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Sjp article and controversy

Tulla,
What's the point of the above post? Has any of those opinions, or facts stopped St Joes from winning 7 of the last 10 championships, and making them a heavy favorite to win next week, as well as next year? If The Prep only accepted players that know each other and live within walking distance would they be so dominate?
Which school only have kids that’s walking distance?
 
The football team was the only ones to go on the new Orleans trip and I'm sure other. Prep fans have a rebuttal for everything. Players from new Jersey is a curse and playing img on ESPN is a curse. Wow preps program really has it bad. Thank goodness this senior class graduates and next year is a rebuilding year for them 😂. How is players safety not a priority for the piaa either!! You got high school athletes on cb south and navereth that will never play after high school. They are playing both sides of the ball. They are going against D1 guys twice thier size playing one way getting subbed in by guys just as good. They are going to get these kids seriously hurt one of these games.
You have a strange obsession with these service trips. As I said above, the football team goes on one service trip a year--as all other SJP students go on service trips. The football team's trips are not to play games or practice but 1) give some help to people and communities that need it and 2) enhance the sense of "brotherhood" among the players. What problem do you have with that?

For my response to your comment about "curses" please see my comment on the other thread where, again, you fantasize about SJP and curses.
 
The football team also went to new Orleans. I can't think of another private school that does those many out of state service trips.
What year was this? There’s plenty prep guys on this board. First it was Florida and Cali Notre it’s New Orleans. They also went to Toronto. Since we’re just saying anything. Bonner did travel to Ireland this year. I guess it’s only an issue if you win.
 
Which school only have kids that’s walking distance?
I recall the Mount Lebanon coach or program had tee shirts or sweatshirts created two years ago that depicted a bunch of feet and some slogan about all the players being with walking distance (or was it bicycling distance?) of the school. This year before the PCC game there was a social media post from the football program emphasizing that the NA players were all "hometown kids." Whatever floats their boat, but if the NA coach was formerly at PCC it seems more than a bit rich.
 
What year was this? There’s plenty prep guys on this board. First it was Florida and Cali Notre it’s New Orleans. They also went to Toronto. Since we’re just saying anything. Bonner did travel to Ireland this year. I guess it’s only an issue if you win.
The Prep has never been to Toronto. I think the freshman team was supposed to go to Toronto this year, but the game got cancelled--as far as I know.
 
I recall the Mount Lebanon coach or program had tee shirts or sweatshirts created two years ago that depicted a bunch of feet and some slogan about all the players being with walking distance (or was it bicycling distance?) of the school. This year before the PCC game there was a social media post from the football program emphasizing that the NA players were all "hometown kids." Whatever floats their boat, but if the NA coach was formerly at PCC it seems more than a bit rich.
yes the "walking" reference was Mt Lebanon- very small "town" setting just on the edge of Pittsburgh, where most kids could walk
I recall the Mount Lebanon coach or program had tee shirts or sweatshirts created two years ago that depicted a bunch of feet and some slogan about all the players being with walking distance (or was it bicycling distance?) of the school. This year before the PCC game there was a social media post from the football program emphasizing that the NA players were all "hometown kids." Whatever floats their boat, but if the NA coach was formerly at PCC it seems more than a bit rich.
 
The Prep has never been to Toronto. I think the freshman team was supposed to go to Toronto this year, but the game got cancelled--as far as I know.
I was being sarcastic bc I never heard them going to New Orleans. He’s just throwing places out there so I figured I would do the same.
 
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Mt lebanon is I think 5 square miles, which is very small. But it is dense. The townships around it USC, Bethel, and Peters have a much larger land area
 
Player safety? How is it anyone’s fault if players go on to play at the next level? Have you ever seen Nazareth or cb South? You’re making assumptions that are far from the truth.
TOWAMENCIN — Every year, it seems, the District 1 champion runs into District 12 champion St. Joseph’s Prep in the PIAA Class 6A semifinals. And virtually every tear, that team loses to Prep.

This year, it was Central Bucks South’s turn.

Juggernaut St. Joseph’s Prep — which draws players from three states and is ranked No. 8 in the country in USA Today’s Top 25 poll — began the PIAA semifinal against CB South with Brandon Rehmann returning the opening kickoff 79 yards for a touchdown.


And the reigning state champion Hawks just continued to pour on the points, blowing out CB South 49-0 Saturday afternoon at North Penn High School to land a return trip to the state title game.

They’ll face North Allegheny next Saturday night at Cumberland Valley High School.

The Hawks (12-1) led 27-0 by the early second quarter and 42-0 by halftime. There was a running clock the rest of the way.


“It’s an elite football program full of elite football players,” CB South coach Tom Hetrick said. “It’s one of those things where it is what it is. We genuinely believed we had a good game plan. We’ve done great things all year. As great as those things are, they weren’t great enough to be able to deal with what we just dealt with today.”




A silver lining for the Titans (13-2) happened when running back Anthony Leonardi broke 2,000 yards for the season. He entered the game needing 76 yards to reach the mark. He finished with 83 — including a 54-yard run on South’s first play from scrimmage — passing the milestone in the fourth quarter.


“It’s crazy,” Leonardi said. “I wouldn’t have been able to do it without my coaches and my offensive line. They paved the way for me all year, with our fullbacks and our receivers blocking on the outside.

“Obviously we wanted to win states, it’s rough, but we had a historic season,” Leonardi said. “It’s amazing to be part of this, to be able to play in a game like this.”

Prep’s defense stiffened after Leonardi’s early run, and the Hawks responded with rushing TDs by Taj Dyches and quarterback Samaj Jones before Kahseim Phillips opened the second period with a 74-yard run to the end zone.


Before halftime, Jones connected with Rehmann for a 47-yard score, and then found Elijah Jones in the end zone from 17 yards out.

Rob Novotny tacked on the Hawks’ final TD in the fourth quarter.

This will be Prep’s 10th state final appearance in the last 11 years. It begs the question, since St. Joe’s can essentially recruit student athletes from anywhere, should the system be set up differently? It doesn’t seem fair to other schools.


“Listen, St. Joe’s are who they are,” Hetrick said. “I don’t want anybody’s sympathy. We don’t want anybody’s pity. My job is to coach football, and we play who we play.

“I guess if you’re playing in the state semifinals against an elite program like that, that’s a pretty good problem to have,” he said.

The Hawks are seeking their eighth state championship. They haven’t lost to a team from Pennsylvania this year. Their only defeat was to IMG Academy, an athletic boarding school in Bradenton, Fla.


“I’ll face everyone the same,” senior offensive lineman Collin Goetter said. “You could be a middle school team or you could be the ’85 Bears, I don’t care. The system is how the system is. Unfortunately, it didn’t break our way this time, but we did a historic thing this year.

“From Homecoming Week 10, to Coach Hetrick’s first playoff win, to getting our first away win in the playoffs, and coming in and beating West at West — that was a surreal feeling. I’ll never forget that,” Goetter said. “And winning the district title. It’s something I’ll always see in my head, doing it as a team, because these guys are my brothers.”

South won its first district football title in the 20-year history of the school, before running into Prep.


“There’s no excuses, football is football,” Leonardi said of losing to the Hawks. “At the end of the day, they’re 17-, 18-year-old high schoolers, just like us. If that’s how the system has to be, that’s how it has to be. We came out and battled our hearts out. I have no complaints.”

Corey Moore added a 21-yard run for the Titans. In five playoff games, he and Leonardi combined for 1,150 yards and 14 touchdowns. They are part of an accomplished senior class that helped lay the foundation for future success at CB South, which will return several key players next year, including quarterback Owen Pinkerton and members of the defensive front.

“It’s been such a special group,” Hetrick said of his seniors. “I’ve known them since they were in sixth and seventh grade. They’re the kind of guys you root for. If anything like what we’ve done this year is going to happen to a senior group, this is the group you want it to happen for.


“It’s a gift to be able to do what I do and hang out with people from the South side of the tracks, because genuinely pure, salt of the earth people,” Hetrick said. “I couldn’t love them any more.”

——

Email Christiaan DeFranco at cdefranco@thereporteronline.com. Follow him on X at @the_defranc, or visit ChrisDeFranco.com.
 
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TOWAMENCIN — Every year, it seems, the District 1 champion runs into District 12 champion St. Joseph’s Prep in the PIAA Class 6A semifinals. And virtually every tear, that team loses to Prep.

This year, it was Central Bucks South’s turn.

Juggernaut St. Joseph’s Prep — which draws players from three states and is ranked No. 8 in the country in USA Today’s Top 25 poll — began the PIAA semifinal against CB South with Brandon Rehmann returning the opening kickoff 79 yards for a touchdown.


And the reigning state champion Hawks just continued to pour on the points, blowing out CB South 49-0 Saturday afternoon at North Penn High School to land a return trip to the state title game.

They’ll face North Allegheny next Saturday night at Cumberland Valley High School.

The Hawks (12-1) led 27-0 by the early second quarter and 42-0 by halftime. There was a running clock the rest of the way.


“It’s an elite football program full of elite football players,” CB South coach Tom Hetrick said. “It’s one of those things where it is what it is. We genuinely believed we had a good game plan. We’ve done great things all year. As great as those things are, they weren’t great enough to be able to deal with what we just dealt with today.”




A silver lining for the Titans (13-2) happened when running back Anthony Leonardi broke 2,000 yards for the season. He entered the game needing 76 yards to reach the mark. He finished with 83 — including a 54-yard run on South’s first play from scrimmage — passing the milestone in the fourth quarter.


“It’s crazy,” Leonardi said. “I wouldn’t have been able to do it without my coaches and my offensive line. They paved the way for me all year, with our fullbacks and our receivers blocking on the outside.

“Obviously we wanted to win states, it’s rough, but we had a historic season,” Leonardi said. “It’s amazing to be part of this, to be able to play in a game like this.”

Prep’s defense stiffened after Leonardi’s early run, and the Hawks responded with rushing TDs by Taj Dyches and quarterback Samaj Jones before Kahseim Phillips opened the second period with a 74-yard run to the end zone.


Before halftime, Jones connected with Rehmann for a 47-yard score, and then found Elijah Jones in the end zone from 17 yards out.

Rob Novotny tacked on the Hawks’ final TD in the fourth quarter.

This will be Prep’s 10th state final appearance in the last 11 years. It begs the question, since St. Joe’s can essentially recruit student athletes from anywhere, should the system be set up differently? It doesn’t seem fair to other schools.


“Listen, St. Joe’s are who they are,” Hetrick said. “I don’t want anybody’s sympathy. We don’t want anybody’s pity. My job is to coach football, and we play who we play.

“I guess if you’re playing in the state semifinals against an elite program like that, that’s a pretty good problem to have,” he said.

The Hawks are seeking their eighth state championship. They haven’t lost to a team from Pennsylvania this year. Their only defeat was to IMG Academy, an athletic boarding school in Bradenton, Fla.


“I’ll face everyone the same,” senior offensive lineman Collin Goetter said. “You could be a middle school team or you could be the ’85 Bears, I don’t care. The system is how the system is. Unfortunately, it didn’t break our way this time, but we did a historic thing this year.

“From Homecoming Week 10, to Coach Hetrick’s first playoff win, to getting our first away win in the playoffs, and coming in and beating West at West — that was a surreal feeling. I’ll never forget that,” Goetter said. “And winning the district title. It’s something I’ll always see in my head, doing it as a team, because these guys are my brothers.”

South won its first district football title in the 20-year history of the school, before running into Prep.


“There’s no excuses, football is football,” Leonardi said of losing to the Hawks. “At the end of the day, they’re 17-, 18-year-old high schoolers, just like us. If that’s how the system has to be, that’s how it has to be. We came out and battled our hearts out. I have no complaints.”

Corey Moore added a 21-yard run for the Titans. In five playoff games, he and Leonardi combined for 1,150 yards and 14 touchdowns. They are part of an accomplished senior class that helped lay the foundation for future success at CB South, which will return several key players next year, including quarterback Owen Pinkerton and members of the defensive front.

“It’s been such a special group,” Hetrick said of his seniors. “I’ve known them since they were in sixth and seventh grade. They’re the kind of guys you root for. If anything like what we’ve done this year is going to happen to a senior group, this is the group you want it to happen for.


“It’s a gift to be able to do what I do and hang out with people from the South side of the tracks, because genuinely pure, salt of the earth people,” Hetrick said. “I couldn’t love them any more.”

——

Email Christiaan DeFranco at cdefranco@thereporteronline.com. Follow him on X at @the_defranc, or visit ChrisDeFranco.com.
I’m not sure how this address safety. CBS was just as big as sjp. Nazareth was also. My thing is this……we can’t keep making excuses when we play these guys. I get it they have advantages, but the mentality I’ve seen wk after wk is pitiful. Monday- Friday “we accept the challenge” then Saturday rolls around and it’s “they have guys from 3 states”. The craziest thing about all of it is that writers publish things that are true about the advantages to make losing more digestible.
 
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I’m not sure how this address safety. CBS was just as big as sjp. Nazareth was also. My thing is this……we can’t keep making excuses when we play these guys. I get it they have advantages, but the mentality I’ve seen wk after wk is pitiful. Monday- Friday “we accept the challenge” then Saturday rolls around and it’s “they have guys from 3 states”. The craziest thing about all of it is that writers publish things that are true about the advantages to make losing more digestible.
The piaa is allowing this. They are coaches and they have a game to play. They are going to have their kids ready to play no matter what but they also realize it's not an even playing field. Something should be done.
 
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I recall the Mount Lebanon coach or program had tee shirts or sweatshirts created two years ago that depicted a bunch of feet and some slogan about all the players being with walking distance (or was it bicycling distance?) of the school. This year before the PCC game there was a social media post from the football program emphasizing that the NA players were all "hometown kids." Whatever floats their boat, but if the NA coach was formerly at PCC it seems more than a bit rich.
Mt Lebo does not have school busses all of their kids walk to school that is a true statement
 
Mt Lebo does not have school busses all of their kids walk to school that is a true statement
And all the schools mentioned above their players are all from one state (Pennsylvania) maybe the PIAA should change their name to the PDNJ-IAA The Pennsylvania Delaware New Jersey Interscholastic Athletic Association
 
And all the schools mentioned above their players are all from one state (Pennsylvania) maybe the PIAA should change their name to the PDNJ-IAA The Pennsylvania Delaware New Jersey Interscholastic Athletic Association
You keep pushing the state thing. It’s an excuse at this point.
 
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Why can't Phillipsburg be a part of the PIAA then? The high school is within walking distance to the PA border, they are less than eight miles from the closest school in PA in their classification and more than 25 miles from the closet NJ school that's also their size. And they've been playing PIAA schools forever - they were in an all Pennsylvania teams conference for 30 years. Them playing in New Jersey is misleading because people aren't aware of the distance, and only hear "different state"
 
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