(All classes, 6A and District 3 teams unless otherwise shown; Districts 3, 4, 5, 6, 9)
1 Harrisburg (4-1)
Big plays in the first half featuring Jahmir Plant’s 43 yard scoop and score and Kamere Day’s 53 and 74 yard touchdown receptions set the stage in a contest between Mid-State powers where Harrisburg led Cumberland Valley 19-10 at the half. 18 unanswered points in the second half sent CV packing as the Cougars secured a key 37-10 conference win. Both Maximos Dell’Anno and Derik Sauve, keys to the Eagles Wing-T were out with injuries. Harrisburg’s quarterbacks had another strong outings where John McNeil completed 5 of 8 for 149 yards and Nicari Williams getting 3 of 5 for 76 yards. Day led all receivers with three receptions for 162 yards and the two touchdowns as the Cougars overwhelmed CV 502 to 164 in total yards. Next up is a clash of two opposites with Central Dauphin’s vaulted defense and low octane offense coming to the city from the burbs (20 minutes) to challenge Harrisburg’s up tempo high scoring offense.
2 State College (5-0, D6)
State College came down from Centre County for the second week in a row, this time for a game with the Trojans of Chambersburg after blasting Carlisle 53-12 the week before. A 3-3 half time score demonstrated the defensive nature of the game and how improved Chambersburg was. The 2nd half saw SC’s quarterback Brady Dorner score on a 4 yard keeper while Keyshawn Jones blasted in from six yards out as the deadlock continued into the 3rd quarter at 10 apiece. Thereon the Lions had the advantage with a few more bodies and weapons to wear Chambersburg down, scoring 17 unanswered 4th quarter points to secure a hard fought 27-17 win. The Trojans strong performance was compromised by three turnovers of which two were converted to touchdowns and that was the difference. SC three game road stint continues at CD East (2-3) before returning home to play Harrisburg and Central Dauphin back-to-back in games that will decide the Mid Penn-Commonwealth title and greatly impact playoff seeding for all involved.
3 Manheim Township (5-0)
We knew Township had a strong defense when they beat Central Dauphin 10-7 two weeks ago. But who expected the shutdown of Cocalico’s Veer, holding them to 94 yards rushing and 120 total yards. Like so many other one dimensional attacks, the lack of a passing attack has often been their Achilles Heel. This was magnified by injuries to FB Austin Vang who went down early in the game, and quarterback Noah Palm in the 3rd quarter. Realistically, the game was over at the half with Township enjoying a 28-7 lead. Both were undefeated coming in. But the Blue Streaks dominated, rushing for 250 yards while throwing for 210. Senior quarterback Harrison Kirk completed 11 of 18 passes for 210 yards with touchdown passes of 33, 80, 20 and 21 yards. Three came in the 2nd quarter with Jaden Floyd rushing for 90 yards on 11 carries to blow it open. Talk about monster LL-1 matchups of undefeated teams. This week sees the Streaks traveling to West Lawn for a war with Wilson while surprising Cedar Crest out of Lebanon, also undefeated, travels to Lititz for a contest with Warwick’s big offense. Wilson currently holds the #1 seed, with Township #2. Warwick is atop the 5A classification going against Cedar Crest who is #4 in 6A.
4 Wilson (5-0)
Wilson’s game with Penn Manor was never in doubt as they easily built a 31-8 lead at the half. Junior quarterback Kaleb Brown had another strong outing, completing 11 of 15 passes for 210 yards and touchdown passes of 5, 32 and 35 yards while rushing for 64 more. They were well distributed, throwing to six receivers. Avanti Lockhart (6-2, 215) ran for 92 yards scoring on 33 and 20 yard runs, while super quick Gavin and Mason Lenart rushed for 65 and 48 respectively. Penn Manor (1-4) had no answer for Wilson’s balanced offense and aggressing defense, generating a paltry 75 yards rushing and 110 passing. Wilson rushed for 302 yards with Qb Harrison and company getting 210 yards passing in a 51-24 win. They’re home Friday against Manheim Township in a battle of unbeaten teams that will match the Harrisburg-Central Dauphin game in importance (seeding) with the great thing being you can see both games since Wilson and Township play Friday night while Harrisburg and Central Dauphin play Saturday afternoon. Flip a coin at a neutral site but at Gurski, Wilson will come out smokin before a raucous crowd. The advantage of a more mobile Qb may just tip it their way.
5 Central Dauphin (3-2)
Central Dauphin had a break out game last week against Carlisle, jumping all over the Thundering Herd for a 49-0 half time lead that grew to 62-7 as time expired. Apart from another solid performance by the defense (271 yield), Malachi Bowman had a 33 yard Pick-6 and sophomore Ryan Russo returned a fumble 91 yards for another score. 13 different players ran the ball and seven different players scored. FB Marques Holton (6-0, 220) scoring twice with Nick Chimienti pulling down three passes for 128 yards and a score. But the big news was the performance of sophomore quarterback Max Mosey who completed 7 of 7 passes for 204 yards, with touchdown passes of 58 and 21 yards. To date CD’s losses are to two of the best teams in the state; at Wilson 21-13 and at Manheim Township 10-7 with a questionable passing game. As always, if the passing game comes around look out! We’ll see this week at Harrisburg who also fields a strong defense but with a credible passing game. They’ve allowed 65 points all year, 42 coming against Archbishop Hoban-OH (3-1). CD will have to pound it if the passing game is absent to prevent them from turning it into a track meet.
6 Warwick (5-0, 5A)
Like all the teams above them in the rankings except State College, Warwick rolled, routing overmatched and winless J.P. McCaskey 49-6. That was as merciful as they could be knowing they had a 42-0 halftime lead. Joey McCracken completed 6 of 8 for 140 yards and 3 touchdown passes before exiting for freshman Jack Reed (6-0, 165) who went 4 for 6 for 44 yards. With Colton Miller rushing for 134 yards and three scores and Caleb Schmitz getting two touchdown tosses for 85 yards, the attack was productive, generating 362 total yards, or 8.61 yards per point. JPM was bottled up all night, held to 72 rush yards and 98 in completions. Cedar Crest’s surprising and undefeated Falcons are next in another huge Section-1 game. Good luck finding another district that can boast the trilogy of games District-3 offers this weekend with Central Dauphin (3-2) at Harrisburg (4-1), Township (5-0) at Wilson (5-0) and Cedar Crest (5-0) at Warwick (5-0, 5A). Depending on your stamina, undefeated Wyomissing is also at undefeated Fleetwood!
7 Southern Columbia (5-0, 2A, D4)
9 seconds into the game, Southern Columbia’s quarterback Preston Zachman hit Julian Fleming (4 for 165) with a 69 yard bomb and the rout was on, with the Tigers bounding out to a 48-0 halftime lead before coasting to a 62-0 win. Zachman had an All-Star performance, completing 8 of 11 passes for 258 yards and two touchdown passes. Gavin Garcia led all rushers with 104 yards and two touchdowns, following by his brother Gaige with 80 yards and three scores. And finally, FB Ty Rothermel ran for 79 yards and a touchdown on just two carries. The Tiger D was outstanding, holding Central Columbia to 27 total yards of offense. 27!....while cranking out 382 on the ground and 258 passing for a total of 640 yards of offense. These guys need to play in another conference! South Williamsport (4-1, 1A) is next, coming off a 17-12 loss at Bloomsburg (2-3) last week.
8 Middletown (5-0, 3A)
The field was loaded with speed and athletes last week when undefeated Steelton Highspire (4-0, 2A) visited unbeaten Middletown to settle the annual back yard feud between the Rollers and Raiders. “Chippy” sounds more like teenaged girls going at than the way these two behaved with 13 flags for 75 yards thrown Steel High’s way and 17 for 140 yards thrown at Middletown. 30 penalties for 215 yards is a little more than chippy. The 1st quarter saw some unusual fireworks when star running back Jose Lopez (out per knee last week) returned to the lineup on defense for a Pick-6 of 103 yards. 103 yards! That helped make it a wild half before a big crowd at War Memorial with a penalty nullifying a Roller Td, and Middletown’s Tony Powell connecting with Jose Lopez for a 46 yard touchdown before his Pick-6. The 2nd quarter saw Middletown pour it on with a 21 point outburst, featuring two more touchdowns by Powell (Lopez and Joseph) and a second Pick-6, this time by Chris Joseph for 90 yards! Talk about an awesome talent, Jose Lopez rushed for 138 yards on 18 carries, had 3 touchdown receptions of 46, 17 and 12 yards and the 103 yard Pick 6. After rushing for 328 yards last week, Middletown’s other weapon, freshman Tymir Jackson (5-10, 220), rushed for 110 here. The Roller’s Nyles Jones was “contained”, held to 122 yards on 22 carries and 114 yards passing but threw 3 picks. Steel High is a talented team but Middletown is more, totaling 408 yards to their 279. They love blitzing, bringing guys all day from all directions. Up next is Boiling Springs (0-5) where Middletown will pull the starters at least by the half, perhaps earlier against the Bubblers who’ve scored 25 points the entire season. They are just what the doctor ordered after a bruising brawl with the Rollers.
9 Central York (4-1)
The Panther’s bowled over New Oxford (2-3) 43-7, playing without quarterback Beau Pribula who has been out since the second half last week against Red Lion. He was seen on the sidelines in a sling, icing his shoulder. Last week saw him suited up although he did not enter the game. Wasn’t needed. He may not be needed the next two weeks with South Western (3-2) and Spring Grove (2-3) up next, although South Western won their last three including last week’s surprising 17-14 upset of Red Lion. Barring the unforeseen (right!) Central York looks capable of running the table with principle challengers Northeastern (5-0, 5A) and York High (3-2, 5A) coming to them. Scoring 41ppg and allow 11 says they’ll be a tough out, even tho they appear to be a year ahead of schedule.
10 Shippensburg (5-0, 5A)
Undefeated Shippensburg beat winless Mifflin County 45-14 with a blistering 1st half that saw them build a 42-7 lead on the Huskies. As mentioned last week, Ship had a score to settle knowing they were the only team to beat them in the regular season last year 26-21. Accordingly, the Greyhounds came out swinging for the fences with FB Jacob Loy (6-0, 195, sr) lobbing it downfield to Isaiah Houser (5-9, 140, jr) who streaked to the end zone on a 62 yard strike. No one’s catching him in the open field. Loy was far from finished, going on to gash them for 158 yards on 18 carries, scoring touchdowns of 4 and 53 yards before catching a 62 yard toss for a third score. Another Greyhound, Alex Sharrow (5-5, 140, sr) zigged and zagged his way to 108 yards on 14 totes. Wow, the Hounds have some speed, with a D that hounded the Huskies, holding them to 110 total yards on three first downs. Mid Penn-Colonial action continues Friday at Greencastle-Antrim (1-4). If it gets to smash mouth, the guys from Antrim Township are the wrong group of fellows to pick a fight with. Long hairs, baseball caps and pickup trucks with rifles on the racks. Man I miss home!? Anyway, they have some hogs in RT Landon Searles (6-3, 310, jr), LT Sam Reid (6-3, 275, sr), C Bobby McCune (5-11, 230, sr), Ben Delauter (6-0, 235, so), Carson Sellers (5-9, 255, jr) and others but are woefully young in most areas. Ship’s speed should run rings around them but they’ll score points at home with their Pistol Offense.
11 Manheim Central (3-2, 5A)
Manheim Central responded the way you knew they would following embarrassing losses at Warwick and Wilson by taking apart Elizabethtown (2-3) 54-6. It was as ugly as the score indicates, holding the Bears to 104 total yards of offense while the Barons pounded out 546 total yards, their highest output of the season. Qb Evan Simon was sharp, completing 25 of 34 passes for 358 yards, thrown mostly to Colby Wagner who caught 16 passes for 232 yards. Running back Jack Harbach had 34 yards on 8 carries. The ground game is still not where it needs to be (Harbach at 34?) having to rely on QB Simon every game. He had 74 of their 162 yards rushing on 33 total carries. So while they’re not out of the woods with the ground game, they can at least see day light after the big Elizabethtown win. Standing between them and another LL-2 title is Cocalico (4-1) and Lampeter Strasburg (5-0) back-to-back the next two weeks. Cocalico will be inspired with added incentive coming off a 56-7 thrashing at home to Manheim Township.
12 Susquehanna Township (4-1, 4A)
Susquehanna Township got past Hershey (1-4) 27-19 on the strength of special teams play and their outstanding quarterback Rahsaan Carlton. Otherwise, it was a listless performance allowing the Bears to hang around. QB Jackson Bouslough kept them guessing, completing 10 of 19 passes for 125 yards, mostly to Davey Loyd who caught 6 for 82 yards. Meanwhile, Hanna’s Qb Carlton threw for 216 yards and a touchdown while rushing for another. WR/CB Stevie Graves was also instrumental in the win with 88 yards in receptions, 34 rushing including a 26 yard touchdown run and a monster 95 yard kickoff return. Up next is a home game against surprising Mechanicsburg (4-1) in a key conference showdown. The Wildcats will be full of themselves after shutting down West Perry’s Qb Kenyon Johnson (seasonal stats; 25/34/512p, 610r), one of the most versatile Qbs in the mid-state, holding him to 117 passing and 29 rushing while giving the Mustangs their first loss of the year, 35-7. Mechanicsburg can stretch you. Qb Micah Brubaker is a duel threat supported by a decent back in Keegan Neill. But if it gets to an all-out, ground and pound, Hanna will out-physical them. Dangerous and key game for both.
13 Cocalico (4-1, 5A)
The Eagles fell out of the Top 10 after being overwhelmed at home by Manheim Township 56-7. The Blue Streaks can throw a lot of different looks at you and Cocalico’s D is green. But still, allowing 250 rushing and 210 yards passing says you couldn’t stop any aspect of their offense. And that’s disappointing when you can’t take anything from your opponent’s attack. The big thing now is getting Qb Noah Palm (63%, 342p, 2/0, 66/438r) healthy, plus Ronald Zahm (14/160r, 10/196p) and FB Austin Vang (25/88r), who were all banged up last week and tightening up a porous defense. They’ll need everyone on the same page against a revived Manheim Central team this week, coming off their exhilarating 54-6 win against Elizabethtown.
14 Chambersburg (3-2)
The boys from Troy moved up a rung after taking State College to the limit last week before losing 27-17. It’s been a quick transition from loser to winner in Chambersburg where they’re past the point of accepting moral victories, with the full expectation of winning games against area power teams. They’ve played with spirit since losing to Red Lion 26-21 two weeks ago; a loss that may have served as a wakeup. You saw a different team the following week against Altoona (1-4) where they were all over the field, recovering 3 fumbles, blocking a punt and getting an 85 yard Pick-6 while pounding out 243 yards on the ground in a 56-24 win. They showed that same level of intensity against State College last week, it just wasn’t enough. As mentioned last week, they have a number of people that can beat you, just not as many as SC. We’ll see Friday how they stack up against Cumberland Valley (2-3) Friday. CV is in the midst of a six game slugfest with consecutive games against Bishop McDevitt, Central York, Coatesville, Central Dauphin, Harrisburg and now Chambersburg. It’s hard seeing CV lose four straight. But if they’re dinged (Coatesville, CD, Harrisburg back to back!) and Chambersburg healthy, it’s anybody’s game.
15 Berks Catholic (2-3, 4A)
Berks Catholic dropped farther in the rankings, losing to a second team outside the Mid State area (McDonogh the other), when they were overwhelmed by Malvern Prep 42-7. The Friars (1-3) dominated the Saints every way you can dominate a team. Offensively, they rushed for 348 yards while passing for another 127. Defensively, they manhandled BC, holding them to 128 total yards and 5 first downs. Standout Abdul MacFoy was hobbled but played while Nolan Larkin missed the game. Lonnie White had a spectacular game for Malvern Prep, completing 5 of 12 passes for 127 yards, throwing touchdown tosses of 24, 58 and 14 yards, and rushing for 202 yards including touchdowns of 47 and 88 yards. Despite coming in 0-3, you knew they were tested, playing McDonogh (4-0), LaSalle (4-0) and Imhotep (2-3). With the Inter-Ac looking stronger than in recent years, the schedule offers no breaks. In fact it looks like rough sledding here on out against teams with a total won-loss of 32-9. This includes six teams currently undefeated; McDonogh, LaSalle, Germantown Academy, Penn Charter, Episcopal, and Springside Chestnut Hill Academy. About Berks, they’ll recover with the young team developing each week against more equal opposition than Central Dauphin, McDonogh and Malvern Prep. But they need the core of their young team, MacFoy, Larkin, etc healthy. Don’t be surprised if they win their next four games against Hamburg (2-3, 4A), Kutztown (0-5, 3A), Schuylkill Valley (2-3, 3A) and Fleewood (4-0, 4A), before the regular season finale against another Reading team, rival Wyomissing (5-0, 4A).
16 Exeter Township (3-2, 5A)
Exeter easily handled winless Muhlenberg 41-0 last week in the Berks-1 opener, responding well to the previous week’s 24-7 loss to Spring Ford. The Muhlies are struggling this year, being outscored 233 to 41. Exeter’s stats reflected that, outgaining them 468 to 24, holding them to negative 23 yards rushing and four first downs. Qb Gavin McCusker was on point, completing 10 of 13 passes to eight receivers for 148 yards and two touchdown passes. Wender Polanco rushed for 144 yards on 14 carries. J.R. Strauss and Alex Javier had solid games, with 83 and 69 total yards respectively; Javier rushing for a score and catching one from McCusker. A rejuvenated Conrad Weiser team seems recovered from the 0-2 start, looking to defend their Berks-1 title. They’re a light weight attack with Owen Dautrich (5-6, 140, 68/375r) and Dalton Moyer (6-0, 165, 28/310r) toting the ball, with a sophomore under center, Logan Klitsch (6-1, 160, 24/46/430, 58%, 4/3). Exeter needs to take care of these guys early, not letting them hang around for record setting field goal specialist Matt Noll to decide the issue.
**** Note on last year’s running back Steven Rose who rushed for 810 yards and had 33 tackles as a safety in 2018. Rose attempted to transfer to Berks Catholic but was denied eligibility for this season then opted to transfer to Malvern Prep, a non-PIAA member, where he could play immediately.
17 Cedar Crest (5-0)
Cedar Crest passed a mild LL-1 test beating Hempfield (1-4) 34-21 to remain undefeated and tied with Wilson, Warwick and Manheim Township atop the LL-1. Cedar Crest showed some muscle against the Knights, rushing for 338 yards with first year starting Qb Chris Danz (5-10, 155, jr) completing 10 of 20 passes for 150 yards and a touchdown. Running back Tyler Cruz (132/814r) had a breakout game, rushing for 320 yards on 40 carries (40!), scoring touchdowns of 60, 18 and 9 yards. The defense held Hempfield’s versatile quarterback Tanner Hess in check at 66 pass yards and 80 rushing. Total yardage was 488 (338r-150p) to 240 (174r-66p), Cedar Crest. The yield gets your attention going on the road this week to face Warwick’s substantial offense. Wilson and Township get a lot of attention and rightly so. But Warwick’s offense is a monster at 52ppg with multiple weapons. Everyone can catch and they’ve found their runner in Colton Miller (6-2, 205, 69/480r). Topping that off is a D allowing 7ppg.
18 Milton Hershey (4-1, 5A)
Milton Hershey had no trouble with East Pennsboro once they saw the 1-3 Enola guys weren’t going anywhere. The Panther’s truly pounced in this one, jumping all over the Trojans for a 9-0, 1st quarter lead. Milton Hershey came back, but it stayed tight through the first half with East Pennsboro down 20-16. That’s as good as it got with the talented Spartans pulling away with 26 second half points to beat a scrappy East Pennsboro squad 46-23. Simply put, Milton Hershey has too many weapons and too much speed. Dion Bryant (5-8, 180) was one of those weapons, rushing for 204 yards on 15 carries. Quarterback Tigere Mavesere (5-11, 180, sr) is another, connecting on 14 of 22 passes for 122 yards and 52 rushing. His receivers are tall, quick and agile in Avohn Cross (6-4, 205) with 3 receptions for 38 yards and Joshua Parra (6-4, 210) collecting 2 tosses for 54 yards. Cross and Mavesere are two of the best athletes in the mid-state. Ditto Dion Bryant who had 128 yards the week before against Boiling Springs and 74 in the Cocoa Bowl against Hershey the week before that. All these guys are burners, even Mavesere who erupted for 252 total yards against Hershey. Trinity’s Shamrocks (4-1) are next as Mid Penn-Capital action continues. If the Rocks don’t bring it hard, the Spartans will run them right off the field.
19 Wyomissing (5-0, 3A)
Here’s another Reading team that doesn’t get enough media coverage. All they do is win, forever it seems. More recently they’re 101-27 the last 10 years. Head Coach/Assistant Coach Bob Wolfrum (305-83-1) is one of PA’s great coaches. This year’s team is the real deal, with a state title in ‘12 and a 16-0 team that bounced Imhotep Charter School (14-1) 35-13 in the semifinal before edging Aliquippa (15-1) in the final 17-14. No one was supposed to beat the Quips that year, averaging 49ppg. And more than a few felt ICS would win with a defense allowing just 73 points with six shutouts. Bringing it back to the present, Wyomissing is at it again with a powerful array despite losing quarterback Zach Zechman for the season (ACL) in the opener. The reason they haven’t been ranked is to know how the replacement quarterback, Jordan Auman would work out. He worked out well. As they often do, the Spartans have another strong O-Line and solid backfield. The line consists of TE Mack Aiden (6-4, 200, so), Steve Olexy (5-11, 240, jr), Seamus Filoon (6-4, 285, jr), Ian Brunner (6-2, 235, sr), Mario Bowen (5-11, 275, jr)..or..Rushard Williams (6-4, 290, jr), with Jack Freightner (6-1, 205, jr) replacing OG Evan Niedrowski (6-2, 230, jr) who moved to fullback. Niedrowski compliments veteran running backs Max Hurleman (5-11, 180, sr, 60-658r) and Jevin Tranquillo (6-1, 185, sr) since he’s not a slug or plodder. He has moves with obvious power. With wins against Pottsville (4-1, 4A), 21-20 in double overtime (Auman’s first start) and North Schuylkill (4-1, 3A) 31-14, you know they’re real. Pottsville’s Crimson Tide are swamping people, winning by an average score of 48-10 excluding Wyo, while District-11 perennial powerhouse North Schuylkill, defeated area powers Loyalsock and Mount Carmel. Wyo beat struggling West York last week 48-0, with 432 yards of total offense, 328 on the ground. The Berks-2 looks like a three team race with Fleetwood (5-0, 4A) next. They have an interesting quarterback in Charlie Maddocks who is over 3000 career yards tallied at four schools; Lancaster Catholic as a frosh, Kutztown as a soph, Bishop Shanahan as a junior and now finally at Fleetwood as a senior. They’ll have him to contend with Friday in Fleetwood (46/90/830 yards, 51%) and the Berks-2 leading rusher Christian Moreno with 658 yards.
20 Cedar Cliff (2-3, 5A)
Like Exeter above, Cedar Cliff responded well to adversity since the Harrisburg loss (41-7), routing Hollidaysburg 49-8 then surprising Bishop McDevitt last week 20-17. Jaheim Morris was a big factor in the win, gaining 84 yards on 28 carries against a legit McDevitt front seven. He also threw a 34 yards Td pass to Kevin Luck in the 3rd quarter. They fell behind 17-7 with McDevitt’s receivers Oscar Hopkins catching 5 passes for 178 yards and Kamil Foster snagging 5 for 80. But when the Colts went to the Wildcat effectively, it was a whole new game, storming back to score 13 unanswered points with an economic but productive attack of 162 yards producing 20 points. That’s 8.1yards per point. At the same time, McDevitt’s impressive offense went up and down the field in mistake prone drives, gaining 428 total yards but scoring only 17 points. That’s 25.17ypp! Good efficiency by the Colts aided by six Crusader errors, two fumbles and four interceptions, secured an important Mid Penn-Keystone conference win. Winless Lower Dauphin is next.
Honorable Mention:
Northeastern (5-0, 5A) at Red Lion 3-2
Suburban (5-0, 4A) at Muhlenberg 0-5, 5A
Lampeter Strasburg (5-0, 4A) at Hempfield 1-4
Montoursville (5-0, 3A, D4) at Milton 0-5, 3A
Gettysburg (4-1, 4A) home Eastern York 2-3, 4A
Mechanicsburg (4-1, 4A) at Susquehanna Twp 4-1, 4A
Lancaster Catholic (4-1, 3A) home Annville Cleona 3-2, 3A
Steelton Highspire (4-1, 2A) home Palmyra 2-3, 5A
Conrad Weiser (3-2. 4A) at Exeter Twp 3-2, 5A
Mount Carmel (3-2, 3A, D4) home Mifflinberg 4-1, 3A
Bishop McDevitt (2-3, 4A) at Waynesboro 2-3, 5A
Cumberland Valley (2-3) home Chambersburg 4-1
Governor Mifflin (2-3, 5A) at Twin Valley 1-4, 5A