Freedom’s Offensive Keys
1. Big Passing Plays
Chase Walker averages nearly ten yards an attempt, and even in games where he’s not super accurate, he’s blown games open with huge chunk plays. Eight completions for 220 yards against Allentown Central Catholic. Eight completions for 221 yards against Nazareth. Eleven completions for 227 yards against East Stroudsburg South. Shacre Colwell and Amare DuBois both average more than 17 yards per catch, and especially if Easton commits a lot of resources to stopping the run, Walker can blow the game open throwing it over the top, particularly to Colwell.
2. The Offensive Line
Easton will throw a ton of defensive linemen at Freedom to keep their front fresh. Tanner Wheeler, Ryan Ellis, and Dylan Hill will play a lot both ways, and they’ll have to be the better conditioned team. Aaron Beete has been able to get his in every game this year, which is a credit to the Freedom offensive line. How they pass protect against a really good Easton pass rush will determine whether key #1 is possible.
Easton Defensive Keys
1. Stop the Run
Easton has played two close games and five blowouts. In the blowouts, they’ve suffocated the run to the tune of 58 yards per game and 2.5 yards per carry. Against Emmaus and CB West, it’s 222 yards and 6.3 yards per carry. The Emmaus total is kind of misleading, as the Green Hornets ran for 137 yards on two plays, and 63 yards on their other 23 carries. But big plays in the run game by Freedom will end Easton’s chances here pretty quickly.
2. Cover Shacre Colwell
Against the best teams on their schedule, Colwell has been the difference maker in the Freedom offense.
- Torrey Pines: 4 catches, 112 yards, TD
- Parkland: 2 TDs
- Nazareth: 3 catches, 139 yards, TD
- Bethlehem Catholic: 6 catches for 72 yards
- Northampton: 8 catches for 97 yards, TD
He plays like a shifty slot receiver, who can really make things happen after the catch. But, he’s 6’2 and is probably the best jump ball receiver in the Valley (see, both end zone fades against Parkland). Easton is the one team that can match his size in the secondary – don’t be surprised if he gets bracketed by 6’4 Sean McPeek and 6’3 Cael DiSora. Amare DuBoise is a good second option, but Easton has to make him the primary receiver.
Easton Offensive Keys
1. Make Freedom Pick Their Poison
Easton has done a fantastic job in their seven game winning streak being flexible offensively. They ran the ball down Spring-Ford, Emmaus, Northampton, and Liberty’s throats. Stroudsburg and Northeast sold out to stop the run and Easton was able to adjust and torch them through the air. Freedom is the most complete defense they’ve seen. If they’re going to stay in their shell and rely on their size and versatility up front to stop the run, Easton offensive line will have to impose their will and Day and Thomas will need to get chunk plays on a light box. If Freedom starts creeping their strike down and getting safeties involved in the run game, we’ll need to see more of JC Wilson and Jasir Frutchey on the outside than we have lately. I don’t necessarily think the RPO slot/tight end seam stuff is going to be there against Freedom, though Andrew Biddle has been a real positive surprise on offense. But this feels like a game where it’s the big guys on the perimeter will have to show out against a lot of the 5’10 guys in the Freedom secondary.
2. No turnovers
The hallmark of the Freedom football resurgence since 2013 has been their ability to force turnovers. This group has 22 in eight games. Easton has only coughed it up seven times in eight games. Something is going to have to give. This is one reason I think Will Day will be the featured running back. He’s the bigger, sturdier back, who has not fumbled once in his career and particularly if this game turns into grind mode, I feel more confident in him taking care of the football against a Freedom back seven that is going to gang tackle and rip the ball like crazy.
Freedom Defensive Keys
1. Use structure to mess with the run game
We talked about this last week with Liberty, but the 3-3-5 can be awkward to run against and Freedom has excelled in getting unblocked linebackers into the backfields if offensive lines aren’t sharpe with their communication. The absence of Justin Peluso gets felt the most here, he’s a monster who could really explode through gaps and mess up a run game. Ryan Roeder will be in that role Friday and he’ll need to play his best game of the year. Easton’s offensive line, particularly the right side with Jackson Fuhrer and Elijah Grovesnor, really gets to the second level well, and Kurtis Crossman at tight end has emerged as one of the best run blockers in the Valley. How well Freedom’s linebackers stay off of those blocks will be how well they stop the run.
2. Keep Cole Ordway in the Pocket
The Easton offense has become more dangerous as quarterback Cole Ordway has become more comfortable extending plays with his legs, either keeping his eyes downfield for big completions (see the opening touchdown to Andrew Biddle last week) or pulling the ball down and picking up yards with his legs (he ran for 96 yards against Stroudsburg and 102 last week against Liberty). Making him a purely pocket passer severely restricts what Easton does on offense. They’ll roll him out to give him options, but the more Freedom can keep him in a box, the better their chances on Friday.