MH in sole possession of first place in the conference. There were a lot of athletes on the field in this one where the Spartans proved to be more diverse and efficient with their opportunities. While Middletown outgained them 326 to 258 yards, it was largely the Jose Lopez show, gaining 194 yards on 34 carries. Their passing woes continued, completing but 6 of 13 for 48 yards. Team mate Tymir Jackson added 102 on 15 attempts. But the Raiders had no answer for sophomore Dion Bryant who scooted for 134 yards on 18 carries with touchdowns of 84 and 33 yards. At 5-8, 180, he’s a hard tackle. He also returned a kickoff 73 yards for another score. Their big receivers, Josh Parra (6-4, 210) and Avohn Cross (6-4, 204) kept Middletown honest with 33 and 25 yards in receptions respectively. Forget about it with those two loose in your secondary. Significantly, Middletown had eight drive stopping fumbles, losing four. MH moves on to Palmyra (3-4) before Camp Hill (1-6) then a huge game against Steel High.
14 Middletown (6-1, 3A)
Middletown’s home loss last week against Milton Hershey snapped their 25 game Capital Conference winning streak, dropping them into second place behind Milton Hershey in the Capital conference. It also resulted in their plunge in the ranking from 8th to 14th. The standings through seven weeks show Milton Hershey in first at 4-0, followed by Middletown and Steel High (6-1) at 3-1 with Trinity (5-2) still in it at 2-2. It’s a great race with Steelton Highspire likely eyeing the October 25th showdown in Hershey against Milton Hershey where a Roller win will create a 3 way conference tie. The Blue Raiders move on, likely blowing out Trinity (5-2), East Pennsboro (2-5) and Palmyra (3-4) to position themselves for post season concerns and another possible conference championship. They currently hold the 2 seed behind Wyomissing.
15 Berks Catholic (4-3, 4A)
Berks Catholic continued its recovery from a demanding early season schedule where most of the backfield suffered injuries against Central Dauphin, McDonogh and Malvern Prep which forced at least three players at one point to the sidelines. Two weeks ago saw them stutter step to a 9-0 win against Hamburg (3-4). Last week showed progress with a more fully recovered backfield routing hapless Kutztown (0-7, 3A) 61-7, getting offensive touchdowns from 7 different players. It started with Clayton Gibbs returning the opening kickoff 85 yards followed by Christian Cacchione returning Kutztown’s first punt 47 yards for another score. The rout was on. They’re at Schuylkill Valley (3-4, 3A) Friday where the Panthers are coming off a 32-21 Homecoming loss to Fleetwood (6-1). SV has been a no-show against the stronger teams on their schedule, losing 44-14 to undefeated Upper Dauphin (7-0, 2A, D3) and District-1 PAC-Frontier power Pope John Paul II (6-1, 3A) 52-7. They’ll handle SV then finish out at home against Berks-2 challengers Fleetwood and rival Wyomissing (7-0, 3A) where the conference championship will be decided.
16 Cocalico (5-2, 5A)
Despite winning last week against Conestoga Valley 54-41, the Eagles dropped in the ranking with their young defense wilting the last 3 games, losing to Manheim Township 56-7 and Manheim Central 46-43, then getting a 54-41 win last week against Conestoga Valley. That’s 143 points allowed in 3 games. About the game; the statistics were immense, with Cocalico gaining 746 total yards of offense (586r, 160p), to Conestoga Valley’s 559 (138r, 421p!). Cocalico’s veer often produces stats that look like typos. And it is difficult containing their ball control offense as rarely as it’s seen with a quarterback like Noah Palm and Rb Ronald Zahm behind a line that understands discipline. Because they’ve been running it for years with a staff that’s been in place forever, they’re good at it! That makes it tough for opposing defenses who have to be equally disciplined, knowing assignments and tackling well. Still, Cocalico’s scheme can lull you to sleep; dive, dive, dive…then Palm keeps it for a big gain, or worse, throws a dart with his 67% completion rate. Manheim Township is the only team to shut them down, aided in part by Fb Austin Vang, Qb Palm and Rb Zahm all going down in the 3rd and 4th quarter. Palm (New Hampshire) is the key to everything Cocalico does offensively, rushing for 203 yards with 3 Tds against CV and passing for 160 with another touchdown. That’s 49 % of their offense. Zalm had 192 yards on 10 carries (4 Tds) with sophomore Steven Flinton (1 Td) turning heads with 164 yards on 9 carries. For Conestoga Valley, Qb Bradley Stoltzfus was outstanding, rushing for 113 yards on 18 carries and completing 24 of 32 passes (75%) for 421 yards and 4 touchdown. Zach Fisher caught 11passes for 170 yards with Derek Ulishney catching 6 for 116 yards. They move on to play Manheim Central while the Eagles go to winless Garden Spot (0-7) who they defeated 55-21 last year.
17 Wyomissing (7-0, 3A)
A 17 point first quarter followed by a 14-0 2nd quarter was all she wrote for Hamburg as the Trojans ran for 300 yards to overwhelm the Hawks 45-6. Max Hurleman’s 80 yards kickoff return following Hamburg’s only score blunted whatever thoughts they had of a comeback. It’s frustrating playing Berks Catholic and Wyomissing back-to-back although they did some damage with Shaheed Warren running for 78 yards; something they’ll have to address before playing Berks Catholic with their stable of running backs. Hurleman finished with 58 rushing and a 16 yard touchdown run with Jevin Tranquilla getting 92 yards on 5 carries. FB Evan Niedrowski had 50 yards and a touchdown on 10 carries. Kutztown is next, then Schuylkill Valley before the road game at Berks Catholic for the Berks-2 title.
18 Exeter Township (5-2, 5A)
Reading got out the gate well, winning their first four games before facing the reality of Berk-1 competition that saw them lose to Governor Mifflin (4-3, 5A) 49-6, and Exeter Township last week 42-7. Governor Mifflin is a strong team that got off on the wrong foot at 0-3, including a 61-14 disappearing act against rival Wilson before righting the ship. Exeter’s season began at Berks Catholic with the “gift that keeps on giving” of 19 penalties for 150 yards in a 14-10 loss. Untimely penalties and a fumbled punt return helped do them in against Spring Ford 24-7, plus Ryan Engro’s 304 yards passing! But they’re hot now, winning 3 straight with the Reading win. Wide out Alex Javier (D1 talent) was too quick and shifty for Reading, snagging 4 touchdown tosses on 5 receptions for 120 yards; one, a 68 yard bomb just before the half giving them a 28-7 lead. The Eagle D thwarted the Knights throughout the game, holding them to 84 total yards of offense. Twin Valley (2-5, 5A) is next, before the big game at Governor Mifflin that will decide the Berks-1 title and more since both are 5A teams. Exeter is currently 12th with GM at 15.
19 Cedar Cliff (4-3, 5A)
A 21 point first quarter was all Cedar Cliff needed to dispose of Hershey (1-6) 43-20, who hasn’t won a game since the opener. Things are far more positive for the Colts who opened the season at 1-2, then went on a tear since the Harrisburg loss with wins against Hollidaysburg 49-8, Lower Dauphin 47-7, Hershey last week and their most impressive win, beating Bishop McDevitt 20-17 three weeks ago. They’re doing it with a balanced offense and a developing first year starter in junior Gannon McMeans (6-0, 190) under center. He’s thrown for 826 yards at 50%, with a Td/Pick ratio of 9 to 3. He rarely runs but doesn’t have to with a back like Jaheim Morris (5-10, 190, sr) doing damage against everyone including Harrisburg and McDevitt where he rushed for 76 and 86 respectively. Against Hershey, he rushed for 196 yards on 26 attempts, scoring touchdowns of 3, 34 and 10 yards. The win keeps them tied with Susquehanna Township atop the Mid Penn-Keystone. Great scheduling for the fans sees Susquehanna Township playing them in two weeks at Cedar Cliff, then McDevitt finishing out the regular season at ST. This week sees the Colts in their last away game at Mechanicsburg (5-2) who are hanging around at 2-1, a game behind the leaders. The Wildcats are inconsistent, beating Northern (5-2) 35-36 on the road then getting skunked two weeks ago at Susquehanna Township 34-0. The Colts are hoping the latter version shows up Friday night.
20 Cedar Crest (6-1)
Cedar Crest responded to the disappointing loss at Warwick last week with a strong effort against Penn Manor (2-5), gaining 400 yards of offense in a 37-10 win. Junior Qb Chris Danz (5-10, 150) is coming along well in his first year as a starter, having a strong game here completing 13 of 21 passes for 263 yards and 2 touchdowns. On the season, he’s at 57%, for 1286 yards with a 13/2 ratio. Most of his passes against PM went to Cole Miller, who caught 6 for 112 yards, including a 55 yard scoring toss. He’s their leading receiver, with 31 receptions for 532 yards and 6 touchdowns. Tyler Cruz was the man again, rushing for 126 yards with scores of 1, 44 and 14 yards on 24 carries. He‘s at 1018 yards for the year. Defense was also strong, picking off quarterback Luke Brass 3 times and recovering 2 fumbles. The Falcons are having a fine season, enjoying something of a renaissance going 25-13 the last 4 years (6-4, 8-3, 5-5 and 6-1) after a long and inept run going 24-77 from 2006 through 2015. They’re in unchartered territory this year with the 4th seed behind Central Dauphin, and a game behind Manheim Township in the Section-One race. That will change this weekend playing at Township.
Honorable Mention:
Northeastern (6-1, 5A)
at Central York 6-1
York Suburban (7-0, 4A) home Gettysburg 6-1, 4A
Northern York (5-2, 5A) home Shippensburg 7-00, 5A
York-William Penn (5-2, 5A) at South Western 3-5, 5A
Lampeter Strasburg (5-2, 4A) home Solanco 5-2, 5A
Montoursville (7-0, 3A, D4) at Mifflinburg 4-3, 3A
Gettysburg (6-1, 4A) at Suburban 7-0, 4A
Steelton Highspire (6-1, 2A) at East Pennsboro 2-5, 4A
Mount Carmel (5-2, 3A, D4) home South Williamsport 4-3, 1A
Bishop McDevitt (4-3, 4A) at Hershey 1-6, 5A
Governor Mifflin (4-3, 5A) home Lower Dauphin 0-7, 5A
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PA Preps Offensive Football Players of the Week - 10/8

PA Preps names our players of the week for this past weekend on the gridiron now!

Ben Jackson, West Greene - 282 yards rushing

Colby Wagner, Manheim Central - 129 yards rushing and 145 yards receiving

Dion Bryant, Milton Hershey - 132 yards rushing, 2 TDs, and a 73-yard kickoff for a TD

Eric Wilson, Sto-Rox - 292 yards passing

Ethan Kohler, Perkiomen Valley - 4 TDs

Germar Howard, Penn Hills - 227 yards rushing

Jaheim Morris, Cedar Cliff - 194 yards rushing and three touchdowns

Jake Johnson, Mount Pleasant - 201 yards rushing

Kaleb Donor, Maplewood - 258 yards rushing

Kyle McCord, St. Joseph’s Prep - 213 yards passing and 4 TDs

Kyle Swartz, Northern - 271 total yards and four touchdowns

Logan Harmon, Apollo-Ridge - 344 yards rushing

Macklin Ayers, Upper Dauphin Area - 210 yards rushing

Naman Alemada, South Fayette - 407 yards passing

Reis Watkins, Shenango - 302 yards rushing

RJ Macnamara, North Penn - 4 TDs

Tanner Lorson, Jersey Shore - 287 yards passing

Tay'Ron Ross, Carrick - 224 yards rushing

Tony Johnson, Brownsville - 264 yards rushing

Tristyn Sulich, Carlisle - 202 yards rushing and two touchdowns

Did we miss anyone? Reply here to add a top performance by an athlete!
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