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wilson8500, bucksftball (G-Val, CB West)

About Garnet Valley’s O-Line starting 5. LT-74, Nick Mahoney, sr, 6-1, 270; LG-52, Nolan Brennan, sr, 6-3, 245; C-64, Sam Di Trolio, 5-10, 215, sr; RG-72, Ben Nash 6-3, 260, sr; RT-62, Austin Sorokanych 6-3, 225, sr. One of first off bench is Matt Wiesendanger #77-78, jr, 6-1, 225. Despite their depth they play these guys hard, most of the game, not the 2-platoon system they were previously known for and far more passing this year. Solid Qb! Still have huge roster. DL is often 62, 52 and 50-Luke English, 6-2, 240, sr.
Traditionally people drop down Safeties/LBs, 9 in the box to stop them, but can burn you now with the pass and still with quick backs t o get the corner. They like to run but are much more than that. Outstanding kicker in Zach Liberatore who reaches end zone often.
Last year’s team was 6-0, avg score of 49-9, their best ever but it was covid. This year’s is at 48ppg allowing 7 making this their highest scoring offense ever and lowest point total ever defensively at 7ppg.


** O-Line/D-Line info from watching 3 game videos, roster info (name, hgt/wgt, class.) from their website.

District-3 Playoffs, all classifications: Nov 12, 13 games.

District-3 Playoff, all classifications: Nov 12, 13 games.

6A Semifinals (highest seed home)
#1 Central York 11-0 vs #5 Wilson 8-3

Jaheim White scored first for York on an 11 yard run before Wilson slammed the door shut, outscoring the Bearcats 50-26 in route to a 50-32 win at 4th seeded York. The Bulldogs overwhelmed them with a ground game churning out 356 yards, while the defense bent but didn’t break against the big Bearcat attack that got 179 yards passing and 235 yards rushing. Quarterback Brad Hoffman led Wilson with 178 yards while power back Jadyn Jones got 155. In lieu of a deep passing attack (Hoffman 54-116-741-57%, 11/9), the two have turned Wilson into a powerful running team with Jadyn at 1103 yards for the year and Hoffman at 871. At some point the anemic passing attack could be their downfall, probably here against Central York. They are a dynamic attack with Beau Pribula throwing for 2100 yards at 76% with a 30/5 Td/Pick ratio. At 45ppg, they are prolific. The receivers are talented and quick in Imeire Manigault (28-712), Treyshawn Smith (31-589) and Parker Hines (26-506). Manigault and Hines do it all with 421 and 435 rushing yards respectively on 70 carries each. Their turnover differential is 21 to 11 with a defense allowing 273 total yards a game at 14.7ppg. They are undefeated against a difficult schedule of Exeter, Cumberland Valley, Hempfield, Spring Grove, Dallastown, York and Manheim Township who they defeated 26-14 last week. The Steaks are a tough out, with Central being the first team to beat them by more than a touchdown. Conversely, Wilson, who has a history of stomping York County teams in districts is 3-3 vs quality, beating Central Dauphin, Hempfield and Township while losing to Governor Mifflin, Exeter and Manheim Central. This will be Wilson’s stiffest test since losses to Governor Mifflin and Exeter. It’ll be a test for Central York too, but they have the best quarterback in the state who just put 60 points on York High in a monsoon.
#2 Harrisburg 10-1 vs #6 Hempfield 7-4
Fullback/LB Mahki Hopkins scored 3 touchdowns and rushed for 119 yards as Harrisburg overwhelmed Carlisle 36-7 in 1st round action. Hopkins (6-2, 230, jr) and Kyle Williams (6-0, 190, jr) blew it open with 3 Hopkins touchdowns by the middle of the 2nd quarter with Williams getting a 35-yard Pick-6 at the close of the quarter. DE Terrell Reynolds (6-2, 235, jr) and LBs Anthony Day (5-11, 210, sr) and Kymir Williams (5-9, 190, Fr) with Hopkins in the middle shut the Herd down to 146 total yards. Freshman quarterback Shawn Lee has developed over the course of the season completing 73 of 109 passes for 720 yards. This is not the lost kid seen vs Pine Richland! Scary thing is how young they are. And they’ve played a representative schedule beating Pine Richland, Manheim Township, Central Dauphin East, Cumberland Valley and Carlisle, twice. But they’ll have their hands full Saturday against a Hempfield team that is equally tested coming off a surprising 35-2 win at nearby Central Dauphin East. There they shut down the balanced offense of East High, holding them to 123 total yards! Qb Cam Harbaugh picked them apart completing 12 of 16 passes for 202 yards and rushing for 35. He’s one of the top dual threats in central Pennsylvania throwing for 1819 yards (59%, 13/4) and rushing for 627 yards. Hard imaging how the Black Knights lost 4 games with the top D in the Lancaster Lebanon-Section One at 16ppg. Holding East to 2 points while scoring 35, a season high for them, shows the completeness of their victory. No one kept East out of the end zone this year. They won’t keep Harrisburg out of the end zone but it should be a competitive game with Harrisburg having the home field advantage and more weapons and team speed than the Knights have or have faced to date, notwithstanding the CD East score. One thing for certain, Hempfield’s win against East High got Harrisburg’s attention.

5A Quarterfinals (highest seed home)
#1 Governor Mifflin 8-0 vs #8 Warwick 7-4

Covid-19 related cancellations (Oct 2nd, 22nd) left Governor Mifflin two games shy of a full slate. But they got in the last one defeating Berks Catholic 42-13 to claim the Berks-Section One title in the league’s final season before merging with the Lancaster Lebanon League. By now everyone knows about Nicholas Singleton (1502ry), but few know what an deep supporting cast he has in quarterback Eden Johnson (342ry, 84py) and Delsin McNeil (157ry, 122py); FB Trey Rock (419ry), Aiden Gallen (340), Ayden Martin (109ry, 24py) and Chase Rapp (112ry). The least talked about aspect of the team is their O-Line that is the best in the district and likely matches any in the state; egs Jonah Naugle (6-3, 305), Nate Goodman (6-4, 230), Daxen Washington (6-1, 250), Jamani Smith (6-1, 310), center Jacob Lopez (8-8, 200), etc, etc. The defense allowed 93 points or 12ppg. Their quality opponents included York, Wilson, Episcopal Academy, Harrisburg, Cocalico and Exeter, teams they beat by an average score of 51-13 with a combined record of 44-17. Warwick missed playing Mifflin last year with Covid-19 cancelling them out. They were 8-0 making it one of the most highly anticipated games in the district. Mifflin was also 7-0, getting the forfeit win before playing Pine Richland in the 5A final. This year the Warriors are again a big and diverse attack with a strong quarterback in Jack Reed (58%, 2249, 17/4) throwing to Cooper Eckert (67-1093), one of the top receivers in the LL, Ryan Fink (41-617) and a powerful running back in Christian Royer (1179). The problem has been a defense that has failed them in crunch time and/or an offense coming up a little short in narrow losses to CD East, Hempfield and Cocalico. But it all came together last week in the first round where they pummeled Gettysburg 44-14, rolling out 484 yards to Gburg’s 234. Since starting 2-3, they’ve gone 4-1, including giving Manheim Central (9-1) their only loss and routing Gettysburg. It’s safe to say if Harrisburg, York and Exeter can’t run with the Mustangs, neither can Warwick.
#4 Spring Grove 9-1 vs #5 Waynesboro 9-2
Here are two teams you don’t see much of in the postseason and for good reason. Spring Grove has a 34-64 record the last 10 years with 3 winning seasons while Waynesboro went 49-52 with 6 winning seasons the last 10 years. The oddity here is this is a rematch of a game Spring Field won at Waynesboro 25-20 in the opener. Three year starting quarterback Andrew Osmun went down early in that one for most of the season. That made the Rockets even more run centric, especially with a back like Zyree Brooks. He ran wild last week in the 33-6 playoff win against Twin Valley, rushing for a season high 288 yards with 4 touchdowns. With Brooks at 2107 yards on the year, they are the top rushing team in the York-Adams Conference and 4th from the bottom in passing at 54 yards per game. Waynesboro (2nd place Mid Penn-Colonial) won their playoff opener last week defeating Boone 42-20. They fell behind 14-0 before outscoring the Trailblazers 42-6 for the win. Here in the quarterfinals, Waynesboro will need to stiffen after allowing Spring Grove 294 yards in the season opener back on Aug 27th. Since then they’ve gone 9-1 while Spring Grove won their last five. Waynesboro is a battler but Spring Grove’s greater team speed, running back Zyree Brooks and 14ppg defense should be decisive. Home field helps too!
#2 Manheim Central 9-1 vs #7 Exeter Township 7-3
Manheim Central enters the playoffs following a bye week as the 2 seed with the satisfaction of managing a strong schedule with only one stumble preventing a 10-0 slate, losing to Warwick (6-4) 35-28. Their most accomplished wins were at home against Hempfield (7-4) 14-0, and road wins at Wilson (8-3) 24-21 and Perkiomen Valley (9-2) 43-40. All advanced in the playoffs last week with Warwick beating Gettysburg 44-14, Hempfield beating CD East 35-2, Wilson trouncing York 50-32 and Perk Val beating Central Bucks East 42-21. At 39ppg with a dual threat in quarterback Judd Novak throwing for 1661 yards and rushing for 611, they’re a handful. He throws to 5 receivers with at least 13 receptions led by Owen Sensenig (51-774). Justin Hefferman does the heavy lifting rushing for 77 yards with Jaden Weit adding 265 yards. The D is one of the very best in the playoffs allowing 14ppg. Exeter advanced to meet the Barons despite playing a sloppy game against 10th seeded South Western (6-5), fumbling 3 times and committing 10 penalties for 105 yards. Their 20-0 half time lead dwindled to 23-14 in the 4th quarter before pulling away for a 38-21 win. For a team that went toe-to-toe with Central York, losing 35-28 then pounding Wilson 42-14 two weeks later, they let teams hang around too often, despite averaging 40ppg! They are led by a quality Qb in Colin Payne at (59%, 1596, 16/5), a D1 receiver in Jeff Schlaffer (33-606, 6-6, 210 junior) and TE/LB J.R. Strauss (6-3, 215, 17/344). They have solid running backs in Eric Nangle (977), Cabraun Woody (366) and FB Ty Yocum (400ry, 206py). Their defense at 14ppg average is good knowing the schedule they play and that it includes a 54-21 loss to Governor Mifflin.
#3 Shippensburg 11-0 vs #6 Cedar Cliff 9-2
Shippensburg continued the streak with their 15th straight win counting last year’s final four by routing overwhelmed New Oxford (6-5, 14th seed) 43-16. It was 29-3 at the half. They have a lot of bodies to track in the Wing-T with Amari Kerr now at 627 yards, Traevon Kater at 792, Nathan Beam at 554 and quarterback Tucker Chamberlin throwing for 1100 yards with a 14 to 2 Td-Pick ratio at 57%. Allowing 10ppg including quality wins against Big Spring (8-3) 34-14, Waynesboro (9-2) 33-14 and Northern (7-3) 21-3 suggests the Greyhounds are ready for Cedar Cliff Friday. About the Colts, they needed an Erik Schriver touchdown with 53 seconds left to hold off combative Lower Dauphin 31-18 last week. Don’t read too much into that as this is a bitter Mid Penn-Keystone conference rivalry, topped off by it being a dreaded rematch. So make that 4 straight since the 56-0 debacle at McDevitt. Their stats through last week have them at 33ppg with a defense allowing 23. Key contributors remain star running back Jontae Morris at 1800 yards (7.4ypc, nice ACL recovery!), Trenton Smith catching 49 passes for 779 yards and quarterback Ethan Dorrell throwing for 1402 yards at 58% with a 15/6 ratio. Cedar Cliff is often a notch above Shippensburg in the Mid Penn pecking order playing in the larger school Mid Penn-Keystone with Ship in the Colonial. But maybe not this year with the Hounds having by all statistical measures their best team ever, definitely from a defensive view. Both can be explosive but the Colts may have the edge in team speed. Toss it up with a lean to Ship at home!

4A Quarterfinals (highest seed home)
#1 Bishop McDevitt 8-1 vs #8 Northern York 7-3

Bishop Mcdevitt enjoyed a 1st round bye last week while Northern had a war with Octorara (now 8-3), edging the explosive Braves at Northern 28-22. They jumped on Octorara early, getting a 28-6 lead that looked good at the end of the 3rd quarter. It wasn’t, with Octorara settling down to score three 4th quarter touchdowns, closing the gap to 6 with 4 minutes left in the game. But the Bears stayed with their game plan, pounding the ball to kill clock and earn a hard fought victory. Props to the Polar Bears D holding Octorara who came in averaging 280 rushing yards per game to 57 yards. Except for Spring Grove and Shippensburg, Octorara is the most talented team Northern had played. That all changes this week tackling top seeded Bishop McDevitt. Their schedule could be more despite playing LaSalle and losing 21-0 and defeating Cedar Cliff (5A, 8-2, 6th seed) 56-0. Their cast of stars are impressive; quarterback Stone Saunders (68%, 2083, 34/1 ratio), running backs Marquese Williams (1183 yards, 13/3ypc) and Cyncir Bowers (707, 15.7ypc), and receivers Mario Easterly (32/672, 21.0 yard per catch, 10 Tds) and Kamil Foster (22/569, 25.9ypc, 10 Tds). OT/DT Gabriel Arena (6-5, 275) is the cornerstone of an awesome wall of an O-Line. Their D players are over the top in OT/DT Riley Robell (6-3, 275, 18 tfl), OT/DT Ethan Straing (6-3, 260) and LBs Ryan Russo (6-2, 200, 76 tackles, 11.5 tfl), Kade Werner (5-11, 190) and Bryce Enders (5-11, 210). They allowed 5 touchdowns since the LaSalle loss and 56 points counting all game. You may see extra incentive by McDevitt knowing they missed the playoffs last year with a 6-0 team that outscored opponents 240 to 48 but feel short point wise making the playoffs with the field reduced to 4 per Covid-19. Look for a BIG effort here.
#4 Berks Catholic 6-4 vs #5 Cocalico 6-4
Berks Catholic is from the Berks-1 with Governor Mifflin, Exeter and others in the final year of the conference’s existence. They’ll merge with the Lancaster Lebanon League next year forming a super conference like the Mid Penn. That’s great news for fans able to regularly see Governor Mifflin, Exeter, BC, Wyomissing and Conrad Weiser of the Berks mix it up with Wilson, Manheim Township, Warwick, Lampeter Strasburg, Cocalico and Manheim Central. Wow! Back to the game. BC survived the transfer of quarterback Brad Johnson to Wilson and running back Aiden Gallen to Governor Mifflin with senior Mitchell Gatz completing 75% of his passes for 751 yards. This provides the threat of a pass with a strong rushing attack. Christian Cacchione leads with 1020 yards (6.9ypc,18 Tds), then Josiah Jordan at 670 yards (17 Tds) and Luke Hughes 461 (4.8ypc). The Saints faced heavy hitters this year as always losing to Malvern Prep (6-2) 37-7, Governor Mifflin (8-0) 42-13, Exeter (6-3) 33-21 and Central Dauphin (5-3) 41-22, but still average 32ppg. Overmatched losses took their yield to 26ppg. In all other games their average score is 43-18. They come out swinging for the fences, outscoring their opponents 121-48 in the 1st quarter and 101-56 in the 2nd. Cocalico wants to run the ball almost every down, and does 87% of the time. And why not having the Lancaster Lebanon League’s leading rusher in Anthony Bourasso at 1863 yards and 23 touchdowns. Qb Blake Taddei is second in carries at 76 netting 205 yards while completing 23 of 39 passes (59%) for 412 yards. Steven Flinton has 40 carries for 250 yards with brother Brycen at 23 for 165 and Aaryn Longenecker at 205 yards on 23 carries. Defensively, the Eagles are even more generous than BC, allowing 31ppg (174ry/g, 158py/g). They also played a big time schedule beating Conrad Weiser (7-4) 36-21 and Warwick (7-4, 27-21) with losses to Governor Mifflin (8-0) 56-0, Manheim Township (6-5) 48-21, Manheim Central (9-1) 42-20 and Cedar Cliff (9-2) 33-27. Both come into this game off losses, BC to Mifflin, Cocalico to Manheim Central.
#2 Lampeter Strasburg 9-1 vs #10 Big Spring 8-3
Lampeter Strasburg had a bye last week after breezing through a less than challenging schedule, winning their last nine games after the season opening 45-22 loss to Warwick. Thereon they crushed the opposition by an average score of 38-8 to win their second straight LL-3 title. They did it with a balanced offense (2602ry, 1199py) a solid quarterback in Berkeley Wagner (69%, 1150, 13/6, 109-658ry) and a hoard of running backs led by Giovanni Malatesta’s 512 rush yards and 210 in receptions. D1 prospect Beau Heyser (6-2, 225, TE, DE) is their top receiver with 19 receptions for 381 yards. The opponent this week is Big Spring from the Mid Penn-Capital (2nd place tie, Steel High, Middletown), fresh off their road win at 7th seeded Conrad Weiser (7-4), 49-35. Dartmouth recruit Logan Klitsch zinged them for 402 yards while well underrated Ethan Eisenberg of Big Spring threw for 220 yards, rushed for 60 and threw 4 touchdowns, getting his passing total to 1590 yards. Dillon Wakefield pounded out 214 yards taking his season total to 1295 yards. The Bulldogs are a big brawny offense at 40ppg as evidenced last week at Weiser and earlier against Steel High 49-14 where they ended the Rollers 17 game winning streak.
#3 Kennard Dale 9-1 vs #6 Donegal 7-2
Kennard Dale (who?) is no longer mired in the depths of a losing history since Chris Grube arrived in 2016 to turn things around. They went 7-43 the 5 years before his arrival, 0-10 his first year then 5-5, 4-7, 6-4 and 4-2 last year before breaking out this year for the first title in school history. They’re at that level with the 2nd rated team defense (ppg) in the York Adams at 11.7 ahead of Central York. They are also 2nd in offensive rush yards/game at 289 behind Spring Grove. Some good news sees Steven Lukes back from injury with 747 yards rushing after missing last month. Micah Partee has 668 yards rushing. His brother, Milachi at 6-1, 240 pounds leads the O-Line and defense at DE with fellow DE Grant Cooper (6-1, 245). They won their last 9 after the 18-16 loss (upset?) to Octorara (8-3). It’s a senior laden group with good wins against New Oxford (6-5)17-7 and at Gettysburg (7-4) 66-22. At 37ppg with a yield of 12ppg, they’ll be tough to beat at home for their first home playoff game in school history. Donegal out of the LL-4 is sneaky good with a modest offense at 25ppg and a defense at 19. Take away the 55-0 loss to Lampeter Strasburg to find a defense allowing 14ppy. They are very similar to KD, preferring to keep it on the ground where they average 221 yards per game. Their principal running backs are Jon Holmes (62-616), Noah Rohrer (95-580), Cody Strough (34-263) and Ian Brown (36-160). Donegal and Kennard Dale will be a knock down drag out affair that looks like a dead heat. Overtime anyone?

3A Semifinals (highest seed home)
#1 Wyomissing 11-0 vs #5 Middletown 6-4

As expected, top seeded Wyomissing dismantled bottom seeded Northern Lebanon (4-7) 65-3 in last week’s opener. The 65 points are the most Wyo ever scored in the playoffs with starters exiting in the 2nd quarter. They ran for 302 yards in the first half and 428 by game’s end, holding NL to 34 total yards. Other defensive highlights saw them get 3 sacks and 2 picks, one returned 77 yards for a touchdown by Nevin Carter. The win takes their season average to 48ppg with a defense allowing 8ppg. With blowout wins against top teams like Pottsville and Southern Columbia, ending Southern’s 93 game regular season winning streak, it’s hard seeing how Middletown can keep up. The Blue Raiders began the year with the disaster at Bishop McDevitt, losing 55-7. Two wins to non-competitive teams were followed by games against Juniata (D6, 4A-1st seed, 9-2) and Steel High (1A-1st seed, 7-2), losing to Juniata 8-7 and to Steel High 36-0. But they got it going against powerful Boiling Springs (3A-2nd seed, 10-1) losing 26-23 before upsetting Big Spring (4A-10th seed, 8-3) 7-0. They’ve played Wyomissing the last 2 years in the finals, losing 38-16 last year and 24-21 in 2019. Middletown has tough kids a winning tradition and may finally be peaking. But this is Wyomissing with a team that is even superior to last year’s 9-1 team that lost in the 3A final to Central Valley (12-0) 35-21.
#2 Boiling Springs 10-1 vs Hamburg #3 7-3
Boiling Springs made playoff history getting their first home playoff win in school history routing 7th seeded Lancaster Catholic 56-10. LC goes home at 4-7 while the Bubblers stay home against Hamburg of the Berks-2. Joey Menke had another big night rushing for 150 yards, taking his season total to 1068 yards. Jack Laing also had a big game getting 117 yards, lifting his season total to 662 yards. Aiden Mttzger had 2 touchdowns and 45 yards rushing taking his totals to 603 yards. That’s a handful guarding those three with quarterback Colin Lunde completing 56% of his throws for 994 yards and 17 touchdowns. Scoring 45ppg while allowing 16 and beating Big Spring and Steel High says the Bubblers are in a groove. Hamburg also made history last week getting their first District playoff win in school history defeating 6th seeded Bermudian Springs (5-6) 31-27. This is big stuff for Hamburg who last had playoff appearances in 1985, 2006, 2007, 2010 and 2013. Running back Diohnny Ruiz also made history setting the school single season rushing record at 1187 yards with 89 yards against Bermudian. With 19 catches for 307 yards, he is their primary weapon. Pierce Mason is also a load adding 161 yards of total offense for the Hawks. Xander Menapace continues to impress with a 63% completion rate for 919 yards and 11 touchdowns. The problem is their less than challenging schedule with wins against teams having a combined record of 12-40. They are a spunky group with a good cast but they’re way out of bounds here against well tested Boiling Springs.

2A Final (highest seed home)
#1 York Catholic 10-0 vs #3 Upper Dauphin 9-1

York Catholic is back where they often are appearing in their 7th title game in 8 years. They are always a hard out with a balanced, senior laden team that graduated only 3 players. Averaging 32ppg with a D allowing 9 even looks like a veteran team. Quarterback Levan McFadden is a talented dual threat passing for 684 yards and rushing for 646. He was unstoppable last week, throwing for 106 yards and a score while rushing for 121 and 2 more touchdowns. Nick Creisher had 102 rushing and 2 scores as the Fighting Irish rolled over 4th seeded Susquenita (5-5) 43-7. Their opponent this week is Mid Penn-Liberty runner up and 3rd seed Upper Dauphin who beat 2nd seeded LL-4 champ Columbia (8-2) 58-48 with the records flying. Not bad for a team picked to finish 4th in the Liberty division. Columbia’s Robert Footman completed 26 of 42 passes for 536 yards (PIAA record) and rushed for 99 more. Leading receiver J’von Collazo also set a new PIAA record for most receiving yards in a game at 358 on 11 receptions. But you have to run the ball in this state and that’s where UDA excelled pounding out 282 yards on 44 carries. Favored Columbia had to be stunned, down 44-12 at the half! But cudos for the comeback. The game with top seeded York Catholic will be a struggle, but one UDA is built for with a powerful running game and overall balance with Qb Will Lakowski at 64% for 820 yards. Five backs handle the load in speedster Brady Morgan (5-8, 150, jr, 88-837ry, 16-156py), Christian Snyder (5-11, 190, jr, 129-769ry, 6-148py), Aiden Wiest (5-11, 185, sr, 41-413ry, 11-226py), Alex Heppler (6-0, 175, jr, 34-296ry, 6-167py) and another burner Konner Walker (5-11, 150, jr, 34-201ry, 3-37py). They are tested vs Juniata (D6, 4A-1st seed, 9-2) who beat them early 20-0 and Columbia last week. Catholic has no such tests barring Delone Catholic (6-4) who they beat 13-6.

1A Final (highest seed home)
#1 Steelton Highspire 7-2 vs #2 Delone Catholic 6-4

The big question coming into this one is how will Steelton Highspire respond after losing two straight games? Keep in mind they’re coming off a home loss to Boiling Springs (3A, 2nd seed, 10-1, MP-Capital champ) where the Bubblers converted a 2-point conversion to win 29-28 at the end. This followed the shocking 49-14 loss at Big Spring (4A, 10th seed, 8-3). Prior to this they were averaging 55ppg and allowing 12. Quarterback Alex Erby (6-3, 200, soph) leads the entire Mid Penn Conference throwing for 2807 yards at 78% with 34 touchdowns and 5 interceptions. Running back Daivin Pryor has 817 rush yards at 10.4ypc. Like Erby, wide out Tyrone Moore leads the Mid Penn with 1120 yards in receptions. Good luck keeping up with this receiver corps with Rell Ceasar at 43 catches for 645 yards and Jaieon Perry at 442 yards on 20 receptions. They need to relight the fuss that got them to 7-0 with their old nemesis Delone Catholic up next. The two have fought many battles recently with Steelton winning last year 23-13 and Delone taking the previous two years, 39-27 and 54-19. The Squires also won 28-13 in 2012 in districts before falling to Bellwood Antis (13-2) in double overtime 33-26. They’ll have to play like that here just to keep up with their run oriented offense scoring a meager 19ppg. But that’s what they do, running the ball to control the clock. Their leading rushers are Coltyn Keller (662), Landen Eckert (625) and Dylan Staub (577). They’re only 16th in scoring in the York Adams but 5th in team scoring. Defense is their strength with the 4th rushing defense (123/g) and 7th (100/g) passing defense. They’re catching the Rollers at a bad time playing at their place but never underestimate this tough little Catholic school from McSherrystown who has gone 117-47 since 2007.
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WPIAL 5A

So, here's my quick preseason look at the WPIAL 5A teams.

1. Penn-Trafford: A few reason I've moved them to #1. First is they have program stability and an excellent coaching staff. Second, the have a star RB with Yacamelli (Wisconsin) and a big and talented returning OL. I believe 3 or 4 return from last year. They also return a couple solid LB/TE bodies. Need to reload in the secondary with the departure of the ? twins, but they always have tons of 5'10 tough kids to play those positions. Their biggest question mark will be at QB. They can run over most everyone, but to beat good teams you need solid QB play and some form of passing game.

2. Pine-Richland: State championship level talent and youth football level coaching. I know people have posted about stopping bashing the staff, but their credentials speak for themselves. They don't have much. Hasley at MLB and WR will be best player on the field most games and their OL should be large and talented, but lacking experience after losing 4 starters. P-R must also replace a ton of skill. Cole Boyd should be very good ata QB if he can avoid mistakes and Alex Gochis needs to takeover Jochem's role as a playmaker. On defense, front 4 should be a strength with Domer returning and Klemm and Kerns stepping up as 2 way players. Secondary will be a rebuild but Palmieri is a very solid player at safety.

[Small Gap]

3. Gateway: With the transfer of the Birch brothers and D1 DB/WR Patrick Body returning, Gateway should have a great offense. Lose 3 of 5 starters on the OL I believe and a similar number on the front 7 of the defense. A solid coaching staff as well. Need to develop a strong OL and gap-sound defense, and this group needs to find a way to compete when times get tough. Losing to Peters Twp after being up 19-0 at the half should sting for this group.

[Gap]

4. Woodland Hills: Everything revolves around their dual threat QB (Williams?) and if their OL can give him time to throw. Last year he made a bunch of plays running around after pressure, but that needs to improve. Defense is basic but will run to the ball. If they can get going early, watch out. Need some big early wins over Moon and Penn Hills to build confidence.

[Gap]

Next Group:

Upper St. Clair: Lost their best senior group in years so have a lot to replace. Solid LB core will lead defense, but need to find playmakers on offense. Also, IMO they need to be tougher.
Penn Hills: QB must be healthy or they are dead in the water. Struggled to score with him last year as a freshman. Without him it will be tough. Always solid defense with Coach LeDonne though.
Moon: An up and coming "program" Not sure they have much at the skill position, but the traditionally compete hard and play physical. Their conference (South) is down so they have a shot at a nice playoff spot.
WestA: QB is top 5 in WPIAL (D1 baseball player). If he can have a big year, then WestA could be a contender again.
Peters: Similar to USC, lost a great group of seniors and need to reload. Return to standout OLB/TE's, but need to rebuild OL and DL.

Central Bucks West 19 - Pennridge 17

This was a bit of a throw back game with two wing-t teams pounding at each other for four quarters on a cold night at War Memorial. West controlled much of the clock and hit two big field goals, their first two of the year. It was tough sledding all night but Boehm / Mancini / Cherubini and Cooper all ran very hard against a terrific Rams defense. West ended up with 108 more yards of total offense, with 19 first downs to PR's 7. West defensively brought a lot of pressure, which the Rams exploited with a couple of quick hitting big runs. Kudos to both teams for a hard fought game. Lots of sore bodies today in Bucks County.

Notes:

1. As the clock wound down and the Bucks were kneeing it out, there were lots of handshakes and hugs between the players on the field. That was great to see. Tons of mutual respect after two games were decided by a total of 6 points. Both games could have gone either way.
2. In the SOL National, North Penn is obviously the class of the league, but the Bucks and the Rams are the two teams who will line up and for 48 minutes and punch and punch... then hug it out afterwards. Pennridge's 4 losses are to DTE by 7, North Penn by 7, and two to West by 4 and 2. Four losses by a total of 20 points. They posted four shutouts, gave up only 7 twice, were right on the cusp all year and their kids play very very hard nosed football. They're elite defensively. They should be, and I'm sure are, very proud of that group.
3. Eli Boehm and the rest of the Buck's backfield, along with their o-line, get so much done, pound for pound, probably more than anyone else in the league. That backfield goes maybe 175, 180, 170 and 160... but keep their feet moving and fight for every yard. They just eventually wear you out.
4. On the final 3rd and 1, when everyone knew it was going to be QB sneak and West needed to convert or risk giving the ball back to Pennridge, the right side of the West line got a tremendous surge and they picked up 3 to put it away.
5. Cooper hit McFadden on a couple of big throws again, one on a third and long fade for a huge first down, and a 7 yard TD on a slant into a very small throwing window.
6. West's 4th quarter TD drive was a classic, 12 plays, 11 runs, one incomplete pass for 75 yards. After pounding away at the stout Ram's D all game they finally were able to exert their will and that drive won them the game.

Bottom line... two fantastic games this year between two very good teams.

Avenging Explorers Blank Roman, 45-0

Two fortnights ago, Roman Catholic upset La Salle, 27-20, at La Salle’s home field at Springfield Montco High. On Saturday, the Explorers more than turned the tables, they spun them into a frenzy in a 45-0 shellacking of the Cahillites. Here’s how the game proceeded:

La Salle won the toss and deferred to the second half. Santi Sturla blooped his kickoff to the 15, where Mao Howell made a nice return to the 30, as Matt Wills brought him down. Soph QB John Ingram handed he ball to Howell on the first play, and he was thrown down by Chris “Tacony” Thompson for a 2-yard loss. But La Salle was flagged for a helmet-to-helmet tackle, and Roman had a first down at their own 43. Howell tested the middle, getting one yard with stops by LBs Abdul Carter and Thompson. Ingram passed on the right side, but LB Sean McFadden made a diving interception for La Salle at the Roman 49, with 10:58 left in the first period.

QB Alan Paturzo handed off to Sam Brown up the middle, who was hit immediately for no gain. Paturzo sent a screen pass to the right to Ryan Moore, but he was tackled for a 2-yard loss. On third and 12 at the La Salle 49, Paturzo’s pass on the right side to Moore was overthrown. After a “12 men on the field” penalty against the Cahillites, Sturla’s punt took a bounce into the end zone, and Roman would get the ball at their own 20, with 9:38 left in the initial stanza.

Howell gained three yards off right tackle, with Del Jackson and Carter combining on the hit. Ingram found Trey Woodley on a look-in on the right side for a 13-yard gain and a first down, with Chris Convey taking down Woodley. Ingram rolled left and hit super soph Tyseer Denmark on the left side for an ii-yard gain and a first down at the Roman 46. Howell got two up right guard, as Carter and DL Darold Dengohe bringing him to the turf. On a low snap, Ingram bent down for the ball, and his knee was down, resulting in a 6-yard loss. On third and 14 at the Cahillite 42, Ingram scrambled to the right and threw out of bounds, with Carter in hot pursuit. Jason Patterson’s punt bounced once, and then into the arms of returner Moore at the La Salle 25. Moore avoided two tackles, and broke into the clear, finally being brought down at the Roman 39, with 6:50 left in the first.

Paturzo took a low snap, and made an awkward pitch to Brown for a 6-yard gain, but La Salle was flagged for another penalty, a block in the back. At the Roman 49, Paturzo hit Moore on a drag pattern on the right side for 6 yards. Brown swept the left side to the Roman 29, but the Explorers, piling up laundry like a college student heading home, were called for an illegal shift. From the Roman 48, on play action, Paturzo, who was extremely accurate this game while exhibiting great footwork, hit Brown on a slant on the right side to the Roman 27 for a first down. Brown was bottled up on a sweep right for no gain. On play action, Paturzo was forced to scramble for a 5-yard gain, and Roman was called for a personal foul, giving La Salle a first down in the red zone at the Roman 11. Brown went left, and juked his way for 2 yards. On a double count, Roman did not jump offsides, but their lineman did not get set when the ball was snapped. Brown and the Blue and Gold blockers took advantage of that, as Brown slanted through right guard for a 9-yard touchdown. Sturla blasted the extra point, and La Salle led, 7-0, with 3:35 left in the first quarter.

Sturla’s boot was returned from the 2 to the 20 by Howell, with McFadden and Colin Dunlap on the tackle. Howell, taking all of the carries so far, gained 4 up right guard, with Thompson and Dengohe doing the tackling honors. Howell got 3 more up the middle, as Thompson and Wills brought him down. On third and 3 at the Roman 27, Howell got 4 yards and first down up right guard, with the trio of Mekhi Johnson, Sam Ross, and Dengohe slamming him down. Ingram rolled left and hit Denmark on the left side again for 10 yards and a first down. Howell was bear-hugged by Thompson for no gain. Ingram scrambled to the right and tossed the ball out of bounds, as Dengohe was chasing him down. On third and 10 at the Roman 41, Ingram rolled right, but his pass was intercepted by Wills, who returned the ball deep into Cahillite territory, refusing to go down until he got to the 18, with 56 seconds left in the first quarter.

Moore came in as Wildcat QB, and option-kept the ball for 4 yards, but La Salle was flagged for a holding penalty. With the ball back at the Roman 25, Brown started a sweep to the right, but he stopped, and tossed a pass into the end zone, where WR Ryan Sorge made an alley-oop catch above two Roman defenders. The 25-yard touchdown, and Sturla’s extra point, made the score 14-0 La Salle, with 30 seconds left in the first period.

Roman was hit for a personal foul on the PAT, and Sturla’s kickoff from the Roman 45 almost hit the snack stand. Howell gained two up the middle, with Dan Ford on the stop, as the first quarter ended with La Salle on top, 14-0. Ingram threw deep down the right side, overthrowing his receiver, but La Salle was ruled for interference on the play. With the ball on Roman’s 37, Howell gained a yard up left tackle, as Tim Fiedler made the stop. Ingram’s slant pass to Woodley was dropped. On third and 9 at the 38, Ingram had to scramble to the right again, and was stopped for no gain by DL Kieran Campbell and Thompson. Patterson’s punt went out of bounds on the La Salle 37, but, you guessed it, the Explorers were hit with a roughing the kicker penalty, and Roman had new life on the La Salle 47. Ingram scrambled to the right, with Fiedler on his tail, and his pass was almost intercepted. Howell gained a yard up right guard, as Dengohe and Campbell made the tackle, forcing a fumble that was recovered by Johnson at the La Salle 41, with 10:12 left in the half. Roman was shooting themselves in the foot with their turnovers.

On play action, Paturzo hit Moore on a slant in the middle to the Roman 44 for a first down. Paturzo threw to Nole Henry on the right side, but the pass was just off his fingertips. Brown had no room up right guard for no gain. On third and 10 at the Roman 44, with an empty backfield, Paturzo hit Moore on a drag pattern across the middle to the right. Moore avoided a couple of tacklers and got to the Cahillite 111 for a first down. Brown swept the left side for 4 yards. Brown the tried the left side for one yard. On third and 5 at the Roman 6, Paturzo tossed a little swing pass to Brown on the left side that was smelled out by Roman for a 5-yard loss. Sturla came on and converted a 29-yard field goal to make the score 17-0, with 6:48 left in the half, and La Salle with now a 3-score lead.

Sturla kicked to the 9, and Howell found a hole up the left side to the La Salle 41, as Convey and Dom Martin made the saving tackle. Ingram was forced to scramble again, and threw incomplete. Roman was flagged for motion before the next snap. Howell gained 4 up left tackle, with Ford on the takedown. On third and 11 at the La Salle 42, a screen pass from Ingram to Eddie Figueroa was dropped. Patterson made a rugby-style punt that went out of bounds on the La Salle 13, with 5:25 left in the second stanza.

Roman was offsides before the first snap of the drive. Brown powered his way up left tackle for 4 yards. Sorge went in motion, and Paturzo found him in the right slot for a first down at the La Salle 34. Brown found a hole up the middle for 8 yards. Brown gained 6 more up right guard for a first down to the La Salle 48. Brown then took a pitch left, and got the edge on the outside, speeding down the sideline to the Roman 14 before he was taken down. Wildcat Moore, on a great fake, ran an option keeper up the middle for 7 yards. Moore ran another option, and got to the 1-yard line for a first and goal. Brown coasted into the end zone up left guard for a 1-yard touchdown. Sturla did his PAT thing, and La Salle had a commanding 24-0 lead, with 1:42 left in the half.

Sturla tried a pooch kick, which was caught for a fair catch by Ronnell Davis, who was knocked down by his own man at the 35. A screen from Ingram to Figueroa gained 4, as Wills made the hit. Howell hit the middle, and broke a tackle to get a first down at the Roman 38, with Ford and Dengohe on the tackle. Ingram threw to Woodley on the left side, and the pass was dropped, as it may have been deflected. Ingram threw complete to Mekhi Watson on the right side for three yards, as Kelby Hampton made a fine tackle. On third and 7 at midfield, Ingram was caught scrambling again, and he tossed the ball out of bounds. Patterson dropped the snap on the punt, but got the kick off that was downed on the La Salle 25, as the half ended, with La Salle holding a 24-0 lead over the Cahillites.

The Explorers were firing on all cylinders offensively, as Paturzo’s passing and Brown’s running were leading the surges downfield. Outside of a couple of short passes, the Roman super soph Denmark was not getting many touches. He was the difference-maker in the Roman victory 4 weeks ago.

La Salle would receive the second-half kickoff, seeking to increase their lead. Ndori Jeack kicked the ball to the La Salle 18, and Amir Anderson made a nice return to the La Salle 42. On play action, Paturzo rolled right, went through his progressions, and spotted Ryan Sorge heading deep down the middle. Paturzo’s pass was just slightly underthrown, but Sorge came back, caught the ball, and headed into the end zone for a 58-yard touchdown that broke the backs of the Cahillites. Sturla made it 31-0 with his PAT, with 11:41 to go in the third period.

Sturla boomed the kickoff into the end zone. Roman came out with Denmark as the Wildcat quarterback. Denmark kept the ball up the middle for 5, with Thompson and Campbell on the tackle. Howell went off left tackle for 4, as Hampton made the hit. On third and 1 at the 29, Howell gained two yards and a first down up right guard, with Ford on the takedown. Denmark ran an option keeper on the right side, had some room, and went out of bounds on the La Salle 43 for a first down. Howell gained a yard up left guard, with Ford and McFadden taking him to the turf. Denmark ran another option keeper for two yards up left guard, with Wills doing the tackling honors. On third and 7 at the La Salle 40, Howell gained just a yard up right guard, with Wills on another tackle. With fourth and 6 at the La Salle 39, Denmark rolled right, and threw to the right side, but McFadden broke up the play, and La Salle would take over, with 8:34 left in the third stanza.

Dom Martin gained a yard off the right side. Martin got two more up the middle, breaking a tackle. On third and 7 at the 42, on play action, Paturzo rolled right, and threw deep to Nole Henry for a first down at the Roman 17. Brown swept the right side, and cut up for 2 yards. Martin swept the right side, and got a good edge to the Roman 5 for a first and goal. On play action, Paturzo rolled right, and threw to TE Collin Wade at the flag, but the pass was overthrown. Martin went off right tackle, following good blocks, and he scored a 5-yard touchdown. Sturla made his extra point, and La Salle initiated the mercy rule with their 38-0 lead, with 4:43 left in the third.

Sturla again found the end zone with his kickoff. Howell got 13 and a first down off right tackle, as McFadden tackled him down. Denmark, still in as wildcat QB, kept the ball for 5 yards up right tackle, with Ford and LB Kevin Hawley on the tackle. Denmark ran an option keeper up the middle for one, with Dengohe taking him to the turf. On third and 4 at the 39, La Salle jumped offsides, giving the Cahillites a first down. Howell got 4 up the middle, with Ross and Wills combining on the hit. Denmark threw a slant to Woodley for a first down to the La Salle 40. Denmark kept the ball for 3 up the middle, as McFadden and Campbell made the takedown. Denmark scrambled out of bounds on the right side for 3 yards. On third and 4 at the La Salle 34, Howell gained just a yard up the middle, with Dengohe and McFadden doing the tackling honors. On fourth a 3, Denmark hit the middle, but was stopped for just 2 yards, as Dengohe, Johnson, and McFadden prevented the first down, and La Salle took over, as the third quarter ended with La Salle coasting, 38-0.

Senior Connor Mehlmann came in as QB for the Explorers, and he handed off to Colin Dunlap for a 3-yard gains up right guard. Stevie Davis powered his way up left guard for a first down to the La Salle 46. More power from Davis, as he got another first down at the Roman 43. Davis was then stopped for a 1-yard loss up the middle. Dom Martin came in at wildcat, and ran an option-keeper for 2 yards. On third and 9 at the Roman 41, Martin swept the right side for 3 yards. On fourth and 5 at the 38, Mehlmann tossed to Dunlap in the left flat, and Dunlap bulled his way to the Cahillite 23, but La Salle was hit with a personal foul, setting them back to midfield. Sturla’s punt was downed on the Roman 20, with 6:57 left in the game.

Howell lost a yard up the middle, with tackles by Brendan O’Connor and senior Declan Smith, back in the lineup after missing several games with an injury. Denmark wildcatted for two yards, as Ford made the stop. On third and 9 at the 21, Howell gained 3 yards up left tackle, with Wills taking him down. Patterson’s punt went out of bounds at midfield, with 4:21 left in the contest.

Stevie Davis took a pitch left, and went untouched into the end zone for a 50-yard touchdown. Sturla did it again, and La Salle’s lead ballooned to 45-0, with 3:38 left.

Davis handled the kickoff chores, and his boot to the 7 was returned by Figueroa to the 30, tackled by Martin. Dazhaun Hopkins came in as wildcat QB, and he ran up the middle to the Roman 42 for a first down, with tackle by soph LB Kevin Schmidt. On a high snap, Hopkins had to fall on the ball for a 10-yard loss. Figueroa came in as wildcat, and swept the left side for 5, tackled by Schmidt. Jah-Jah Boyd ran a jet sweep to the La Salle 47, with tackles by Mason Lange and Schmidt, as the clock ran out. La Salle took care of business and blanked the Cahillites of Roman Catholic, 45-0, to move on to the next round of the PIAA playoffs.

Notes

Not counting the many penalties, La Salle otherwise played an almost flawless game, mixing in passes and runs, and some new wrinkles on offense that fooled the Cahillites. Paturzo had great success with his two junior wide receivers, Nole Henry and Ryan Sorge. Sam Brown and Stevie Davis benefited from the great blocking of the offensive line. On the other side of the ball, the defense bottled up Mao Howell and Tyseer Denmark, keeping the big play from happening, and they forced several third and longs and harassed the soph QB John Ingram into several throwaways as well as a couple of INTs.

This was the 13th consecutive victory for La Salle in first-round playoff games. Their next opponent will be their ancient adversary, St. Joseph’s Prep, who eked out a 17-14 victory over Archbishop Wood on Friday night, after trailing by 14-6 after three quarters. The game will be played on Saturday, November 13, with time and place yet to be determined at this writing. This will be another great chapter in the playoff story between the two schools.
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Q&A with Palmerton quarterback Matthew Machalik

How has everything been going football wise as of late?
“Football has been going well for the team and me. We just ended our season and now we are onto the playoffs. Our goal for the playoffs is to go 1-0 each week or we go home.”

Going forward, what do you feel your team can continue to improve on?
“Going forward I think our team can improve on the fundamentals of the game. The most important thing is our focus at practice. Going into the playoffs we have to be very focused at practices and studying film on our own.”

Have you been pleased with your performances?
“I am never satisfied with my performances. Going into the next game I always try to put in the extra work and work on things that needed to be corrected from my past games to better myself.”

How do you feel about the play of your team?
“Our team is a great group of guys. I feel like we have had a productive regular season and we are looking to just improve week in and week out.”

What are your sporting goals going forward as of now?
“My sporting goals moving forward is to be able to continue my academic and athletic career at the collegiate level.”

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“Some MAC schools are showing interest as well as some Patriot League teams.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“At this time, as a sophomore, I cannot talk to college coaches, so I am unaware of what schools are recruiting me the hardest.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I made some unofficial visits to a few universities this year.”

Do you have plans for game day trips?
“Yes.”

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

Q&A with Selinsgrove linebacker Brandon Hile

How has everything been going football wise as of late?
“Football has been great. We’re heading into the playoffs feeling confident and prepared.”

Going forward, what do you feel your team can continue to improve on?
“We can continue to improve every day with our execution on offense and being mentally prepared for our opponents.”

Have you been pleased with your performances?
“I’ve been pleased with my performances this year but always think of ways I can get better. Putting on weight and strength this off-season has influenced the way I’ve been playing.”

How do you feel about the play of your team?
“Our team has been rolling this year. We continue to improve every week.”

What are your sporting goals going forward as of now?
“Win a District Championship.”

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“Army, Colgate, Penn State, Lafayette, Fordham, Bloomsburg, Seton Hill, few others.”

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

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I went on a visit to Army in the summer and have been on gameday visits to Lafayette, Bloomsburg, Penn State, and Colgate.”

Do you have plans for game day trips?
“I have a game day visit coming up in November at Army. “

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Penn State was my favorite college growing up and living in PA.”

Q&A with Bishop Canevin running back Marquis Carter

How has everything been going football wise as of late?
“Going great for my team and everything lately.”

Going forward, what do you feel your team can continue to improve on?
“I feel like we can improve on being more consistent.”

Have you been pleased with your performances?
“I’m pleased but I feel like I could do better.”

How do you feel about the play of your team?
“We’ve grown overall and I feel like we’ve improved a lot.”

What are your sporting goals going forward as of now?
“Keep improving my game overall and getting better every year.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yes I want to just focus on football then I can get to the next level.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“No, I haven't been recruited yet.”

Do you have plans for game day trips?
“Just getting my head right and listening to music.”

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

Q&A with Mount Carmel defensive end Matthew Scicchitano

How has everything been going football wise as of late?
“Everything is going great, we are practicing for our first playoff game as of now.”

Going forward, what do you feel your team can continue to improve on?
“I feel like our team can improve on our passing game, which we have been but there is still room for improvement.”

Have you been pleased with your performances?
“I’ve been pleased with my performances, but there is still plenty of room for improvement.”

How do you feel about the play of your team?
“Our team has been playing great within the last 5 games. We are looking to carry the momentum into the playoffs.”

What are your sporting goals going forward as of now?
“My sporting goals as of now are to go as far into the playoffs as possible and play the best I can to help my team.”

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I wouldn’t say I’m being recruited at the moment. But I’ve been hearing from a few colleges but nothing's been official. I’m hoping to hear more in the offseason.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“See above.”

What was your favorite college growing up?
“No, growing up I never really watched college football.”

Q&A with Cedar Cliff wide receiver Isaiah Maisonet

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“Football season has been great so far with a good positive record 8-2.”

Have you been pleased with how you have played this season?
“I’m pleased with my performance this season. Seeing previous seasons I think I definitely grew as a player.”

How do you feel your team has played?
“I feel that my team has been playing well. Had some rough times but we pushed to pull a win.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“I feel that my team could improve on trusting each other.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“Some key things are staying disciplined and keep going through adversity.”

Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I would love to play sports in college! I don’t really have a preference, I just want to be able to ball out.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I haven’t had any trying to recruit me at this time.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“None at the time.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“No, I haven't made any trips.”

Do you have plans for game day trips?
“I don’t have any trips planned at this time.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“I don’t really have any favorites but if I were to choose I would say LSU.”

PA Preps High School Football Talk

Find out what some of the top players in the state are saying about football now!

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


Q&A with Cedar Cliff wide receiver Isaiah Maisonet
How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“Football season has been great so far with a good positive record 8-2.”

Have you been pleased with how you have played this season?
“I’m pleased with my performance this season. Seeing previous seasons I think I definitely grew as a player.”

How do you feel your team has played?
“I feel that my team has been playing well. Had some rough times but we pushed to pull a win.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“I feel that my team could improve on trusting each other.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“Some key things are staying disciplined and keep going through adversity.”

......................................................................................................
Q&A with Mount Carmel defensive end Matthew Scicchitano
How has everything been going football wise as of late?
“Everything is going great, we are practicing for our first playoff game as of now.”

Going forward, what do you feel your team can continue to improve on?
“I feel like our team can improve on our passing game, which we have been but there is still room for improvement.”

Have you been pleased with your performances?
“I’ve been pleased with my performances, but there is still plenty of room for improvement.”

How do you feel about the play of your team?
“Our team has been playing great within the last 5 games. We are looking to carry the momentum into the playoffs.”

What are your sporting goals going forward as of now?
“My sporting goals as of now are to go as far into the playoffs as possible and play the best I can to help my team.”

......................................................................................................
Q&A with Bishop Canevin running back Marquis Carter
How has everything been going football wise as of late?
“Going great for my team and everything lately.”

Going forward, what do you feel your team can continue to improve on?
“I feel like we can improve on being more consistent.”

Have you been pleased with your performances?
“I’m pleased but I feel like I could do better.”

How do you feel about the play of your team?
“We’ve grown overall and I feel like we’ve improved a lot.”

What are your sporting goals going forward as of now?
“Keep improving my game overall and getting better every year.”

......................................................................................................
Q&A with Selinsgrove linebacker Brandon Hile
How has everything been going football wise as of late?
“Football has been great. We’re heading into the playoffs feeling confident and prepared.”

Going forward, what do you feel your team can continue to improve on?
“We can continue to improve every day with our execution on offense and being mentally prepared for our opponents.”

Have you been pleased with your performances?
“I’ve been pleased with my performances this year but always think of ways I can get better. Putting on weight and strength this off-season has influenced the way I’ve been playing.”

How do you feel about the play of your team?
“Our team has been rolling this year. We continue to improve every week.”

What are your sporting goals going forward as of now?
“Win a District Championship.”

......................................................................................................
Q&A with Palmerton quarterback Matthew Machalik
How has everything been going football wise as of late?
“Football has been going well for the team and me. We just ended our season and now we are onto the playoffs. Our goal for the playoffs is to go 1-0 each week or we go home.”

Going forward, what do you feel your team can continue to improve on?
“Going forward I think our team can improve on the fundamentals of the game. The most important thing is our focus at practice. Going into the playoffs we have to be very focused at practices and studying film on our own.”

Have you been pleased with your performances?
“I am never satisfied with my performances. Going into the next game I always try to put in the extra work and work on things that needed to be corrected from my past games to better myself.”

How do you feel about the play of your team?
“Our team is a great group of guys. I feel like we have had a productive regular season and we are looking to just improve week in and week out.”

What are your sporting goals going forward as of now?
“My sporting goals moving forward is to be able to continue my academic and athletic career at the collegiate level.”

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

The Recruiting Zone

Find out what colleges are recruiting Isaiah Maisonet, Matthew Scicchitano, Marquis Carter, Brandon Hile, and Matthew Machalik now!

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


Q&A with Cedar Cliff wide receiver Isaiah Maisonet​


Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“I would love to play sports in college! I don’t really have a preference, I just want to be able to ball out.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I haven’t had any trying to recruit me at this time.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“None at the time.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“No, I haven't made any trips.”

Do you have plans for game day trips?
“I don’t have any trips planned at this time.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“I don’t really have any favorites but if I were to choose I would say LSU.”


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


Q&A with Mount Carmel defensive end Matthew Scicchitano​


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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“I wouldn’t say I’m being recruited at the moment. But I’ve been hearing from a few colleges but nothing's been official. I’m hoping to hear more in the offseason.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“See above.”

What was your favorite college growing up?
“No, growing up I never really watched college football.”


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


Q&A with Bishop Canevin running back Marquis Carter​


Do you want to play sports in college? If so, which one?
“Yes I want to just focus on football then I can get to the next level.”

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“No, I haven't been recruited yet.”

Do you have plans for game day trips?
“Just getting my head right and listening to music.”

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


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


Q&A with Selinsgrove linebacker Brandon Hile​


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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“Army, Colgate, Penn State, Lafayette, Fordham, Bloomsburg, Seton Hill, few others.”

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

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I went on a visit to Army in the summer and have been on gameday visits to Lafayette, Bloomsburg, Penn State, and Colgate.”

Do you have plans for game day trips?
“I have a game day visit coming up in November at Army. “

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Penn State was my favorite college growing up and living in PA.”


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


Q&A with Palmerton quarterback Matthew Machalik​


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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“Some MAC schools are showing interest as well as some Patriot League teams.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“At this time, as a sophomore, I cannot talk to college coaches, so I am unaware of what schools are recruiting me the hardest.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I made some unofficial visits to a few universities this year.”

Do you have plans for game day trips?
“Yes.”

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


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