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SOL Wrap

Nice Wrap up:


I'm excited to watch Pennridge and Abington. But I agree with others Coach Beck probably gets the knights back in form - last night was a good win, never close. Neshaminy has a shot at getting back into it. I don't see Pennsbury as a contender.

Pennridge reminds me of Downingtown West of last year, but I think the Rams play better Defense. The Rams show lots of formations - misdirection, power, and pass, execute well, and play physical. Looks like they have some nice size as well. They're my favorite in SOL.

WPIAL Playoffs

The Trib reported this morning that the WPIAL is likely going to have to have its football committee fill in the brackets for many teams because of the missed games. This means that the tiebreaker and gardener points systems will not be used. Which I guess means some conference may only get 1 team into the playoffs if its a very weak conference. More details are supposed to be released this week.

Q&A with Muncy linebacker Ethan Gush

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“I’m just really glad we can play the sport we all love. Without many fans, it’s different, but we still get the job done.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“We could work on pursuit and everyone going to the ball, whether it’s on defense and gang tackling or on offense blocking for one another.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“Staying healthy and working well as one. We could go far if we stay healthy and stay motivated.”

What are your goals for the rest of the season?
“We want to win the district championship for the third year in a row, but also make it to state championship. It’s goal we can achieve if we work for it.”

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“Bloomsburg, Millersville, Lycoming, and Wilkes.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I have gone to Bloomsburg, Millersville and Lycoming. All have really nice campuses and awesome coaches.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“I don’t think so because of them not being able to play, but if they do end up playing, I would love to go to their games.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“I always loved Penn State football. I just like how they play tough and it’s our home state.”

Q&A with Central Columbia linebacker Garrett Carter

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“Our football season has been going good. We are starting to play our best football.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“I feel like my team can best improve on the offensive side of the ball, especially with our different blocking schemes.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“To be successful, we just need to play fast and do our jobs.”

What are your goals for the rest of the season?
“Our team’s main goal is to win a district championship and my personal goal is to be all state.”

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“Some schools I have had recruiting with are Penn, Pitt, Syracuse, Yale, Bryant, Army, Fordham, and Bucknell.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“Yes, I took visits to Penn, Syracuse, and Bucknell.”

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

Q&A with West Middlesex running back Ian Smith

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“Everything this year has been challenging, but we have been able to work through them so far and have a great season as of today. I’m really excited about this group of guys we have. We can make some noise.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“Our team can improve on many things as there is always room for improvement. I feel the number one thing is gelling as a team and becoming a brotherhood. We preach it, but we haven’t grown close. I feel last week, we had the best week of practices and really came together. I hope to build off of that.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“We have to be better on third down on both offense and defense. We have to be better with the football as there are too many turnovers. And we have to like I said gel as a team. If we fix that, wow, we can be a hard team to beat.”

What are your goals for the rest of the season?
“I’d like to get a turnover, I would love to finish the season with a 100 yard game every game, and I want to finish with 10+ TDS and at least 10+ tackles a game. I’m averaging about 8 right now.”

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?
“I haven’t gotten a lot of interest yet, but I feel as soon as the season is over that will change. Allegheny College has been interested the most I’d say A lot of colleges have emailed me more for academics. So, I’m excited to get my name out there more for football.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“Allegheny College.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I visited Michigan State.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“I plan on going to a Michigan State game and Penn State game if they allow fans. And also, a YSU game.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Michigan State and Tulane are my two favorite colleges.”

Q&A with Kennett wide receiver Kalen Frazier

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“It’s been really tough. We’ve been practicing, but we are not really sure if we would play. Hopefully everything goes well.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“Our team can improve on our timing with all these obstacles of practicing. For a while, we missed out on a lot of chemistry within the team, so we’re really working on getting acclimated with all of our team.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“Our keys to being successful are to just be physical. We’re a very athletic team and we’re physical as well. If we can maintain both, we’ll have a good season.”

What are your goals for the rest of the season?
“My goals for the season are to win every chance we have, get more college interest, and be the best receiver in the Ches-Mont.”

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“None.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“Not yet, but I am planning on it very soon.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“Hopefully we can get to a WVU football game.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“West Virginia University.”

Q&A with Cathedral Prep linebacker Jaheim Williams

How has everything with the football season been going so far?
“So far, it has been good.”

What do you feel your team can improve on?
“One thing our team can improve on is the pointing finger stuff. When we lose, we need to understand that each and every one of us makes mistakes.”

What are the keys for your team being successful going forward?
“Keys for our team being successful going forward is just practicing hard and staying focused on the objective in front of us.”

What are your goals for the rest of the season?
“To continue to win and finally get back to states.”

Have you made a college decision?
“Right now, I am committed to Duquesne University.”

What other schools were you considering?
“Akron, Valpo, NDC, IUP, Lake Erie Storm, UVA-Wise, Cal-U, and many more.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“Yeah I did, but now that I am committed, there is no need to go.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Yes, Penn State.”

Week Five Football Game Predictions

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


Aliquippa* vs. Montour
Altoona vs. Central Dauphin*
Bedford* vs. Penn Cambria
Berks Catholic* vs. Exeter Township
Gateway* vs. Woodland Hills
Harbor Creek vs. General McLane*
Jeannette* vs. Bishop Canevin
Lackawanna Trail vs. Dunmore*
Nazareth* vs. Freedom
North Allegheny* vs. Canon-McMillan
Notre Dame-Green Pond* vs. Palisades
Smethport vs. Coudersport*
Warwick* vs. Solanco
Western Beaver vs. Sto-Rox*

The Recruiting Zone (October 12th, 2020)

Find out what colleges are recruiting Jaheim Williams, Kalen Frazier, Ian Smith, Garrett Carter, and Ethan Gush now!


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

Cathedral Prep linebacker Jaheim Williams

Have you made a college decision?
“Right now, I am committed to Duquesne University.”

What other schools were you considering?
“Akron, Valpo, NDC, IUP, Lake Erie Storm, UVA-Wise, Cal-U, and many more.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“Yeah I did, but now that I am committed, there is no need to go.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Yes, Penn State.”


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

Kennett wide receiver Kalen Frazier

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“None.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“Not yet, but I am planning on it very soon.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“Hopefully we can get to a WVU football game.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“West Virginia University.”


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

West Middlesex running back Ian Smith

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?
“I haven’t gotten a lot of interest yet, but I feel as soon as the season is over that will change. Allegheny College has been interested the most I’d say A lot of colleges have emailed me more for academics. So, I’m excited to get my name out there more for football.”

What school is recruiting you the hardest?
“Allegheny College.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I visited Michigan State.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“I plan on going to a Michigan State game and Penn State game if they allow fans. And also, a YSU game.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“Michigan State and Tulane are my two favorite colleges.”


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

Central Columbia linebacker Garrett Carter

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“Some schools I have had recruiting with are Penn, Pitt, Syracuse, Yale, Bryant, Army, Fordham, and Bucknell.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“Yes, I took visits to Penn, Syracuse, and Bucknell.”

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


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

Muncy linebacker Ethan Gush

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

What colleges have been recruiting you?
“Bloomsburg, Millersville, Lycoming, and Wilkes.”

Have you made any college trips yet?
“I have gone to Bloomsburg, Millersville and Lycoming. All have really nice campuses and awesome coaches.”

Do you have plans for game day trips this fall?
“I don’t think so because of them not being able to play, but if they do end up playing, I would love to go to their games.”

Did you have a favorite college growing up?
“I always loved Penn State football. I just like how they play tough and it’s our home state.”


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

Top Football Performers - 10/8, 10/9, & 10/10

Add top performers by replying here!

Adam Obrin, Central Catholic 205 yards passing
AJ Corrado, Burrell 172 yards receiving and two touchdowns
Alex Arledge, Burrell 271 yards and two touchdowns
Alex Briggs, Greensburg Salem 106 yards rushing
Anthony Collura, Chartiers Valley 90 yards receiving
Anthony D’Alessandro, Fort Cherry 104 yards receiving
Anthony Mackey, Chartiers Valley 207 yards passing
Anthony Neeley, Union 120 yards receiving
Antonio Epps, South Allegheny 122 yards rushing
Austin Mitchell, Northgate 110 yards passing
Bobby Brazell, O.L. Sacred Heart 109 yards receiving
Brad Birch, Jeanette 109 yards passing
Brandon Strausser, Governor Mifflin 171 yards rushing, two touchdowns, abd returned a fumble 88 yards for a score
Brian Olan, Seneca Valley 267 yards passing
Brock Wilkins, Kiski Area 194 yards rushing and three touchdowns
Cadin Olsen, Armstrong 330 yards passing
Carson Davidson, Blackhawk 113 yards passing
Chandler Thimons, Highlands 183 yards passing
Christian Zilli, Hempfield 211 yards passing
CJ Robbins, Baldwin 131 yards receiving
Cole Brown, Armstrong 109 yards receiving
Collin Dietz, Fox Chapel 267 yards passing
Colton Brain, Baldwin 201 yards passing
Conner Murga, Thomas Jefferson 140 yards rushing
Connor Chrisman, Norwin 126 yards receiving
Connor Roberts, Trinity 158 yards passing
Curtis Foskey, North Hills 116 yards rushing
Damani Stafford, California 112 yards rushing
Dane Anden, Belle Vernon 107 yards rushing
Dante Phillips, Riverside 107 yards rushing
David Pantelis, Upper St. Clair 138 yards receiving
Demetri Fritch, Springdale 116 yards receiving
Deontae Williams, Woodland Hills 129 yards passing
Devin Whitlock, Belle Vernon 120 yards rushing
Dontae Sanders, Clairton 252 yards rushing and four touchdowns
Dylan Gustafson, Latrobe 170 yards rushing
Eddy Tillman, Central Catholic 147 yards rushing
Eli Heidenreich, Mt. Lebanon 147 yards receiving
Emmitt Harris, Seton LaSalle 116 yards passing
Eris Seibles, Woodland Hills 103 yards rushing
Ethan Dahlem, Upper St. Clair 300 yards passing and two touchdowns
Gabe Haddox, New Brighton 105 yards passing
Gage Gillott, Connellsville 150 yards passing
Gamal Marballie, Yough 124 yards passing
Gannon Kadlecik, Montour 113 yards rushing
Gavin Miller, West Allegheny 324 yards passing and three touchdowns
Harper Conroy, South Park 103 yards passing
Ian Syam, Avonworth 267 yards rushing and four touchdowns
Isaiah Rodriguez, Lebanon 257 yards passing and four touchdowns
Jackson LaRocka, Burgettstown 108 yards passing
Jaedan Zuzak, California 440 yards rushing and seven touchdowns
Jake Fello, Apollo-Ridge 139 yards passing
James Williams, Riverview 157 yards receiving
Jaren Brickner, Beaver Falls 176 yards passing
Jase Keib, Brentwood 164 yards passing
Jashaun Spencer, West Allegheny 112 yards receiving
Jaymar Pearson, O.L. Sacred Heart 108 yards rushing
Joey Daniels, Mt. Lebanon 343 yards passing and four touchdowns
Joey Prentice, North Catholic 221 yards passing, two touchdowns, and two rushing touchdowns
Josh Castro, Shady Side Academy 115 yards passing
Josh Hough, Beaver Falls 205 yards rushing and three touchdowns
Julian Dugger, Penn Hills 102 yards passing
K.J. Rush, Avella 107 yards passing
Karl McBride, Aliquippa 105 yards rushing
Kenny Fine, Frazier 129 yards rushing
Lamont Lyons, Canon-McMillan 130 yards passing
Landon Alexander, Central Valley 202 yards rushing and two touchdowns
Legend Ausk, Springdale 245 yards passing
Logan Harmon, Apollo-Ridge 123 yards rushing
Logan Klitsch, Conrad Weiser 308 total yards and four touchdowns
Lorenzo Jenkins, Fox Chapel 166 yards receiving
Luke Loeffert, Baldwin 125 yards rushing
Luke McCoy, Laurel 205 yards rushing and three touchdowns
Maddox Truschel, Fort Cherry 152 yards passing
Mason Smeland, Palisades 244 yards rushing and four touchdowns
Mateo Cepullio, Upper St. Clair 113 yards receiving
Max Rocco, Serra Catholic 208 yards passing
Micah Brubaker, Mechanicsburg 252 total yards and three touchdowns
Micah Finley, Trinity 117 yards rushing
Micah Kimbrough, Hopewell 110 yards rushing
Naman Alemada, South Fayette 207 yards passing
Nehemiah Azeem, O.L. Sacred Heart 171 yards passing
Nick Fleming, Norwin 187 yards passing
Nick Singleton, Governor Mifflin 248 yards rushing and two touchdowns
Nodin Tracy, West Allegheny 90 yards receiving
Owen Maddich, Jefferson-Morgan 122 yards receiving
Owen Petrisek, Bentworth 163 yards rushing and five touchdowns
Owen Trumbull, Eisenhower 262 yards passing and six touchdowns
Reed Martin, Plum 107 yards receiving
Reis Watkins, Shenango 299 yards rushing and five touchdowns
Robert Dickson, North Hills 92 yards receiving
Ryan Aber, Riverview 191 yards passing
Ryan Hubner, Plum 178 yards passing
Ryan McGuire, South Fayette 97 yards receiving
Shane Kemper, Burgettstown 190 yards rushing, one touchdown, and caught a 25-yard touchdown pass
Shawn Reick, Keystone Oaks 139 yards rushing
Shay Aitken, South Fayette 100 yards rushing
Steve Smith, Erie 238 yards rushing and two touchdowns
Tamar Sample, Cathedral Prep 171 yards rushing and four touchdowns
Tanner Dobbins, Hopewell 200 yards rushing
Teddy Ruffner, Mars Six touchdown runs
Terrance Glenn, McKeesport 123 yards rushing
Tino Campoli, Shenango 158 yards passing
Trent Cavanaugh, Bentworth 130 yards rushing
Troy Volpatti, Bethel Park 114 yards rushing
Tyler Staub, Union 137 yards passing
Vernon Redd, Aliquippa Returned the opening kick 85 yards for a touchdown, 148 yards rushing, and two touchdowns
Vozzy Steals, Ambridge 116 yards passing
Zach Cernuto, Southmoreland 118 yards passing
Zaire Nelson, Brashear 118 yards passing

Weekly Match-Ups

Neshaminy-Pennridge should be a heck of a game. Neshaminy needs to stave off a let-down after a big, emotional win over NP. This game will show if Pennridge is the real deal. I don’t think Pennridge can be one dimensional offensively against Neshaminy. They will crowd the line to stop the run, so it will be interesting to see if Pennridge can throw the ball in this new offense. On the other side, Pennridge defense wasn’t really tested by West. They are dealing with a different animal in Neshaminy with James and Hutchinson in the backfield. I believe Neshaminy is the better team, but Hartzell is the great equalizer on Pennridge side. If I had to guess, I’d take Neshaminy to win by 14+.

Any thoughts on other SOL matchups? How about LaSalle-DTE?
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Lehigh Valley Power Rankings

Trying to get my arms around this weird year. Not a ton of clarity through one week - teams that were supposed to win won and the first set of marquee match ups start this week with Easton-Freedom. Still, going to try and capture the picture in the Lehigh Valley here.

#1 Nazareth Blue Eagles (2-0)
Can’t begin to explain how surprised I am by this one. Nazareth won D11 6A last season on the strength of an awesome senior class, featuring all time leading passer Anthony Harris (Maine), All State defensive end and EPC Defensive Player of the Year Jake Wilson (Penn State PWO), and All State wideout with 1,000 receiving yards and 10 interceptions Nate Stefanik (Princeton – wrestling). Nazareth tends to regress back after big classes graduate (see: 2011 to 2012), but Tom Falzone’s group is humming through two games. They killed Allentown Central Catholic (my preseason pick as the best team in the Lehigh Valley) in their opener, then shutout Bethlehem Catholic last week. The defense has been the story, holding opposing rushing games to under 50 yards per game, and passing games to a 37% completion percentage. Not a lot of size, outside of nose tackle Cody Breidenbach, but they fly around and are schemed really well. Falzone is an offensive guru (those longtime readers know I’m very high on him as a coach and have been since he was taking Catasauqua to state playoffs) and has senior QB Matt Bugbee looking comfortable as a first time starter. They don’t have the offensive weapons they’ve had in the past, but they execute and have played mistake free football through the first two weeks. They’ve got the top spot until proven otherwise right now.

#2 Parkland Trojans (0-0)
Parkland missed week one because of COVID quarantine, so they are the last team in the Lehigh Valley to get started. Still, big things are expected in Orefield. Junior quarterback Ty Tremba gave the Trojans a real boost last season when he won the job in week 4, and led them on a nine game winning streak all the way to the D11 finals. He’s an option type, really good scrambler and runs with power, but is accurate on the short throws they utilize and has a big receiving corps. Running back Isiah Rico is the bell cow, coming off of a 1,600 yard, 20 TD junior season. They lost a lot on the offensive line – including star left tackle and Penn State recruit Nick Dawkins, but they’ve really reloaded up front this decade and they definitely have size from looking at rosters and projected lineups. They open with Whitehall tonight and are heavy favorites.

#3 Easton Red Rovers (1-0)
You know my policy on this era of Rovers – believe it when I see it. This group is ranked in most state polls (despite D11 opting out of state playoffs), and they certainly have personnel to be good. The defense suffocated Liberty last week, holding the Hurricanes to negative rushing yards until a touchdown drive in the final minute of a 30-7 win. They’re small in the back seven, but have the most team speed they’ve had in years, and Dom Falcone and Tamir Jackson are true impact linebackers. Offensively, it starts with Nahjee Adams. Liberty kept him from breaking off any big runs, but he looked more patient and mature from last season, and did a great job picking holes for 5-10 yard gains on virtually all of his carries, finishing with 24 totes for 124 yard and 2 TDs. The offensive line showed flashes, particularly sophomore left tackle Sean Wilson (6’4 245) who looked a little lost in pass pro sometimes, but also buried two defenders on Adams final touchdown run. Right tackle Donovan Lance (6’3 310) was ejected and they lost to cohesion after that, but assuming he can avoid personal fouls they’ve got solid bookends. Cole Transue was 11-14 for 146 yards, with lots of safe throws to speed guys on the perimeter. Marcus Williams in particular looked dangerous – he was the D11 champ and state qualifier in the 200 as a freshman and has real track speed. He returned a punt for a TD and was scary on swing passes and stretch plays and was lined up in the slot and in the backfield. Still, they left at least 14 points on the board with penalties and turnovers deep in Liberty territory. Talent won out against an overmatch Hurricane team, but this week will be a real challenge.

#4 Freedom Patriots (1-0)
Freedom is kind of in the Nazareth boat – where to go after one of the best senior classes in school history. Despite losing all state players Jared Jenkins (QB – Millersville), Kaden Moore (LT/DE – Virginia Tech), and Jalen Stewart (RB/LB – prep school), the Patriots were a trendy pick to win Northampton County thanks to a really good offensive line and all purpose back Matty Russin. Both looked the part in a week 1 win over Northampton (welcome back to the Lehigh Valley after winning the EPC North the last two years), as Freedom raced out to a 30-0 lead and won 44-20. Russin is tiny (5’8 165) but one of the fastest guys in the league and three breakaway TDs in the first half before leaving with cramps after a 10 carry, 134 yard and 3 TD in the first half. But backup tailback Deonte Crawford also looked like a weapon with 21 carries for 111 yards and two TDs. Again, it’s easy to look good behind an experienced offensive line of Braelin Moore (Jr. 6’3 275), Jacob Schwind (6’3 245), Juan Feleciano (Jr. 6’1 260), Alex Rosado (Sr. 6’2 225) Ryan Frantz (Sr. 6’0 265) and the passing game did its part with Bethlehem Catholic transfer Brian Taylor throwing for 193 yards as the Patriots topped 500 yards of total offense. Jason Roeder has been one of the best coaches in the Lehigh Valley this decade, and it looks like he’s got another contender on his hands.

#5 Notre Dame (GP) Crusaders (3-0)
Notre Dame is the class of the Colonial League and one of the best small school teams in eastern PA has dominated so far. Phil Stambaugh once again has a fantastic offense, scoring 194 points in four games. Their star has been Matt Frauen, who has rushed for 659 yards and has 16 total TDs despite sitting out most second halves. Frauen had to sit out last posteason after transferring from Belvidere, which changed this team for the playoffs, but he’s making up for lost time. Junior Collin Quintano missed much of last season with an injury, but looks healthy and has thrown for 893 yards and 9 TDs to just one pick so far, and five players already have at least 100 yard receiving. It starts with the best offensive line of Stambaugh’s tenure (and thus, the best offensive line in ND history because they don’t have much football tradition pre-Stambaugh’s arrival) of Brandon Guffy (6’1 235), Jake Hull (6’0 220), Tyler Lissey (6’3 285), Lex Rivera (6’4 275), and Josh Hoffert (6’1 270) – with Lissey an FCS prospect and Guffy and Rivera with a bunch of PSAC offers. The Crusaders should be heavy favorites in their four remaining regular season games and I’d absolutely bet on them to win 3A in D11.

#6 East Stroudsburg South Cavaliers (1-0)
The Cavaliers are ranked #7 in the state in 5A and rolled in their season opener with a 69-0 win over Pocono Mountain West. The Panthers don’t really offer a challenge to East Stroudsburg South, but they put them away like a heavy favorite should. This is going to be a very good team – they return 17 starters from last year’s 5A D11 finalists, including all of their offensive skill players and their entire back 7 on defense. The Cavaliers have had a sneaky run of Division I players recently, dating back to Kyshoen Jarrett, and wideout Christian Sapp (Villanova) will keep that streak going. He pairs with running back Christian Arrington to form the best RB/WR combo in District 11. Sapp caught 5 passes for 109 yards and a pair of TDs last week and Arrigton added 10 carries for 89 yards and 2 TDs – all in the first half. There is nobody on their schedule that is going to challenge East Stroudsburg South, which is a shame because this is a really good team that deserves to be tested at some point.

#7 Emmaus Green Hornets (2-0)
Emmaus brings back the second leading rusher in D11 in Brandon Camire plus wideout Jameel Sanders who is the leading returning receiver in the EPC and all conference linebacker Jared Groller. They don’t have tons of depth around those three, but it hasn’t shown itself so far in a pair of mercy rule wins over William Allen and Dieruff. I’m not sure how much those two games tell us, but Emmaus has the talent to jump on some teams.

#8 Allentown Central Catholic Vikings (1-1)
The Vikings were my preseason pick to be the best team in the East Penn Conference, but they were walloped in their second game by Nazareth. Still, the pieces are here. Quarterback Matt Rauscher is a Lehigh commit, Jayden Williams is coming off of a 1,200 yard rushing season, Jack McGorry is one of the best lacrosse recruits in the country and caught 50+ passes as a junior, and on defense Lavon Johnson is an FBS prospect at defensive tackle and Leroy Johnson had a 100 tackle season at middle linebacker. Williams rushed for 207 yards in the opener, but Nazareth took advantage of an inexperienced offensive line to plug his running lanes in their loss. Rauscher has been good, but not great so far, and that is the difference in this team if the passing game can get more in sync. He’s a dual threat, but the timing is off right now – not a total surprise given how weird practicing has been. But they absolutely can challenge Parkland and Emmaus for the top dog in the division.

Harrisburg at Berks Catholic

It's on for Friday afternoon....5 at BC. Great seeing Harrisburg playing football again and BC getting a game. It's their first game while BC at 2-1 is fighting for a spot in the 4A postseason.

End of 2019 season note.
3 Harrisburg (9-4)

The Cougars had another strong year, highlighted by a season opening road win against Coatesville (10-2) 14-6 with subsequent wins against Cedar Cliff (10-2) 41-7, Cumberland Valley (5-6) 37-10, Central York (9-2) 47-14 and Wilson (10-2) 33-29 before seeing their two year run as conference champ come to an end at Central Dauphin last week. They return a good core for next season including quarterback John McNeil who will operate behind another powerful line that returns juniors Layne Brannon 6-4 305, Jamear Henderson 6-0 240, All Everything Nate Bruce 6-5 300, and sophomore Tyshawn Black 5-11 275. About 2020; Hopefully Coatesville and Harrisburg will play, but as of now, Coatesville has not renewed the contract.

District 3 Top 10: Oct 7, 2020



District 3 Top 10: Oct 7, 2020


(Last week’s ranking bracketed)

1 Central Dauphin 2-0 (1) 6A
Central Dauphin crushed rival State College 35-13, holding them to 8 first downs and 262 total yards while rolling up 524 yards of their own, overwhelming SC with 358 yards on the ground. Tim Smith continues to impress as one of the top players in the state running for 158 yards, getting 25 yards in receptions and returning the opening kick-off 89 yards for the score. He is also an All-State linebacker. This was a typical CD-SC slugfest, where the Rams led 14-0 at the half until wearing State down, holding a 28-7 lead going into the final quarter. Their diverse offense (358 rush, 166 pass) saw five different players cross the goal line; Tim Smith on the opening kick-off, Tyrell English on a 60 yard pass, Shamarr Joppy on a 5 yard run, Malachi Bowman on a 39 yard pass and Dan Ficca on a 1 yard burst. Quarterback Max Mosey who has bulked up since last year (6-1, 180), completed 9 of 16 passes, many of them right on the money for 166 yards. This was a tough setting for SC, being their first game and playing without their All-State running-back Dresyn Green. They were also breaking in a new quarterback in Conrad Moore. With nothing up top (9 of 19, 75yds), he managed 125 yards rushing on 25 carries and was the bulk of their attack. The Rams are at Carlisle (1-0. 6A) Friday for their first road game of the year with the #4 power rating, battling the Thundering Herd who currently hold the top seed. They may not be a pushover this year with their veteran, huge line and slippery new quarterback in sophomore Ezeekai Thomas. He beat out Bishop McDevitt transfer Victor Patterson so you know they’re high on him. But being a sophomore quarterback can be a brutal experience facing the defenses seen in the Commonwealth.
2 Warwick 3-0 (2), 5A
Joey McCracken continues shedding rust from his ACL rehab with a sterling performance against Manheim Central last week, leading them to a 45-14 manhandling of the Barons. He completed 14 of 19 (74%) passes for 222 yards and a touchdown. The Warrior have a number of weapons throughout the offense beginning with McCracken then branching out to running backs Colton Miller and Christian Royer, plus receivers Caleb Schmitz, unheralded tight end Thatcher Miller and the multi-talented Tanner Haines. Colton Miller is almost unstoppable (1324 rushing last year) running behind Wisconsin commit Nolan Rucci (6-6, 272). He gained 134 yards last week with scores of 6, 15, 1 and 13 yards. Christian Royer had 59 yards and a score. Their receivers are fast enough, rangy, even physical; TE Thatcher Miller (6-3, 230), wide-outs Caleb Schmitz (6-4, 210, 960 yards last year) who had 8 receptions for 102 yards vs MC and Tanner Haines (6-2, 200) with a 10 yard Td reception and 27 yard field goal. The offense that averages 43ppg overshadows a defense allowing 27 total points to date. Last year’s allowed 14ppg, the year before 12, making Warwick much more than an offensive juggernaut. They’re in Elizabethtown (1-2, 5A) Friday battling the Bears who will be fired up in their home opened after narrow road losses to Solanco 29-22 and Conestoga Valley 10-7. They’ll heave it knowing Coach Andy Breault (3rd year) set records at Div-II Kutztown with over 9000 passing yards.
3 Governor Mifflin 2-0 (3), 5A
The Mifflin teams finally met last week when Governor Mifflin scored 33 2nd quarter points to blow this one open and seal a 55-14 win against visiting Mifflin County (0-2, 6A). They are loaded with wildly talented underclassman who dominated with junior Nicholas Singleton rushing for 102 yards and touchdowns of 12 and 21 yards, plus a 56 yard punt return for another 6. Trey Rock who is also a junior, rushed for 72 yards on 6 attempts while sophomore Ayden Martin lit things up with a 33 yard Pick Six in the 1st quarter, a blocked punt recovered in the end zone and a 46 yard Td catch. Governor Mifflin’s defense dominated, holding Mifflin County to 53 rush yards and 125 total, after manhandling Wilson the week before, holding them to 46 yards rushing and 139 total yards. Things ratchet up considerably Friday with Berks Inter-Conference mate Exeter (2-0, 5A) in for what is essentially a playoff game with the Eagles holding the top seed in 5A and the Mustangs in second. They’ll need to be ready because these guys will beat you up, especially along the lines with TE Cam’Ron Stewart 6-5, 245, tackles Devonte Phillip 6-1, 245 and Dom Sheidy 6-2, 290. Then there’s Dylan Kohl 6-1, 275 and Mason Klahr at 5-11, 260. This is not last year’s Governor Mifflin team.
4 Central York 3-0 (4), 6A
Quarterback Beau Pribula continued scorching teams, completing 12 of 17 passes (71%) for 144 yards and throwing 3 touchdowns to lead Central York to an easy 56-3 rout of South Western. The Mustangs were held to 73 yards rushing and 177 total. Central York rushed for 208 yards, led by Isaiah Sturgis with 64 yards on 10 carries and 3 scores, and Raquel DeWitt’s 66 yards and 2 scores on 6 carries. With a lead of 35-0 at the half and 49-9 after the 3rd quarter, reserves flooded the field in the 2nd half. Through three games, they haven’t allowed a touchdown, outscoring teams 162 to 3, beating Red Lion 55-0, Dover 51-0 and South Western 56-3. Spring Grove (2-1, 5A) is next at Central, looking for improvement over last year’s 2-8 team that wasn’t competitive playing sophomores and freshman. The 21-7 loss to York Sept 25th says things are getting better measured against last year’s 49-14 loss to the Bearcats. Need to get better still for Central.
5 Lampeter Strasburg 3-0 (5), 4A
There was no let up last week as Lampeter Strasburg kept up their torrid pace through Section-One by trouncing hapless Lancaster Catholic (0-3, 3A) 48-0. Through 3 games, they’ve destroyed competitive teams at Solanco (2-1, 5A) 47-15 and Lebanon (2-1, 5A) 42-20, both on the road before beating LC last week in their home opener. The wins earned them the 2nd seed behind West York (1-0) and ahead of Bishop McDevitt (2-0, 3rd), Octorara (3-0, 4th how about the Braves!), ELCO (3-0, 5th), Conrad Weiser (3-0, 6th), Berks Catholic (2-1, 7th), Cocalico (2-1, 8th) and Northern (2-0, 9th)….all battling for one of four postseason playoff slots. Last week saw Lampeter overwhelm Catholic with a 34-0 first half before emptying the bench with 12 backs get carries. A 388 to 95 total yardage advantage tells the story. They move on to play Donegal (2-1, 4A, 11th seed) away.
6 Bishop McDevitt 2-0 (6), 4A
McDevitt got their second straight road shutout beating Lower Dauphin (0-1, 5A) 48-0, after handling Mifflin County 33-0 in the opener. Quarterback Lek Powell was on, completing 19 of 23 (83%) for 134 yards, with touchdowns of 7, 10 and 17 yards. Senior Dedrick Tinker (senior week) started for star sophomore Marquese Williams, getting 110 yards on 10 carries. Mario Easterly snagged 5 passes for 64 yards with Kamil Foster catching 4 for 50 and 2 touchdowns. Lower Dauphin was held to 74 total yards. It gets much tougher this week against Mid Penn-Keystone rival Cedar Cliff (1-1, 5A) in a must win game for both. Cedar Cliff (1-1, 5A, 14th seed) is coming off a 28-21 upset loss at Hershey (2-0, 5A, 11th seed) in the competitive 5A classification that is pretty much a battle for 4th knowing Exeter, Governor Mifflin and Warwick hold the top three seeds, although Exeter and Mifflin play Friday. Back to McDevitt-CC; the last time the Colts were home they beat Berks Catholic 35-34 in double overtime making them a real threat here, especially after last week’s upset in Hershey. And, they are the toughest opponent McDevitt will face this year in the regular season. McDevitt is a little more but it will still be a war, perhaps a classic at West Shore Stadium.
7 Wilson 2-1 (8), 6A
How bout them Dawgs! Coming back from an emotionally draining season opening 48-7 loss to Governor Mifflin, then beating LL rival Manheim Township in Neffsville 31-28 before skating last week against Penn Manor, 35-8. The good news out of West Lawn is the return of quarterback Kaleb Brown who went down in the opener along with two other key starters. Standout receiver Troy Corson has yet to return although running back Mason Lenert is back along with Brown. Brown’s passing stats were 12 of 25 for 134 yards with a Td and a pick. But the telling news is he was turned loose to run for 115 yards on 10 carries, getting 2 touchdowns. Not a bad return cranking out 249 total yards of offense. 254 yards rushing says the new line is jelling (PM’s D?) while the defense gets good marks holding the Comets to 193 total yards. The win keeps Wilson in the postseason contention at #6 with three games to go beginning with JP McCaskey (0-3, 6A) Friday.
8 Berks Catholic 1-1 (10 tie), 4A
Berks Catholic brought previously undefeated Daniel Boone (2-1, 5A) back to Earth with a 49-7 pounding in Reading in a Berks Conference-Section One game. At 6-2, 215, quarterback Brad Hoffman is a specimen, cashing in on the rare opportunity to wing a few in BC’s system by completing 4 of 5 passes for 66 yards and 3 touchdowns. But as always, their mainstay is running the football where they excel. Justin Small was the workhorse against Boone with 114 yards on 33 carries plus a score, followed by Christian Cacchione with 110 yards on 5 carries and 2 scores. Colby Newton ran for 80 yards on 11 carries with 2 touchdowns. Connor Gundersen caught 3 passes for 54 yards with 2 touchdowns. All totaled, the Saints rushed for 390 yards, 456 total. They currently hold the 7th seed. The latest news out of Harrisburg Monday is the team got the green light to play football this year. And because Berks Catholic had an open week and was willing, they hooked up to play a game Friday night in Reading. This is the third game they’ve scheduled on the fly (Northwestern Lehigh, Cedar Cliff) because of Covid forcing the cancelation of earlier non-conference game. Well done!
TIE
Wyomissing 3-0 (Other) 3A

(Upgraded Wyo to 8 after seeing them (video) for second time) Wyomissing showed Plymouth Whitemarsh why they’ve been a dominant force in the district and one of the top programs in the state over the years (106-24 last 10) by administering a 44-0 pasting on the visiting Colonials. It was an awkward game with Wyomissing having a two game edge and it being PW’s first game, although they had tape of Wyo’s games while the Spartans had none. Bottom line, it was a dominate display of Wyomissing’s offense and particularly the defense getting a shutout, having 10 negative yardage plays and holding PW to 62 total yards of offense. 62 yards! PW got things started with questionable play calling going for a first down their opening drive on their own 39 yard line. Quite a call against the best D-front the Colonials will face all year….and they were stopped, with Wyo taking over at the 40. That set the tone with Wyo scoring 5 plays later followed by a blocked punt at PW’s 14 yard line and a score. On the next possession, the ball was snapped over the punter’s head and through the end zone for a safety giving Wyomissing a 16-0 1st quarter lead. Another botched snap ended up with Wyo taking over on the 4 yard line and scoring. Later in the game PW again mystified everyone going for a first down on their own 5 yard line!?!? Strange calls going up against DTs Rushard Williams 6-5, 315, Steve Olexy 6-0, 240, Seamuas Filoon 6-4. 290 and Isiah Fernandez 5-9, 210 (et al) and LBs Darren Brunner 6-1, 195, Tommy Grabowski 5-11, 190 and Jack Freightner 6-2, 205 who cleaned everything up while spending much of the game in PW’s backfield. Wyo moves on to play Twin Valley (0-2, 5A) in Reading with the real concern being a soft schedule with the cancellation of Southern Columbia, (3-0, D4, 2A), Pottsville (3-1, D11, 4A), Boyertown (0-2, D1, 6A) and Conrad Weiser (3-0, D3, 4A) from the early portion of the schedule; all non-conference games except Weiser.
9 Exeter Township 3-0 (Other) 5A
Exeter’s Eagles are flying high now, defeating a good Hempfield team in ot, getting off to a 3-0 start and sitting atop the district’s 5A power chart. Coming off a 51-0 win against Muhlenberg may be just the tonic going to Shillington to play Governor Mifflin Friday in a 5A district showdown, knowing Mifflin is right on their heels in 2nd place. But they have had little success to draw on against the Mustangs, losing 9 of the last 10 games by an average score of 30-17. Their skill people will have to be at their best with Qb Gavin McCusker (6-2, 180, sr) improving on 54% completion rate and a 3 to 4 Td/Pick ratio. His primary is only a sophomore in Joey Schlaffer. But he’s 6-6, 200 lbs with impressive stats of 13 completions for 324 yards, a 24.92 yards per catch average. The featured back is Eric Nagle, another underclassman (5-10, 170, jr) who gets it done rushing for 346 yards on 53 carries. JR Strass is a powerful fullback (6-2, 210, jr), rushing for 100 yards on 12 carries. Of concern is the defense that allowed Hempfield 34 points, the same night Governor Mifflin was shutting down Wilson to 139 total yards of offense. Exeter needs to bring it hard Friday against a multi-talented Mifflin team that can be physically intimidating with the size, power and speed they bring to the game.
10 Steelton Highspire 2-0 (Other) 1A
In one of the more historic rivalries between two rough and tumble river towns bordering one another (unfortunately I know this), Steelton beat Middletown in an exciting 43-21 game. This one featured talent, speed and athleticism all over the field. After the 1st quarter with a few exciting plays but no scoring, the Rollers struck first, with Mehki Flowers (PSU) scoring on a 2nd quarter 40 yard sprint, then again on a 70 yard punt return….and again on a 19 yard dart from freshman quarterback Alex Erby just as the half ended, giving them a 21-15 half time lead. Middletown also woke up in the 2nd quarter with Tymir Jackson going in from 19 yards out and Tajae Broadie scooping up a fumble and running in from the 3 yard line. Jackson scored again in the 3rd quarter knotting the game at 21-21 and that’s as good as it got for the Blue Raiders. Thereon, the Rollers added two scores in the 3rd quarter by Odell Green, one a 5 yard dash, the other an 18 yard run making it 36-21. Erby found Flowers one more time on a 20 yard strike in the 4th quarter for the final score. This was Steel High’s toughest opponent meaning they won’t likely lose again during the regular season. Neither will Middletown. The Rollers are currently second in power points with three consecutive homers left beginning Saturday against Trinity Catholic (0-2, 2A). Delone Catholic (3-0, 1A) holds the top spot but could stumble at always tough York Catholic (3-0, 2A) in their closer Oct 23rd.
Others
Mid Penn Conference
Harrisburg 0-0, 6A (9-4 last year)

2020 couldn’t start off more challenging, getting the ok to play football Monday Oct 5th then scheduling a game the next day with powerful Berks Catholic. Talk about morale, no one transferred as you felt they might through all the back and forth of having a season or not. Speaks volumes about Coach Cal Everett and the players for sticking it out, hoping to play ball at Harrisburg, not just anywhere. Looking at this year, they have a good core back with veteran quarterback John McNeal (6-0, 190, sr) returning and wide-out Kamere Day (5-10, 160, jr). Much of last year’s OL/DL return in All-Everything Nate Bruce (6-4, 325, sr, PSU), Layne Bannon (6-5, 275, sr), Tyshawn Black (5-11, 270, jr) and Jamear Henderson (6-0, 240, sr). That line will get the running game going. And quarterback McNeal and Day are a strong combo. The line backing corps lost a hitter in Harold O’Neal who was their leading tackler with 125. But they return Lamir Johnson (5-11, 215, sr), Jaylon Johnson (5-9, 180, sr) and Jamani Heron (6-0, 210, jr). The graduation of Sa’Quan Carter-Barton (6-2, 230, IUP) is big, taking 72 tackles with him. Apart from Day the secondary was wiped clean. Big loss in WR/DB Donte Kent (Central Michigan) and RB/DB Jah’mir Plant (Toledo?). But Coach has kept the winning tradition going at Harrisburg with a 72-40 record since 2011 and a 44-11 mark the last 4 years. He took over in 2011 replacing the legendary George Chaump (179-53) who went 62-29 in his 8 years before vacating the position in 2011. Harrisburg has been a state powerhouse going back to nationally ranked John Harris High where Chaump coached from 1962-1967 going 58-4!
Hershey 2-0 (5A, not ranked); at Palmyra 0-2, 5A
Middletown 1-1, (7) 3A; at Camp Hill 2-0, 2A
Cedar Cliff 1-1 (10 tie), 5A;
home to McDevitt 2-0, 4A

Lancaster Lebanon League
Cocalico 2-1 (9), 4A;
home to Conestoga Valley 1-1, 5A.
Hempfield 2-1, 6A; at Cedar Crest 1-2, 6A.
Manheim Township 1-2 (10 tie), 6A; at Penn Manor 0-3, 6A.
Solanco 2-1, 5A, 2-1; at Manheim Central 1-2, 5A

Berks Inter-County Conference
Conrad Weiser 3-0, 4A;
home to Hamburg 1-1, 3A

York-Adams
York (William Penn) 3-0, 6A;
at Red Lion 2-1, 5A
Gettysburg 5A 2-0; at Kennard Dale 1-1, 4A

Harrisburg High back in the mix!


I had these guys 1st or 2nd in preseason before they dropped the bomb on the program. CD has proven to be a monster team but who knows where the Cougars might have been with a vet Qb and a pile of quality lineman returning.
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