High School Football: Andy Shay’s Elite 11 Rankings after Week 6

0
11. West Perry6-011
The points just keep coming for the Mustangs. Eight first-half touchdowns against Boiling Springs on their way to a 72-28 victory.
10. Steel-High5-010
A short trip to Middletown Saturday is on the docket for the Rollers.
9. Wyomissing6-09
Stop if you’ve heard this score before; Wyomissing 49, Opponent (in this case Donegal) 0. Standard Spartans Saturday home victory it seems.
8.Manheim Central5-18
Barons methodically dominated a 1-4 Muhlenberg squad by scoring twice in the odd numbered quarters and once in the even numbered quarters to post a 42-0 victory.
7. Exeter Township6-07
Warwick is a 1-5 team that has played no fewer than three squads in the Elite 11 and gave the Eagles all they could handle before falling to Exeter by a touchdown. Good win for Exeter against a battle-tested squad.
6. Cocalico5-16
In a matchup of one-loss squads, the Eagles paid a visit to Myerstown and dropped 42 on host ELCO in the first half to keep the engine rolling along.
5. Central York6-04
Give Dallastown, a two-win team, credit for pushing the Panthers the full 48 minutes. This game was 13-10 Central York midway through the third quarter, and it took until the last minute for the Panthers to make this a two-score final.
4. State College4-15
Visiting CD East gave the Little Lions a jolt, as it scored the first 10 points in Happy Valley. State College’s response was 37 unanswered points by the end of the third quarter to seize control.
3. Harrisburg5-13
Somebody found their offensive rhythm. The Cougars, who rolled Altoona 54-7, have now scored 156 points in their last three games since losing to Manheim Township. Brick by brick for this squad.
2. Manheim Township6-02
Another easy week at the office for the Blue Streaks, as they dropped 44 on J.P. McCaskey in the first half to easily continue their perfect season.
1. Bishop McDevitt6-01
Bonus Keystone Division football for the McDevitt starters, who played their starters in the third quarter of a division game because it took a couple second-half touchdowns to get the game with Milton Hershey to mercy rule.

Pennsylvania high school football: Scores, highlights from Week 6 in Mid-Penn Conference and midstate

0

We’ve made the turn at the halfway point of the season.

Five more weeks of the PIAA high school football regular season remain, with the playoffs right around the corner. Week 6 of the Mid-Penn Conference slate includes several more matchups that will go a long way in determining division races and potentially playoff seeding.

As always, bookmark this page on your phone, laptop or tablet to follow every matchup and see every highlight from the Mid-Penn and some of the teams in the Colonial-Schuylkill League. We’ll update scores throughout the night on this page (refresh the page to see new updates), and you can follow our Twitter feed below for minute-by-minute updates.

PIAA football: Week 6 Mid-Penn analysis, staff picks and previews

Each week 4th Down Magazine will preview the weekend slate, predict the winners and provide extra analysis. Here’s everything to get you ready for Week 6 of the PIAA high school football season:

Mid-Penn Conference football schedule and scores: Week 6

Looking for the latest updates and final scores from this weekend’s games around the Harrisburg area? We have you covered:

Thursday, Sept. 28

  • Central Dauphin 50, Carlisle 16
  • Cumberland Valley 35, Chambersburg 20

Friday, Sept. 29

  • State College 43, CD East 17 Final
  • Bishop McDevitt 55, Milton Hershey 14 Final
  • Cedar Cliff 48, Mifflin County 6 Final
  • Hershey 41, Red Land 0 Final
  • Lower Dauphin 28, Palmyra 7 Final
  • East Pennsboro 29, Mechanicsburg 16 Final
  • Gettysburg 13, Shippensburg 0 Final
  • Greencastle-Antrim 24, Northern 14 Final
  • Susquehanna Township 40, Waynesboro 21 Final
  • Trinity 28, Big Spring 22 Final
  • West Perry 72, Boiling Springs 28 Final
  • Camp Hill 22, Susquenita 3 Final
  • Upper Dauphin 36, Halifax 0 Final
  • Juniata 46, James Buchanan 16 Final
  • Line Mountain 27, Newport 0 Final
  • Tri-Valley 33, Shenandoah Valley 14 Final
  • Palmerton 41, Pine Grove 22 Final
  • Williams Valley 35, Nativity BVM 28 Final

Saturday, Sept. 30

  • Altoona at Harrisburg, 1 p.m.
  • Middletown at Steel-High, noon

Pennsylvania high school football live updates and highlights

Follow us on Twitter/X at 4thdownmag for live updates from area teams and reporters from tonight’s games.

High School Football: Results: Picks and Predictions for Week 6

0

EXPLAINING OUR PICKS: It’s Week 6 of the Pennsylvania high school football season, and the 4th Down Magazine team is here to tell you who’s going to win every game involving Mid-Penn Conference teams, as well as Schuylkill-Colonial League games featuring former members of the now-defunct Tri-Valley League.

This year’s group of experts includes veteran reporters Andy Shay and Andy Sandrik, as well as 4th Down owner and manager Adam Kulikowski.

Here’s who we think will win each game this week.

2023 Standings

Picker: Week 5 — Overall — Perfect Picks

Andy Sandrik: 13-9 — 105-33 — 0

Adam Kulikowski: 18-4 — 104-34 — 0

Andy Shay: 18-4 — 99-39 — 1

* Records in parentheses after school name; District and seed in parentheses before school name.

THURSDAY, SEPT. 28

Central Dauphin 50, Carlisle 16:

Andy Shay: Central Dauphin 31, Carlisle 6: Thundering Herd have dropped four straight, but three of those setbacks were one-score losses. Rams are looking to steer the ship back on course after falling to State College. The Power of CD shows up here.

Andy Sandrik: Central Dauphin 33, Carlisle 10: After a fast start to the season, Carlisle’s offense suddenly finds itself at a standstill, scoring just seven points over its last two games. The Thundering Herd will need more than that if they hope to keep up with the rising CD Rams.

Adam Kulikowski: Central Dauphin 35, Carlisle 10: Rams learned why State College is a state title contender last week. But lessons like that make good teams better. Rams take full advantage of this matchup to continue to improve. 

Cumberland Valley 35, Chambersburg 20

Andy Shay: Chambersburg 20, Cumberland Valley 10: Going with chalk here, especially after the Trojans won a game 3-0 last week. Neither offense brings a whole lot to the table, so if one finds a groove or gets hot that’s your winner. Expect defense to set the tone and tenor of this one.

Andy Sandrik: Cumberland Valley 14, Chambersburg 13: I attended last week’s 3-0 win for Chambersburg over Carlisle. I’m expecting a similar kind of defensive struggle this week.

Adam Kulikowski: Cumberland Valley 24, Chambersburg 10: Perhaps this is an upset, but there’s been progress on the offensive side of the ball for the Eagles. Count on that to pay dividends in this Thursday night tussle. 

FRIDAY, SEPT. 29

State College 43, CD East 17

Andy Shay: State College 52, CD East 14: The Panthers are 3-0 in road games this season heading into Happy Valley. CD East will struggle big-time to stay competitive against a Little Lions squad that has found a little bit of mojo on both sides of the ball.

Andy Sandrik: State College 50, CD East 18: The Little Lions made us experts look like a bunch of homers last week when they trounced our backyard contender Central Dauphin. Except for maybe the Harrisburg game, I don’t think I can pick against State College again this season.

Adam Kulikowski: State College 45, CD East 20: Little Lions complete the sweep of the Central Dauphins after flexing its muscle last week against the Rams. 

Bishop McDevitt 55, Milton Hershey 14

Andy Shay: Bishop McDevitt 49, Milton Hershey 6: Que the weekly “this has nothing to do with the opponent” line — this week it happens to be the Spartans. McDevitt overpowers teams in waves, and slowing them down is almost impossible.

Andy Sandrik: Bishop McDevitt 56, Milton Hershey 21: It’s Milton Hershey’s turn to get a shot at slaying the McDevitt dragon. Can the Spartans last any longer than Cedar Cliff did last week?

Adam Kulikowski: Bishop McDevitt 55, Milton Hershey 14: Question to the McDevitt fans out there: where does this team stack up historically with other Crusaders squads? Tweet at us or respond on Facebook. 

Cedar Cliff 48, Mifflin County 6

Andy Shay: Cedar Cliff 28, Mifflin County 14: I expect the Colts to pick themselves up by the bootstraps and put in a solid effort after getting blitzed a week ago in a game they expected to be competitive but wasn’t. If they fall shot, the Huskies are built to make you pay and will not go quietly.

Andy Sandrik: Cedar Cliff 35, Mifflin County 14: The faster Cedar Cliff can distance itself from the McDevitt beatdown loss, the more prepared it will be to take on a Mifflin County team that it’s heavily favored to beat.

Adam Kulikowski: Cedar Cliff 48, Mifflin County 26: There’s a Taylor Swift song that perfectly fits the mentality the Colts need after last week’s drubbing by the Crusaders. 

Hershey 41, Red Land 0

Andy Shay: Hershey 34, Red Land 14: Trojans have scored 30 or more points in four of their five games and get to enjoy the Cocoa Bean Bowl trophy for another year. Opposing teams are so focused on the run game, the Hershey pass game has quietly become a viable weapon.

Andy Sandrik: Hershey 39, Red Land 10: I don’t care how much you love the game of football, there’s no way trying to tackle Hershey’s 230-pound sledgehammer RB Angel Cabrera is fun in any way.

Adam Kulikowski: Hershey 48, Red Land 6: I’m just not sure the Patriots have the power in the trenches to battle the Trojans for a full four quarters. Final score shows the wear Hershey’s big men can inflict. 

Lower Dauphin 28, Palmyra 7

Andy Shay: Lower Dauphin 28, Palmyra 14: It will take a solid effort from the Falcons’ offense to make hay against a Cougars defense that has been better than you might think on a pretty consistent basis this season. Grinding is an LD specialty, though.

Andy Sandrik: Lower Dauphin 30, Palmyra 7: This Falcons squad is quietly outworking its competition this fall, and a big part of the success has been LD’s defense, which is allowing just nine points per game.

Adam Kulikowski: Lower Dauphin 28, Palmyra 13: The Falcons aren’t going to overpower many opponents, but they sure do find ways to battle through adversity — a welcome change from previous Falcons clubs. 

East Pennsboro 29, Mechanicsburg 16

Andy Shay: East Pennsboro 38, Mechanicsburg 14: Good to see the Panthers have to win a game without their signature explosive big plays. Hard to keep East Penn shackled and drawn for eight consecutive quarters, though. Wildcats have enjoyed moments to date, but consistency has been elusive. 

Andy Sandrik: East Pennsboro 36, Mechanicsburg 16: I’ve been having a heck of a time picking Mechanicsburg games this year. But with the ‘Cats facing a Colonial contender in East Pennsboro, I feel like I’m finally making the right call this week.

Adam Kulikowski: East Pennsboro 42, Mechanicsburg 28: I fully expect there to be big points scored in this one. But in the end, the firepower the Panthers possess is just too much to handle for the Wildcats. 

Gettysburg 13, Shippensburg 0

Andy Shay: Gettysburg 30, Shippensburg 20: Warriors QB Brady Heiser has more than 1,000 total yards and 14 touchdowns through the midway point. And the pieces around him are starting to show up more and more. Greyhounds might not have enough offensive pop to keep up.

Andy Sandrik: Gettysburg 28, Shippensburg 20: These teams have identical 2-3 records, but Gettysburg has scored over 100 points more than Shippensburg up to this point. If this turns into a game of keep up, it will be a long night for the ‘Hounds.

Adam Kulikowski: Gettysburg 38, Shippensburg 14: The Greyhounds have scored more than 14 points just once all season. Not your typical Greyhounds squad. 

Greencastle-Antrim 24, Northern 14

Andy Shay: Greencastle-Antrim 21, Northern 7: The Blue Devils’ first loss of the season, to undefeated East Pennsboro last week in a slugfest, qualifies as a quality loss in my book. Two running teams who know each touchdown really matters. Focus here will be on defense.

Andy Sandrik: Greencastle-Antrim 19, Northern 7: The struggling Polar Bears offense broke out for 28 points last week. It’s going to be hard to repeat that feat against a Greencastle defense that doesn’t allow a whole lot.

Adam Kulikowski: Greencastle-Antrim 28, Northern 6: Polar Bears are on a four-game skid heading into a tough matchup against the Blue Devils. If you are a Bears fan, you have to like the fight this club showed last week in a 29-28 loss to Waynesboro.

Susquehanna Township 40, Waynesboro 21

Andy Shay: Susquehanna Township 39, Waynesboro 20: Just feels like the right time for the ‘Hanna Tribe to get on a roll after surviving a crazy affair with Shippensburg last week. Remember, only two points separate Hanna from being 5-0 as compared to 3-2. Slim margins this week for the Indians, but they show up.

Andy Sandrik: Susquehanna Township 31, Waynesboro 14: If ‘Hanna races out to an early lead and forces Waynesboro to play catch-up, it could be lights out early at Rip Engle Sports Complex on Friday.

Adam Kulikowski: Susquehanna Township 38, Waynesboro 20: The Tribe’s 3-2 record can be deceiving. This is a club that lost its two games by a combined two points.

Trinity 28, Big Spring 22

Andy Shay: Trinity 35, Big Spring 14: The T-Rocks navigated some smooth waters last week and it was much needed coming out of a two-game fog. This is still a very good squad. Bulldogs will put up a fight but struggle with speed in space, and Trinity will want to show its chops in the open field.

Andy Sandrik: Trinity 28, Big Spring 14: Never count out a backfield that includes both Connor Green and Grant Hall, but this seems like it’s Trinity’s game to lose.

Adam Kulikowski: Trinity 41, Big Spring 28: We know the Shamrocks have the ability when healthy to score in a hurry. Question to me is just how healthy is Messiah Mickens?

West Perry 72, Boiling Springs 28

Andy Shay: West Perry 48, Boiling Spring 14: After two consecutive games falling short of the 40-point standard for this offense, the Mustangs can make it two straight above that mark. Bubblers are approaching 200 points surrendered after five games.

Andy Sandrik: West Perry 46, Boiling Springs 12: I’m not sure what path to victory the Bubblers have if West Perry comes out and simply executes the fundamentals.

Adam Kulikowski: West Perry 51, Boiling Springs 6: The West Perry crew has all the pieces it needs to put this game to bed before halftime. 

Camp Hill 22, Susquenita 3

Andy Shay: Camp Hill 21, Susquenita 14: After a promising 3-0 start, the Lions have been saddled with a couple tight setbacks. Defense is the ticket for Camp Hill to get back on track. Blackhawks hit some big plays and press the accelerator offensively but still have only one win to show for it.

Andy Sandrik: Camp Hill 28, Susquenita 14: After toiling through heartbreaking losses to Big Spring and Middletown, I expect Camp Hill to have slightly more breathing room this week. 

Adam Kulikowski: Camp Hill 35, Susquenita 28: ‘Nita has surrendered 171 points as we begin the second half of the season — that’s an unsavory 34.2 points per game. 

Upper Dauphin 36, Halifax 0

Andy Shay: Upper Dauphin 41, Halifax 14: Couple of 3-2 squads, but the Trojans seem like they are on a different trajectory right now. This UDA group took some early lumps, but the pieces are coming together at the right time and they are playing well.

Andy Sandrik: Upper Dauphin 37, Halifax 20: The reality of the Liberty Division is starting to catch up with Halifax, while Upper Dauphin is hitting its stride for a possible run at the division. 

Adam Kulikowski: Upper Dauphin 42, Halifax 21: The Wildcat faithful won’t be happy with our crew’s assessment of their chances in this Week 6 matchup, but the Trojans present a challenge the Wildcats might not be equipped to handle. 

Juniata 46, James Buchanan 16

Andy Shay: Juniata 42, James Buchanan 7: Indians get back to .500 in this one against a Rockets outfit that has surrendered 92 points over the last eight quarters.

Andy Sandrik: Juniata 38, James Buchanan 6: If you haven’t added Juniata sophomore WR Jasper Shepps to your high school fantasy team yet, what are you waiting for? The kid already has 36 catches for 654 yards and seven TDs.

Adam Kulikowski: Juniata 45, James Buchanan 6: The last two matchups have provided the Indians with plenty of time to get some of their young playmakers valuable experience. One more tune-up before the schedule becomes more challenging.

Line Mountain 27, Newport 0

Andy Shay: Line Mountain 35, Newport 0: Couple of tight-squeeze wins in a row for the Eagles to keep a positive outlook on the season. Buffaloes have scored only 19 points this season and have been non-competitive on a weekly basis.

Andy Sandrik: Line Mountain 33, Newport 0: I don’t know how many defenders have the kind of gear Line Mountain’s Maxim Johnson has. Dude’s a 6-foot-4 defensive end with eight sacks, 16.5 TFLs and an INT to boot. Not good news for a Newport team struggling to score points as it is. 

Adam Kulikowski: Line Mountain 45, Newport 6: This is another game on the Week 6 docket where the outcome simply is not in question. 

Tri-Valley 33, Shenandoah Valley 14

Andy Shay: Tri-Valley 30, Shenandoah Valley 22: This won’t be easy for the Bulldogs against a 2-3 Blue Devils squad that keeps itself in most games. Something tells me the Tri-Valley passing game has a say in the final outcome of this game.

Andy Sandrik: Tri-Valley 28, Shenandoah Valley 21: The Bulldogs are balanced on both sides of the ball, which has kept them in every single game this fall. I’m expecting another close, grind-it-out kind of game this week, too. 

Adam Kulikowski: Tri-Valley 21, Shenandoah Valley 20: The Blue Devils don’t sport the flashy numbers that jump off a stats page, but they are getting solid contributions from a bevy of playmakers. To me, that makes this a dangerous club for the Bulldogs. 

Palmerton 41, Pine Grove 22

Andy Shay: Palmerton 49, Pine Grove 6: Tough sledding here for the Cardinals with the undefeated Blue Bombers welcoming Pine Grove to town as ungracious hosts. Palmerton has scored more than 200 points and has rarely been slowed down.

Andy Sandrik: Palmerton 52, Pine Grove 6: When you combine an offense that’s scoring a lot of points with an opposing defense that’s allowing just as many points, you end up with a lopsided result like this. 

Adam Kulikowski: Palmerton 55, Pine Grove 13: When you talk about dawgs at the high school level, there are few performing better right now than dual-threat quarterback Matthew Machalik. This dude has surpassed 1,100 yards rushing and 700 passing yards through five matchups. 

Williams Valley 35, Nativity BVM 28

Andy Shay: Williams Valley 35, Nativity BVM 21: Did you know Vikings RB Alex Achenbach has accounted for nearly 80% of the total yards of offense for Williams Valley at the halfway point of the season? He drives this team, obviously.

Andy Sandrik: Williams Valley 28, Nativity BVM 21: I can’t say I know a ton about Nativity, but I can see the teams share a common opponent in Schuylkill Haven. The Vikings played within three points of the Hurricanes, while the Nativity Green Wave was washed away.

Adam Kulikowski: Williams Valley 33, Nativity BVM 14: Vikings don’t try to hide what they are going to do to beat you. Hint: you must stop Achenbach. Can a Nativity BVM team that has yielded just 99 points this year force the Vikings a Plan B? 

SATURDAY, SEPT. 30

Middletown at Steel-High, noon

Andy Shay: Steel-High 49, Middletown 7: Up front and on the outside in those open spaces, the gap between the Rollers and Blue Raiders right now is as wide as the Susquehanna River that flows along each town.

Andy Sandrik: Steel-High 45, Middletown 7: Congrats to Middletown for nailing down that first win faster than anyone could have imagined. The Blue Raiders will have a little more trouble with a Rollers squad that matches up well in the trenches.

Adam Kulikowski: Steel-High 55, Middletown 6: Earning that first win of the year had to feel good for a Blue Raiders club searching for positive momentum. Rollers pose a much greater test. 

Altoona at Harrisburg, 1 p.m.

Andy Shay: Harrisburg 41, Altoona 0: There’s a growth spurt happening with this Cougars offense that bodes well moving forward. The pieces are falling place. The Mountain Lions’ offense has little to test this Cougars defense right now.

Andy Sandrik: Harrisburg 41, Altoona 7: With the way Harrisburg’s defense has been playing of late, it only takes a simple mistake or two for opponents to suddenly find themselves on the wrong end of a blowout.

Adam Kulikowski: Harrisburg 49, Altoona 13: It took the Cougars a bit to get their high-octane offense in gear last week, but Calvin Everett’s crew still dropped 42 on Cumberland Valley. Expect another big offensive performance in Week 6. 

High School Football: Mid-Penn Conference Player of the Week Sponsored by Vertical Raise PA: Wyatt Ehrenzeller

Wyatt Ehrenzeller has guided Juniata to a 2-0 start in Mid-Penn Liberty play, and for that he was voted by fans as the Week 5 4th Down Magazine Mid-Penn Conference Player of the Week.

The junior quarterback and linebacker was an efficient 8 of 9 for 117 yards and three touchdowns last week, plus 96 yards and a score on five carries, in a 35-14 win over Halifax, moving Juniata to 2-3 on the season and remaining tied with Upper Dauphin atop the division. Ehrenzeller also chipped in seven tackles (one for loss) on defense.

The signal caller topped the polls over a previous Player of the Week, East Pennsboro QB/LB Keith Oates III with 586 votes to Oates’ 259. A total of 976 were cast.

Juniata visits James Buchanan in Week 6 action Friday at 7 p.m.

High School Football: Colonial-Schuylkill League Player of the Week: Michael Gelatko

0

It was a defensive battle for 48 minutes, and Michael Gelatko’s efforts in Marian Catholic’s win last week earned him the Week 5 4th Down Magazine Colonial-Schuylkill League Player of the Week. 

The junior defensive back recorded 11 tackles (three for loss) in a 12-6 victory over Nativity BVM. He also added a sack for the 3-2 Colts.

A total of 6,196 votes were cast, with Colts fans coming out in droves to vote 3,276 times for Gelatko, beating Minersville defensive tackle Cade Schultz (2,330).

Marian Catholic hosts Mahanoy in Week 6 action Friday night at 7.

Eric F. Epler’s State High School Football Rankings after Week 5

0

For more content from Eric Epler, visit Pennlive.com.

CLASS 6A 

Rank – Team – District – Record – Previous 

1. St. Joseph’s Prep (12)          — 3-1 – 1 

2. Pittsburgh C.C. (7)               — 5-0 – 2 

3. Parkland (11)                       — 5-0 – 4 

4. Central Bucks West (1)        — 5-0 – 5 

5. Central York (3)                   — 5-0 – 6 

6. Manheim Township (3)       — 5-0 – 7 

7. Downingtown East (1)        — 5-0 – 8 

8. North Allegheny (7)            — 4-1 – 3 

9. Nazareth (11)                      – 4-1 – 9 

10. Downingtown West (1)     — 5-0 – NR 

Teams to watch: Canon-McMillan (7) 4-1, Garnet Valley (1) 4-1, Harrisburg (3) 4-1, State College (6) 3-1.  

CLASS 5A 

Rank – Team – District – Record – Previous 

1. Imhotep Charter (12)          — 5-0 – 1 

2. West Chester Rustin (1)      – 4-0 – 2 

3. Exeter Township (3)            — 5-0 – 4 

4. Roman Catholic (12)           – 4-1 – 5 

5. Peters Township (7)            — 5-0 – 6 

6. Strath Haven (1)                  – 5-0 – 7 

7. Cathedral Prep (10)             – 2-2 – 3 

8. Southern Lehigh (11)          — 5-0 – 9 

9. Penn Hills (7)                       – 4-1 – 10 

10. Cocalico (3)                       — 4-1 – NR 

Teams to watch: Pine-Richland (7) 3-2, Springfield-Delco (1) 4-1, Upper St. Clair (7) 4-1, Whitehall (11)   4-1. 

CLASS 4A 

Rank – Team – District – Record – Previous 

1. Bishop McDevitt (3)            – 5-0 – 1 

2. Aliquippa (7)                       – 4-0 – 2 

3. Thomas Jefferson (7)          – 5-0 – 3 

4. Pope John Paul II (1)           – 5-0 – 5 

5. Allentown C.C. (11)             – 4-1 – 4 

6. Jersey Shore (4)                   – 4-0-1 – 6 

7. Selinsgrove (4)                    – 4-0-1 – 7 

8. McKeesport (7)                   – 4-1 – 8 

9. Manheim Central (3)          — 4-1 – 9 

10. Bethlehem Catholic (11)   — 5-0 – NR 

Teams to watch: Bonner-Prendergast (12) 3-1, Central Valley (7) 4-1, Lampeter-Strasburg (3) 4-1,   

Meadville (10) 4-1, Twin Valley (3) 5-0. 

CLASS 3A 

Rank – Team – District – Record – Previous 

1. Belle Vernon (7)                  – 3-1 – 1 

2. Wyomissing (3)                   – 5-0 – 2 

3. Avonworth (7)                     – 5-0 – 3 

4. Neumann-Goretti (12)        – 3-1 – 4 

5. North Schuylkill (11)           – 4-1 – 7 

6. West Perry (3)                     — 5-0 – 8 

7. Danville (4)                          — 4-1 – 6 

8. Northwestern Lehigh (11)  — 5-0 – NR 

9. Central (6)                           — 5-0 – 10 

10. Elizabeth-Forward (7)       — 5-0 – NR 

Teams to watch: Lancaster Catholic (3) 5-0, Loyalsock (4) 3-2, Mt. Pleasant (7) 4-1, Oil City (10) 4-1, Scranton Prep (2) 4-1. 

CLASS 2A 

Rank – Team – District – Record – Previous 

1. Southern Columbia (4)        – 5-0 – 1 

2. Farrell (10)                           – 5-0 – 2 

3. Westinghouse (8)                – 4-0 – 3 

4. Richland (6)                         – 5-0 – 4 

5. Bald Eagle Area (6)              — 5-0 – 5 

6. Central Clarion (9)               — 5-0 – 6 

7. Washington (7)                   — 5-0 – 7 

8. Troy (4)                                — 5-0 – 8 

9. Trinity (3)                             – 3-2 – 9 

10. Sharpsville (10)                 — 5-0 – NR 

Teams to watch: Berlin Brothersvalley (5) 4-1, Chestnut Ridge (5) 5-0, Mercyhurst Prep (10) 5-0, Mount Carmel (4) 3-2, Steel Valley (7) 3-1.  

CLASS 1A 

Rank – Team – District – Record – Previous 

1. Steelton-Highspire (3)         — 5-0 – 1 

2. Bishop Canevin (7)              — 4-0 – 2 

3. Canton (4)                           — 5-0 – 3 

4. Northern Bedford (5)          — 5-0 – 4 

5. Lackawanna Trail (2)           – 5-0 – 5 

6. Redbank Valley (9)              — 5-0 – 7 

7. Cornell (7)                           — 5-0 – 8 

8. Lakeview (10)                      — 5-0 – 9 

9. South Side (7)                     — 5-0 – 10 

10. Muncy (4)                          — 4-1 – NR 

Teams to watch: Fort Cherry (7) 5-0, Minersville (11) 4-1, South Williamsport (4) 4-1, Union Area (7) 4-1. 

Vote Now: Week 5 Colonial-Schuylkill League Player of the Week

Vote now for your 4th Down Magazine Colonial-Schuylkill Player of the Week. Our poll will remain open until Tuesday evening at 11 p.m. Voting is allowed once every 30 minutes.

Editor’s note: We have implemented safeguards to prevent voting which falls outside the spirit of the rules in place. We reserve the right to block users who cast fraudulent votes.

Browser cookies must be accepted to vote.

Noah Hillis and Greg Campbell, srs., RB & QB, Bangor: What do you do when two gents on the same team each rush for 145 yards and three touchdowns? You make them co-nominees for our player of the week. They were responsible for nearly every yard of production Friday night in their team’s 41-0 blanking of Wilson.

Michael Gelatko, jr., DB, Marian Catholic: When you play a defensive game, you know there will be standout performances that contributed to the low-scoring affair. Gelatko delivered with a team-high 11 tackles, including three for a loss, and one sack in his team’s 12-6 victory against Nativity BVM.

Aiden Myers, sr., RB, Schuylkill Haven: Myers carried a heavy load for Haven Friday night against Palisades. The senior logged 32 totes for 200 stripes and two touchdowns.

Jack Robertson, jr., WR, Saucon Valley: Robertson sure made the most of his opportunities Friday night against Pottsville. The junior hauled in two receptions for 97 stripes and a pair of touchdowns in his team’s 21-9 victory.

Cade Schultz, sr., DT, Minersville: Schultz proved to be a disruptive force Friday night in Minersville’s 41-28 victory against Panther Valley. He also had a team-high 10 tackles, including four for a loss, and a QB hurry.

Luke Stevenosky, sr., RB, Minersville: Stop us if you’ve heard this one before. Stevenosky turned in another monster performance, racking up 272 stripes on 17 carries. He reached the end zone three times on the evening.

This poll has ended (since 1 year).
Michael Gelatko, jr., DB, Marian Catholic:
52.87%
Cade Schultz, sr., DT, Minersville:
37.60%
Luke Stevenosky, sr., RB, Minersville:
5.81%
Aiden Myers, sr., RB, Schuylkill Haven:
3.57%
Noah Hillis and Greg Campbell, srs., RB & QB, Bangor:
0.11%
Jack Robertson, jr., WR, Saucon Valley:
0.03%

Vote Now: Week 5 Mid-Penn Conference Player of the Week Sponsored by Vertical Raise PA

Vote now for your 4th Down Magazine Mid-Penn Conference Player of the Week. Our poll will remain open until Tuesday evening at 11 p.m. Voting is allowed once every 30 minutes.

Editor’s note: We have implemented safeguards to prevent voting which falls outside the spirit of the rules in place. We reserve the right to block users who cast fraudulent votes.

Browser cookies must be accepted to vote.

Put those Candy Boxes Away; No more Sub Sales; Retire from Washing Cars! And elevate your team’s fundraising this season with Vertical Raise!

Vertical Raise is the premier online fundraising platform for organizations of all types and sizes. Vertical Raise provides solutions to the challenges of fundraising by utilizing its best-in-class software to create the easiest, most efficient and effective fundraising campaigns on the market. Raise more money in less time with the help of a dedicated fundraising coach who will work with each program every step of the way.

Nolan Baumert, sr., RB/DB, Line Mountain: Baumert’s 1-yard TD plunge with 8:06 left proved the difference in the Eagles’ 27-21 win over Susquenita. He finished with 26 carries, 177 yards and two more touchdowns that spanned 44 yards and 1 yard.

Preston Burnett, so., RB, Gettysburg: The Warriors picked up their first Colonial Division win Thursday, 41-20 over Mechanicsburg, thanks to the churning legs of Burnett. The sophomore scored two minutes into the game on a 28-yard run, added second-quarter TDs of 6 and 6 yards, and finished with 38 carries for 189 yards.

Angel Cabrera, sr., RB/LB, Hershey: The Trojans made it two straight Cocoa Bean Bowl victories thanks in a big way to Cabrera. The senior rushed for a career-high 258 yards and three touchdowns (2, 3 and 1 yards) on 28 touches to beat rival Milton Hershey 33-22 on Saturday. It’s his third game with three TDs.

Wyatt Ehrenzeller, jr., QB/LB, Juniata: Ehrenzeller completed 8 of 9 passes for 117 yards and three touchdowns in Juniata’s 35-14 win over Halifax. He also added another score on the ground, rushing for 96 yards on five carries. And he added seven tackles (one for loss) on defense.

Alex Erby, sr., QB, Steel-High: Inching closer to the state’s career passing record, Erby put together another quality night in a 46-7 win at Big Spring. He finished 16 of 25 for 219 yards, three TDs (14, 11 and 5 yards) and a pick, and he ran in two scores of 1 and 6 yards.

Christian Joy, jr., RB/KR, Trinity: The Shamrocks snapped a two-game skid thanks to the efforts of Joy — QB Caleb Wray also threw for five TDs and 218 yards — who scored on a 25-yard reception and a 70-yard punt return, both late in the first quarter. Joy finished with seven carries for 149 yards as well.

Shawn Lee Jr., jr., QB, Harrisburg: Lee completed 14 passes for 338 yards and four scores of 70, 26, 93 and 28 yards to dismantle Cumberland Valley 42-7 on Friday night. Lee also rushed 11 times for a team-high 85 yards. Special hat tip to top target Elias Coke, who had seven catches, 193 yards and three of those TDs.

Keith Oates III, sr., QB/LB, East Pennsboro: Oates and the Panthers improved to 5-0 after a 24-13 win over Greencastle-Antrim on Friday. Oates’ scored three rushing touchdowns of 20, 2 and 1 yards to finish with 10 carries and 35 stripes. He also completed 16 passes for 139 yards and had six tackles on defense.

Jared Porter, jr., RB/DB, CD East: Porter dismantled Altoona in a 28-7 road win Friday night, rushing for 219 yards on 26 touches (8.4 yards per carry) for the 3-2 Panthers. He put an exclamation point on the performance with a game-sealing 73-yard TD in the fourth quarter and picked off a pass on defense, one of four forced CD East turnovers.

Marcus Quaker, sr., QB, West Perry: It was another record-breaking night for the Mustangs. This time, Quaker broke the program record for career passing yards with 4,738 — passing Zach Smith’s 4,523 set in 2012. Quaker went 20 of 25 for 313 yards and four TDs in a 47-13 win over James Buchanan.

Stone Saunders, jr., QB, Bishop McDevitt: Two records fell in the Crusaders’ 48-7 rout of Cedar Cliff. It was their program-record 18th straight win. And Saunders set the new career passing yards record with his 251-yard night (15 of 17 passing), passing former great Matt Johnson. The Kentucky verbal commit also tossed five TDs.

Dorian Smith, sr., RB, Susquehanna Township: Smith got ‘Hanna back over .500 for the season in a 28-19 win over Shippensburg on Thursday night. The senior finished with 199 yards and capped his night with a 52-yard TD run in the fourth quarter to ice the game.

Josh Smith, jr., WR/DB/KR, Mechanicsburg: Smith’s Wildcats fell 41-20 to Gettysburg in Colonial action, but the junior was electric throughout the game. He caught nine balls for 176 stripes, including TD receptions of 18 and 90 yards in the first half. And he broke away for a 90-yard kick return score in the second quarter.

Caleb Snyder, jr., RB/LB, Upper Dauphin: Snyder’s three tackles for loss, along with 12 tackles (seven solo) led a stout defensive effort in a 30-6 win over Newport. On offense, he chipped in two receptions for 40 yards and a 4-yard touchdown, seven carries for 41 stripes, and a two-point conversion.

Robert Strayer, jr., LB, State College: Strayer’s pick-6 early in the second half ensured the Little Lions weren’t going to be the latest victim of resurgent Central Dauphin in a 31-13 win. He returned the interception 71 yards and helped hold the Rams’ offense to just 239 yards, and just 35 of them through the air.

This poll has ended (since 1 year).
Wyatt Ehrenzeller, jr., QB/LB, Juniata:
60.04%
Keith Oates III, sr., QB/LB, East Pennsboro:
26.54%
Caleb Snyder, jr., RB/LB, Upper Dauphin:
7.79%
Nolan Baumert, sr., RB/DB, Line Mountain:
1.33%
Alex Erby, sr., QB, Steel-High:
0.72%
Angel Cabrera, sr., RB/LB, Hershey:
0.72%
Robert Strayer, jr., LB, State College:
0.61%
Marcus Quaker, sr., QB, West Perry:
0.51%
Josh Smith, jr., WR/DB/KR, Mechanicsburg:
0.41%
Stone Saunders, jr., QB, Bishop McDevitt:
0.41%
Shawn Lee Jr., jr., QB, Harrisburg:
0.41%
Dorian Smith, sr., RB, Susquehanna Township:
0.20%
Christian Joy, jr., RB/KR, Trinity:
0.20%
Jared Porter, jr., RB/DB, CD East:
0.10%
Preston Burnett, so., RB, Gettysburg:
0.00%

Sunday Morning QB: New records set across the Mid-Penn; State College flexes its muscle; gambling to win and more

0

To kick off this midseason version of the Sunday Morning Quarterback, we have some impressive records that tumbled in Week 5 to highlight.

First, Bishop McDevitt’s domination of previously undefeated Cedar Cliff at West Shore Stadium was the 18th consecutive victory for the Crusaders. The defending PIAA Class 4A champs lost their opener in 2022 to Imhotep Charter and haven’t lost since.

The 18 straight wins is a school record that is going to continue to grow as the Crusaders roll through the Keystone Division portion of their schedule. From my chair, the opening three non-conference games McDevitt played make this mark the gold standard. The number should exceed 25 at a minimum.

Speaking of the 5-0 Crusaders, junior quarterback Stone Saunders became the all-time career passing yards leader in school history with more than 8,000 yards. Saunders surpassed Matt Johnson, the current Kent State offensive coordinator who played collegiately at Bowling Green.

Here’s the kicker: Saunders is only a junior. Imagine how many yards he might have considering he played very little or not at all in the second half in at least half the regular season games during his three years.

Of course, he’s enjoyed having a ridiculous amount of highly talented receivers at his disposal. The Kentucky recruit will own all the records at McDevitt, if he doesn’t already, before he’s done.

Elsewhere, West Perry senior quarterback Marcus Quaker threw for 313 yards and four touchdowns in a cruise-control win over James Buchanan. The signal caller for the 5-0 squad from Elliottsburg is now the school record holder for career passing yards with 4,738. Quaker surpassed Zach Smith’s mark of 4,523 yards established from 2010-2012.

Quaker is the best QB in Mustangs history. The proof is in his career numbers, where he’s first in completions, second in completion percentage, first in passing yards, first in passing touchdowns, is the top rushing QB in school history and tied for first in total touchdowns. No wonder the Mustangs are 16-2 in their last 18 games.

State College announces its presence

Prior to the season I was fairly certain State College had some tools to be a contender for championships at any level in the state. Then the Little Lions were pushed by Williamsport to start the season, lost to Downingtown East and had a game canceled because of lightning storms.

So I wasn’t exactly sure what to expect from this State College squad when it made a road trip to surging Central Dauphin to play the Rams at The Speedway. On some levels I think the Little Lions wanted to learn about themselves at the halfway point.

And the Rams delivered a haymaker early, taking the first play from scrimmage 60 yards and scoring on the opening drive. What impressed me was the response by State College. It was very telling.

The Little Lions’ offense powered up and scored 31 straight points, and the defense locked down CD’s run-focused offense. State College was dominant. I don’t think the Rams played poorly, either.

Little Lions QB Eddie Corkery is a weapon, and he has plenty of options at WR led by Ty Salazer. The Rams had no answer for State College’s short passing game built on accuracy from the QB and speed on the edges.

CD is a quality opponent and was playing its best football of the season coming into this tilt. State College simply announced its presence on many levels with authority.

You play to win the game

Playing to win in the dying stages of a game, or in overtime, is something I’ve always admired. Risking a loss by gambling to win is a tough call but one I’m on board with.

Waynesboro squandered a 21-point lead at Northern, and in the fourth quarter found itself down by a touchdown. The Indians rallied and pulled even with 5:55 to play. New head coach Mark Saunders, the former Chambersburg skipper, played to win and went for two to grab a 29-28 lead that stood up.

Last week Big Spring went for two in overtime to edge Camp Hill instead of rolling the dice in a second overtime. Central Dauphin did the same earlier this season to win on the road at Wilson.

Trinity could have kicked a field goal in the dying seconds to force overtime with West Perry at COBO Field a week ago. Instead, T-Rock head coach Jordan Hill made the absolute right call and went for the win. The Shamrocks pass play on fourth down failed. Maybe you question the play call, but the decision was about winning while not being afraid to lose, either.

Quick hits

  • Harrisburg was in full snooze mode at Cumberland Valley before a halftime reset took place. The Cougars, behind 338 passing yards along with 85 rushing yards and four touchdowns from QB Shawn Lee Jr., dropped a five-touchdown bomb on the Eagles the final 24 minutes. Harrisburg WR Elias Coke had seven grabs for 193 yards and three TDs.
  • As expected the Colonial Division battle between unbeatens East Pennsboro and Greencastle-Antrim was a tight squeeze. The Panthers’ offense didn’t have the explosive extra gear but instead went into grind mode. That’s because the Blue Devils kept the game inside their box. QB Keith Oates III had three rushing TDs and led East Pennsboro with six tackles. The contribution of RB JJ Gossard (105 rushing yards on 21 carries) was the game-changer for the Panthers. Winning (final score 24-13) when it’s not easy will serve this Panthers team well. 
  • CD East is 3-2 at the halfway point and moved to 1-1 in the Commonwealth Division after drubbing Altoona on the road at Mansion Park. Not much was expected of the Panthers to start the season, and to be honest, their schedule has been very favorable. Still, you are what your record says you are. RB Jared Porter had 219 rushing yards and a TD while also snagging an INT in the three-touchdown win. The Panthers still have State College, Harrisburg and rival Central Dauphin, who is also 3-2, to play. The really tough games are coming, but opportunity still exists for a .500 season. That would’ve been unexpected in the preseason.
  • Did Chambersburg really beat Carlisle 3-0? I was sure the score was wrong. It’s 2023 after all. Why do I really like that scoreline?