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Good article

Bob Tonkin’s first response to his email mirrored his view of the subject matter.

Before Tonkin made any definitive statements about the new PIAA football classification system that he designed, he replied politely, he wanted to elicit feedback from stakeholders across the state. Just as when Tonkin, a long-time sports administrator from District 9, recognized the need for a new structure by collaborating with parties state-wide, he knew the initial verdict on the scheme that crowns its first champions this weekend in Hershey would originate from the coaches and officials living its nuances.

Tonkin’s findings reflect his receptiveness for diverse perspectives. In its first season, he’s pleased with the new order but not blinded to adjustments that can optimize its utility.


North Penn’s Dan Drop tries to cling to the shirt tail of Prep’s D’Andre Swift in the PIAA semifinal last Friday. Under alterations to the new PIAA classification system proposed by the scheme’s designer, North Penn could find itself in a “Super 700” class in the future. (Digital First Media/Bob Raines)

“Everybody I’ve talked to state-wide, everyone is very much in favor it,” Tonkin told PaPrepLive Wednesday. “I think things went far more smoothly than what people thought they would. But there are a couple of minor things that need to be looked at.”

That smoothness doesn’t preclude Tonkin from pushing for alterations, and among the biggest issues he hopes to address is the resurrection of the “Super 700” plan, which partitions the largest enrollment schools into Class 6A, dividing the rest of the state equally into five classes.

Tonkin’s zeal for finding cooperative solutions stems from his background as, “the old guy on the block,” as he puts it. His experience as an educator has brought him to every corner of the state. He attended (the now closed) West Pittstown High in the Scranton area and matriculated to East Stroudsburg University. In his retirement, he holds a litany of titles — secretary/treasurer, district chairman for football and track and field as well as other initiatives, plus sits on numerous committees — in District 9, which encompasses the rural tranche of north-central/western Pa. around towns like Bradford and Dubois.

A move toward broad reclassification failed on several occasions in the last two decades, most recently in 2009, but Tonkin’s diligence propelled it through initial opposition from strong constituencies last year.

Tonkin devised the arrangement to solve a handful of obvious problems; on those objectives, the system has succeeded.

Football champions will be crowned over three days this weekend, long before Christmas and with diminished impingement on the winter season, which begins Friday. Player safety is paramount to Tonkin, who likened the schedule for a potential state champion to that of a college football team, sans bye weeks or bowl breaks. The optional play/scrimmage date and reduction of practices/games in frigid December conditions struck a compromise there.

Tonkin is also heartened by feedback from the WPIAL (District 7), which had bristled at the six-class plan’s disruption of its hallowed day of four championship games at Heinz Field. This year, classes 3A-6A played at the Steelers’ home in a quadruple-header Nov. 18, with the A and 2A games moved a week later to Robert Morris University.

Conflicts persist, though. Among those that Tonkin cited involve District 10, borne of the specter of private-school powerhouse Erie Cathedral Prep, which plays Imhotep Charter for the 4A title Thursday night. Rather than compete with the Ramblers, nine schools whose calculated enrollments qualified for 4A opted to play up in 5A.

That predicament and others is why Tonkin is revisiting former plans. When first broached in the spring of 2015, Tonkin presented two sets of the same four plans, with and without a provision for calculating enrollment of charter/cyber/home-school students that was eventually passed overwhelmingly by the PIAA. Beyond the approved six-class plan and a restatement of the status quo of four, each evenly divided by enrollment, Tonkin also presented the “Super 700” and “Super 800” plans. Those would’ve isolated teams above 700 and 800 enrolled male students, respectively, into a class, with the rest of the state evenly divided among the other five, with the existing option to play up but not down.

“Now that the playoffs have expanded, I think it’s time for the 700-plus,” Tonkin said. “It evens the playing field in other classes, but teams can always play up.”

In local terms, the “Super 700” would relegate Haverford, Garnet Valley and Penn Wood (plus 6A finalist St. Joseph’s Prep and both Downingtown schools) to 5A, and the equal reshuffle would reverberate down, with small 5A teams moving to 4A, and so on. The smallest football school in 6A for 2016-17 is Central Dauphin East, with 564 boys.

Tonkin, who’ll spend a busy weekend in Hershey obtaining input, hopes to reintroduce the “Super 700” plan at the January meeting of the football steering committee. With the PIAA operating under two-year cycles, change is unlikely to be implemented next year, waiting for the 2018-19 school year and a recount of enrollment undertaken in the fall of 2017.

One facet not yet on Tonkin’s radar is the possibility of a public/private split, which engenders particular fervor in sections of southeastern Pennsylvania and is likely to be stoked by March’s basketball finals. (For the record, Tonkin’s initial six-class plan was isolated to football, but he was “happily surprised” when the PIAA broke protocol in Oct. 2015 to expand in other sports, including six in boys and girls basketball, on first reading rather than the usual three. “It saved me a lot of work,” Tonkin said.)

A public/private split entered Tonkin’s mind in crafting the six-class systems but never progressed to a formal framework.

“I certainly looked at it, but it was not part of it because I knew it wouldn’t go anywhere,” he said. “… Was it a thought? Yes. Was it something that I thought would pass? No.”

Regardless of what lies ahead, Tonkin is maintaining the process and spirit that brought his plans to fruition, one that resonated with the PIAA where others had failed.

“The purpose,” Tonkin said, “is to give more kids and more schools the opportunity to move up in the class they’re supposed to be in.”

PCC way overated

All the talk about PCC dominance and their o-line was totally overblown. Fisher under pressure all night and very few holes created. Ofensively very one dimensional. PCC is good, but after this performance, not sure they are even top 5 in state. Definitely behind Prep, Wood, and NP!!!!! I picked PCC based on all the chatter,, have seen Prep 5 times should have known better, glad no money on it....HA!
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PIAA Finals; 6A, 3A, 2A (Saturday Games)

All games are at Hershey Park Stadium, East rep on top.

Class AAAAAA Final, Dec 10th Saturday 8 PM
St. Joseph’s Prep 13-0, Philadelphia Catholic-League Red Division, #15 USA-Today
vs
Pittsburgh Central Catholic 14-1, WPIAL Class 6A, Northern Seven

Here’s the Commonwealth’s premier Private School State Final….the PSSF, featuring St. Joseph’s Prep and Pittsburgh Central Catholic, with the East and West runner ups Wilson and North Penn meeting in the preliminary. That actually looks pretty good! You know the Knights want to keep it going the way their game ended and Wilson has to be anxious to atone for last week’s embarrassment to Central Catholic.
Ok back to reality; Central Catholic is coming off a 63-21 pounding of Wilson were they used 4 scoring plays of plus 50 yards to put the Bulldogs away early, racing out to a 21-0 1st quarter lead. They rushed for 318 yards with 505 total yards. That’s pretty much been the story all year, no competition, winning their games by an average score of 49-16. Looking at the best teams played, teams like North Allegheny, Williamsport, Pine Richland (regular season only) and Wilson last week, they are still blowing people away by an average score of 57-23. The one loss talked about in previous write ups was to St. Johns College (8-4) 35-14 in the opener. SJC’s losses were to IMG (11-0, USA-Today #3), Gonzaga (8-3, 2nd in Washington Catholic League) and DeMatha (12-0, WCL Champ, USA Today # 6) twice in tight games. Regardless, Central Catholic is loaded everywhere and are particularly threatening this year with a legitimate passing attack. Junior Troy Fisher (6-4, 205) has thrown for 1825 yards at a 58% rate while rushing for 577 yards. Senior JJ Younger is quick as a cat at 5-8 165 with 1698 rush yards supported by David Marshal (5-9, 200, Sr) with 426 yards and David Adams (6-2, 230, Sr) with 178 yards. Except for Younger’s 190 yards in receptions, the backs aren’t a threat there. But Justice Evans and Evan Frazier are with 1096 and 366 yards respectively. The lines mentioned in previous weeks are mammoth, and mostly senior veterans.
About St. Joseph’s, there are similarities to Central Catholic with their veteran line, explosive running back with multiple, talented receivers and a highly veteran team with 17 starters back from last year. Central returned 13. Their average score is 38-16 compared to 49-16 for the Vikings. Last week saw them beat North Penn 35-25 in the Eastern Final with a 4th quarter explosion, outscoring the Knights 21-8 with D’Andre Swift blistering them for 170 yards, all in the 4th quarter. Impressive stuff knowing the score was 17-14 North Penn at the end of the previous quarter. Swift ended the game with 32 carries for 274 yards and 4 Tds. The Hawk D harassed North Penn quarterback Reece Udinski unending, forcing 4 turnovers, with special teams coming through big time for a 2nd quarter 82-yd kickoff return for 6 by Terrance Green, and other returns resulting in excellent field position.
You won’t likely see them getting to Fisher the way they got to Udinski, not with Central’s line so he should have time to find his receivers. And that could spell trouble with the other option of JJ Younger breaking one and a threat out of the backfield receiving, combined with Fisher’s run ability. Fisher is their edge. But no more than underrated Hawk receivers against a secondary perceived to be vulnerable, if McCray can connect and D’Andre Swift. Looking at schedule difficulty; St. Joe’s has strong postseason wins against LaSalle, Parkland, North Penn and a stronger regular season schedule while Central has overwhelming playoff wins against good stuff from Williamsport and Wilson and a weaker regular season slate. Some would argue a weaker postseason slate. The great thing about this one is these are clearly the two best teams in the state….and they appear to be evenly matched. Parkland’s comeback last year losing 21-18 made that one seem tight. But the one that really comes to mind is the 2014 final where the Hawks edged Pine Richland 49-41 in one of the most exciting finals since Liberty and Bethel Park in 2008 where Liberty won 28-21 in overtime, or, 8 years before that where Cathedral Prep edged Central Bucks West 41-35.

Class AAA Final, Dec 10th Saturday 3:30
Middletown 14-0 ,Mid Penn Conference-Capital Division
vs
Beaver Falls 13-1,WPIAL Class 3A-Beaver Valley Division

This game is about old school football, the way it used to be played between two small towns with none of the private school rhetoric. Just rock solid in your face football with no thought of how big the opponent’s school is. Yes!
Middletown has been dormant the last 15 years with only 5 winning seasons but have come off a 7-4 season where they showed good statistical improvement over the preceding year. So with 16 starters back it is no surprise they are vastly improved. This is the second year running backs Jaelen Thompson (5-11, 185, Sr) and Brady Fox (5-9, 195, Jr) have back-to-back +1000-yard seasons, 1598 for Thompson and 1436 for Fox this season. On top of this they have strong quarterbacking with senior veteran Chase Snavely (2120/23 Tds) protected by a substantial veteran line where all are returning starters except one. Snavely’s favorite target is Tyreer Mills with 22 catches for 722 yards. This is their first time in a state final but they bring a powerful, veteran team to the event that is highly productive at 42ppg. The defense is stingy at 11ppg. When I lived in Middletown going to Penn State no one knew why the mascot was named the Blue Raiders….and still don’t!?
Beaver Falls: The Tigers discovered Martinsburg Central out of District-6 plays some serious football, forcing them to score late to pull out a 14-7 victory. So here they are like Middletown and Steel Valley in their first ever finals appearance. Heady stuff! They are something like Imhotep in that they run a lot of bodies at you with 4 backs topping the 400-yard mark, led by Malik Shepherd’s 1018 yards, followed by Darrell Carter with 865 and Torian Leak at 608. All can catch with 28 receptions for 481 yards between them. As mentioned in last week’s write up (below) they are massive along both lines with people like Donovan Jeter 6-5 255, Matt Gandy 6-5 305 and Rayquan Crowder 6-4 315 plugging things up or opening holes. Compared to many of the offenses you see at this level, their’s is modest, averaging 29ppg. With a 13-1 record, a D allowing but 15ppg, and last week’s game as evidence, that has not been as issue.

Class AA Final, Dec 10th Saturday 11 AM
Southern Columbia 15-0, Heartland Athletic Conference-Division II
vs
Steel Valley 14-0, WPIAL Class 2A-Three Rivers Division
Steel Valley and the town of Munhall have a strong football tradition but like Harrisburg, Middletown and Beaver Falls are in rarified air at this level. Munhall is 2-3 miles downriver (west bank) from Pittsburgh on the Monogahela, in the heart of the WPIAL. Everything out that way is football centric. And if last week’s score result against another powerful program means anything, Southern Columbia is in for a serious encounter. Steel Valley destroyed the Greyhounds 49-13. And like West Allegheny being routed by Harrisburg last week, that just doesn’t happen. The Ironmen are wildly talented with strong quarterbacking in Ryan Harper and a dynamic runner in DeWayne Murray and receiver Paris Ford. Harper has thrown for `978 yards and 33 touchdowns with a 62% completion rate, completing 98 of 158. Murray has been close to unstoppable with 2008 yards rushing. The receiving corps is talented and deep featuring Ford with Najhier West and ZaiQuan Henderson.
Southern Columbia: Southern comes into another state title game after a close call 31-27 win against Ligonier Valley. LV bent but kept it together despite Southern getting 368 yards rushing. They are led by two outstanding backs, freshman Gage Garcia with 1942 yards and 31 scores and Hunter Thomas with 1469 yards and 23 touchdowns. Quarterback Stone Hollenbach has a 62% completion rate for 2022 yards and 23 touchdowns throwing to essentially two receivers who get most of the work, Cam Young and Julius Fleming. It is a big offense, like Steel Valley’s at 47ppg with a defense a little softer than many playoff teams at 17ppg. But 15-0 speaks for itself despite their extreme youth.
For Steel Valley, we’ll see if big game jitters get to them but they are definitely battle tested against WPIAL quality, especially in the postseason where they’ve outscored opponents 241 to 55! But talk about Southern Comfort! The other side of the field sees the Tigers in their 15th state title game and 2nd in a row. After beating Aliquippa 49-14 in last year’s AA final, they are on a 31 game winning streak. With all the offensive talent on the field, it should be a high scoring, exciting game. The last possession just may decide this one!
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TEP POORLY COACHED

Questions
Why throw the ball from your own 2 yard line against the wind ?
Why does the Qb have to come over to coach to get a play after 14 games ? caused 3 delay of game penalties and many plays rushed to beat the play clock
Up 8 why are you throwing the ball against the wind?
Only down 7 with 3 minutes left with 3 timeouts Plenty of time to run your offense Schmidt had no plan
looked like his plan was to have the Qb drop back and make something happen
swing pass screen pass was there all night with all the blitzing from prep

last time Schmidt was a head coach at Hershey He had no plan also His team was down 49-0 at halftime to PCC
Coach Crosby wins this game by 3 TD

Trump saves close to 1,000 jobs at Carrier Air...

Before even taking office and seeing a current president with no interest and/or capability to act, Trump, 50+ days before he is scheduled to take office, has worked out a deal with Carrier Air to save close to 1,000 jobs from being moved to Mexico. These jobs will remain in Indiana.

This is the kind of leadership and interest in the American worker that we need.

Fortunately the Obama Malaise ® will soon be over and we can move on to having a person of action in office.

PIAA Class AAAA Final, Dec 8th Thursday 7 PM

Imhotep Charter School 13-0, Philadelphia Public League-3A Division
vs
Erie Cathedral Prep 13-0, District 10 League, Region 6


Wow….this looks like a good one and it’s a rematch! Last year saw Imhotep win in a laugher, 40-3. This followed routs of Saucon Valley 72-27, Academy Park 46-16 and the real final where they beat Archbishop Wood in the District-12 title game 20-14. And with Cathedral Prep young in a number of key positions (so is ICS) it could get ugly again, especially after struggling last week beating Berks Catholic 28-14. Berks is good football but this was not a special edition, losing to Exeter 35-20. Yet the Saints got 25 1st downs against Cathedral with two backs topping 100 yards rushing (Wilson, Lutz) while failing to score on two other trips inside the 10. This was not a strong showing by the Ramblers. Berks was not Beca!

ECP’s weapons are centered on second year starting quarterback Joe Mischler (5-11, 185, Jr) with 2768 passing yards (60%) and 38 touchdowns. His favorite target is Tyler Oedekoven (6-0, 175, Jr) with 1120 yards in receptions. The backs are junior Matt Lupo (5-9, 190, 840yds) and Bill Lucas (6-0, 190, 802yds), a sophomore. Maybe the Ramblers are a year ahead of schedule? The lines are a strength, featuring OG/DE Frank Scruggs 6-3 265 (Everyone!), Cam Landis 6-2 290 and 6-2 245 Chris Smith at TE/DE. DT Dom Covatto 6-3 315, Evan Presta 6-4 260, DE Chris Smith and DT Scruggs form an experienced line backed by 3 veteran Linebackers, juniors Ryan Sargent 6-0 195 and Matt Bauer 6-3 220, and senior Jerry Roberts 6-1 230. Behind them is a veteran secondary. The offense is huge at 47ppg (soft schedule?), their largest since 2013’s 13-1 team that scored 50ppg, losing to Bishop McDevitt 47-42 in the semifinal. The defense allows 14ppg.

About Imhotep Charter School, there isn’t much that hasn’t been said about them on their quest for a second straight PIAA State Championship. Going 15-0 last year sees them on a 28 game winning streak, averaging 42ppg allowing 4. Here’s the short form: They have extreme team speed, a bunch of big guys up front with waves of speedy receivers and running backs leaving you gulping for air. Outside the Pub against recognized, talented teams including Malvern Prep, O’Hara, North Pocono and Bethlehem Catholic, they’ve averaged 37ppg and allowed 8. Last week was unique in that they experienced their most competitive game of the season at Northern Lehigh High School (Slatington), gutting out a 24-13 win. It was quite a game with the Panthers holding onto a narrow 18-13 lead going into the 4th quarter. Realistically, all the Golden Hawks had was a passing attack but it was almost enough with Javon Clements completing 16 of 27 for 220 yards. Their rushing total was a mere 22 yards. ICS’s underrated Nasir Boykin had another strong outing completing 11 of 19 passes for 194 yards and 1 touchdown. Beca had no answer for Amir Brown, Justin Harris or Jeff Davis who caught 10 passes for 178 yards….or Isheem Young who had 124 yards rushing. Boykin also got loose for 52 yards on 11 carries. The great thing about this one is we got to see how the Panther’s held up against “real” competition, a team with history and tradition in a hostile environment. That’s exactly what they’ll face Thursday night in Hershey minus the hostility against Cathedral Prep. This should be a great game, testing Cathedral’s ability to manage Imhotep’s physicality….which they probably can….extreme depth, running fresh backs at you, and unending speed, speed that is seen at every position on both sides of the ball.
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Best PA HS Football Player(s) over the past 30 years?

Given the big-time talent on display the past few weekends from PA roots: Saquon Barkley, Will Fuller, Jaelen Strong, Tyrelle Pryor, Lesean McCoy, D'Andre Swift, etc, the State has had a tremendous surge in producing national talent over the past decade. This begs the question about the best high school player to grace the fields over the past 30 years. Is it Pryor? Dan Connor? Devlin? Revis? Perhaps someone who saw more success in HS than at higher levels like David Williams, Nosovitch, Jeremiah Young?

So...if you had the opportunity to name 5 players as first-ballot Hall of Famers for PA HS football (again...past 30 years), who would be included on your list?
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