Eric F. Epler’s State High School Football Rankings after Week 6

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

CLASS 6A 

Rank – Team – District – Record – Previous 

1. St. Joseph’s Prep (12)          — 4-1 – 1 

2. Pittsburgh C.C. (7)               — 6-0 – 2 

3. Parkland (11)                       — 6-0 – 3 

4. Central Bucks West (1)        — 6-0 – 4 

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

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

7. Downingtown East (1)        — 6-0 – 7 

8. North Allegheny (7)            — 5-1 – 8 

9. Nazareth (11)                      – 5-1 – 9 

10. Downingtown West (1)     — 6-0 – 10 

Teams to watch: Central Bucks South (1) 6-0, Garnet Valley (1) 5-1, Harrisburg (3) 5-1, Spring-Ford (1) 5-1, State College (6) 4-1. 

CLASS 5A 

Rank – Team – District – Record – Previous 

1. Imhotep Charter (12)          — 6-0 – 1 

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

3. Exeter Township (3)            — 6-0 – 3 

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

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

6. Southern Lehigh (11)          — 6-0 – 8 

7. Penn Hills (7)                       – 5-1 – 9 

8. Cocalico (3)                         — 5-1 – 10 

9. West Chester Rustin (1)      — 4-1 – 2 

10. Upper St. Clair (7)             — 5-1 – NR 

Teams to watch: Cedar Cliff (3) 5-1, Garden Spot (3) 6-0, Springfield-Delco (1) 5-1, Whitehall (11) 4-2.  

CLASS 4A 

Rank – Team – District – Record – Previous 

1. Bishop McDevitt (3)            – 6-0 – 1 

2. Aliquippa (7)                       – 5-0 – 2 

3. Thomas Jefferson (7)          – 6-0 – 3 

4. Pope John Paul II (1)           – 6-0 – 4 

5. Jersey Shore (4)                   – 5-0-1 – 6 

6. Selinsgrove (4)                    – 5-0-1 – 7 

7. Allentown C.C. (11)             – 4-2 – 5 

8. McKeesport (7)                   – 5-1 – 8 

9. Manheim Central (3)          — 5-1 – 9 

10. Twin Valley (3)                  — 6-0 – NR 

Teams to watch: Bethlehem Catholic (11) 5-1, Bonner-Prendergast (12) 4-1, Central Valley (7) 5-1, Lampeter-Strasburg (3) 5-1, Meadville (10) 5-1. 

CLASS 3A 

Rank – Team – District – Record – Previous 

1. Belle Vernon (7)                  – 4-1 – 1 

2. Wyomissing (3)                   – 6-0 – 2 

3. Avonworth (7)                     – 6-0 – 3 

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

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

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

7. Danville (4)                          — 5-1 – 7 

8. Northwestern Lehigh (11)  — 6-0 – 8 

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

10. Elizabeth-Forward (7)       — 6-0 – 10 

Teams to watch: Lancaster Catholic (3) 6-0, Loyalsock (4) 4-2, Mt. Pleasant (7) 5-1, Palmerton (11) 6-0, Scranton Prep (2) 5-1, Sharon (10) 5-1. 

CLASS 2A 

Rank – Team – District – Record – Previous 

1. Southern Columbia (4)        – 6-0 – 1 

2. Farrell (10)                           – 6-0 – 2 

3. Westinghouse (8)                – 5-0 – 3 

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

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

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

7. Washington (7)                   — 6-0 – 7 

8. Troy (4)                                — 6-0 – 8 

9. Trinity (3)                             – 4-2 – 9 

10. Mercyhurst Prep (10)        — 6-0 – NR 

Teams to watch: Berlin Brothersvalley (5) 5-1, Chestnut Ridge (5) 6-0, Mount Carmel (4) 4-2, Sharpsville (10) 5-1, Steel Valley (7) 4-1. 

CLASS 1A 

Rank – Team – District – Record – Previous 

1. Steelton-Highspire (3)         — 6-0 – 1 

2. Canton (4)                           — 6-0 – 3 

3. Northern Bedford (5)          — 6-0 – 4 

4. Lackawanna Trail (2)           – 6-0 – 5 

5. Fort Cherry (7)                    — 6-0 – NR 

6. Bishop Canevin (7)              — 4-1 – 2 

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

8. Cornell (7)                           — 6-0 – 7 

9. Lakeview (10)                      — 6-0 – 8 

10. South Side (7)                   — 6-0 – 9 

Teams to watch: Minersville (11) 5-1, Muncy (4) 5-1, Northern Cambria (6) 5-1, South Williamsport (4) 5-1, Union Area (7) 5-1.  

Vote Now: Week 6 Colonial-Schuylkill League Player of the Week

Vote now for your 4th Down Magazine Colonial-Schuylkill League 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.

Alex Achenbach, RB, sr., Williams Valley: It feels like we say this every week, but Achenbach turned in a stellar performance in Week 6 against Nativity BVM. All Achenbach did was rush for 220 yards on 26 carries. He scored twice on the ground. He threw a touchdown pass—oh, and he also delivered a 70-yard kick return for a touchdown. And when his team needed a defensive stop to end the game—yep, you guessed it—Achenback delivered a 60-yard pick six to seal the Vikings win.

Cole Gemberling, LB, so., Tri-Valley: On a night when many of the Bulldogs didn’t play a full four quarters, Gemberling filled the box score with impact defensive plays. He notched five tackles, a sack and a 90-yard pick-six in a 33-14 victory against Shenandoah Valley.

Aiden Myers, RB, sr., Schuylkill Haven: Myers carried the load for the Hurricanes in a 22-13 victory Friday night against Catasauqua with 22 carries for 176 yards and three touchdowns. He also had four tackles, two for a loss.

Luke Stevenosky, RB, sr., Minersville: Stevenosky did it again for the Battlin’ Miners in a 35-20 victory against Pen Argyl, toting the load with 27 carries for 181 stripes and three touchdowns.  He also chipped in four tackles to help his team improve to 5-1 on the season.

This poll has ended (since 1 year).
Cole Gemberling, LB, so., Tri-Valley:
48.08%
Alex Achenbach, RB, sr., Williams Valley:
43.59%
Luke Stevenosky, RB, sr., Minersville:
4.87%
Aiden Myers, RB, sr., Schuylkill Haven:
3.46%

Vote Now: Week 6 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

Nolan Baumert, sr., RB/DB, Line Mountain: Baumert provided the highlight of the Eagles’ 27-0 win over Newport when he returned a blocked field goal 65 yards to pay dirt. That came on the heels of him breaking off an 81-yard run for a score. He finished with 130 yards (six carries, 97 rushing yards; one catch, 33 receiving yards).

Colin Benoist, sr., DL, East Pennsboro: Another week, another undefeated Panther nominee. This time we head to the defensive line, where Benoist, who had seven tackles, showed some sticky hands with a 78-yard interception return for a touchdown that blew up a screen pass and helped East Penn beat Mechanicsburg 29-16.

Connor Boreman, jr., WR/DB/KR, Juniata: Boreman kept Juniata at the front of the Liberty Division pack with an all-around effort in a 46-16 win over James Buchanan. He caught four passes for 59 yards and a touchdown, returned a kickoff 85 yards for a score and finished third on the team with five tackles plus a 39-yard fumble recovery.

Drew Branstetter, jr., QB, Camp Hill: Back after a one-week injury absence, Branstetter guided the Lions to a 22-3 non-division win over Susquenita with a typical performance. The junior completed 16 of 26 passes for 243 yards and three touchdowns, two to Noah Doi and another to Kobe Moore.

Carter Burton, jr., QB, Lower Dauphin: Burton did most of his damage with his legs in this one, scoring on runs of 1, 37 and 47 yards to lead the Falcons to a 28-7 win over Palmyra. The junior finished with 173 stripes on 18 carries and went 3 of 5 passing for 30 yards. LD finished with 345 yards on 48 carries.

Angel Cabrera, sr., RB/LB, Hershey: The surging Trojans pounded Red Land 41-0 thanks to another monster effort from their breakout running back standout. Cabrera toted the rock 19 times for 154 yards, scoring three times.

Rell Ceasar Jr., sr., WR/DB, Steel-High: Ceasar caught two of QB Alex Erby’s six TDs Saturday afternoon in the Rollers’ 48-7 romp of Middletown, finishing with right catches for 267 yards and end zone trips of 79 and 85 yards.

Mateo Crummel, sr., WR/DB, Central Dauphin: The Rams routed Carlisle 50-16, with Crummel the center of a flawless passing attack. The senior caught six passes for 209 yards (an impressive 34.8 yards per reception) and four touchdowns, and on defense he had three tackles and a pass breakup.

Alex Erby, sr., QB, Steel-High: Erby put himself within striking distance of the career Pennsylvania passing yardage record in the Rollers’ 48-7 win over Middletown Saturday afternoon. He went 21 of 24 for 467 yards and six touchdowns, leaving himself 138 yards shy of No. 1. He’s also 11 TDs away from the state record.

Tyler Erdley, jr., RB, Upper Dauphin: The Trojans stayed in the Liberty co-pilot seat with a 36-0 win over Halifax that saw Erdley chip in on both sides of the ball. He led the rushing attack with 117 yards and two touchdowns on seven carries, and on defense he recorded five tackles and an interception. He also had two two-point conversions.

Jared Porter, jr., RB/DB, CD East: Porter kept CD East’s offense moving in a 43-17 loss to State College, churning out 195 yards on just 17 carries and scoring on a 68-yard rush in the opening minutes. He also hauled in four passes for 34 yards.

Marcus Quaker, sr., QB, West Perry: While leading his team to program records for points in a game (72), in a quarter (42) and most combined points (100) in a 72-28 blowout of Boiling Springs, Quaker threw for 142 yards, rushed for 120 and contributed four touchdowns in just a half of play before backups took over a 56-0 game at the break.

D’Antae Sheffey, so., RB, State College: Sheffey was back to his old ways Friday in a 43-17 win over CD East, carrying the ball 21 times for 163 yards and a 26-yard fourth-quarter touchdown. The Power Five recruit also had a 5-yard reception.

Bryce Staretz, sr., RB/LB, Cumberland Valley: What a night for Staretz, who set a career high with 256 rushing yards in a 35-20 Eagles win over Chambersburg. Staretz finished with two touchdowns on 34 carries in CV’s second Commonwealth win this season.

Caleb Wray, sr., QB, Trinity: Wray scored on a 4-yard run in the opening quarter and tossed touchdown passes of 27 and 6 yards in the Shamrocks’ 28-22 victory over Big Spring. He finished 15 of 20 for 181 yards through the air and rushed four times for 2 yards.

This poll has ended (since 1 year).
Bryce Staretz, sr., RB/LB, Cumberland Valley:
44.58%
Connor Boreman, jr., WR/DB/KR, Juniata:
31.15%
Carter Burton, jr., QB, Lower Dauphin:
9.34%
Colin Benoist, sr., DL, East Pennsboro:
9.30%
Angel Cabrera, sr., RB/LB, Hershey:
2.28%
Tyler Erdley, jr., RB, Upper Dauphin:
1.65%
Marcus Quaker, sr., QB, West Perry:
0.98%
Nolan Baumert, sr., RB/DB, Line Mountain:
0.24%
D’Antae Sheffey, so., RB, State College:
0.12%
Mateo Crummel, sr., WR/DB, Central Dauphin:
0.11%
Alex Erby, sr., QB, Steel-High:
0.08%
Caleb Wray, sr., QB, Trinity:
0.06%
Drew Branstetter, jr., QB, Camp Hill:
0.05%
Jared Porter, jr., RB/DB, CD East:
0.02%
Rell Ceasar Jr., sr., WR/DB, Steel-High:
0.02%

Sunday Morning QB: Unbeaten teams after six weeks of play; West Perry sets another record; what to look forward to in Week 7 and more

0

Get ready for the home stretch of the 2023 Mid-Penn Conference football season following a rather pedestrian Week 6 that didn’t include many marquee games.

I’m a big fan of the District 3 power rankings and how they are used to determine playoff bids. But after only six weeks, their relevance still doesn’t have enough meat on the bone for me to look at them in any detail. Join me in waiting one more week to talk playoff scenarios, possibilities and bracketology.

Only four teams remain unbeaten through six games. Bishop McDevitt showed its mettle by navigating a legitimate non-conference schedule in defense of its PIAA crown. The Crusaders will win the Keystone Division, again, and are favorites to repeat as District 3 Class 4A champs. No real surprise, there. 

Steel-High and West Perry are each 6-0 from the Capital Division, and the Mustangs will welcome the Rollers to Elliotsburg to close out the regular season. Could be a winner-take-all game, but remember Steel-High still has to play Trinity. The Shamrocks are a bit wobbly and banged up these days but want to have a say in this division.

The final unbeaten is East Pennsboro. The Panthers have revealed themselves as a complete team with assets on both sides of the ball and the ability to successfully play a variety of styles. They are the Colonial Division favorites and will be a tough team to knock off the stretch.

On the flip side of the coin there is only one team, Newport, that is winless in the 38-team Mid-Penn Conference. We’re rooting for the Buffaloes to get one.

Four unbeatens entering Week 7 feels about average compared to the last five or so years, but only one winless squad is definitely below the average at this point.

To give you an idea how lopsided this week was, there was only one game on the Week 6 schedule that was decided by fewer than 10 points. Trinity withstood a late comeback from Big Spring to hold off the Bulldogs 28-22 in Newville. Every other game was decided by 10 or more points and most weren’t close.

West Perry set a school record for points scored in a game with 72 against Boiling Springs and didn’t play its starters in the second half after putting up 56 prior to intermission. Bishop McDevitt, Central Dauphin, Hershey, Juniata, State College, Susquehanna Township, Cedar Cliff, Steel-High and Harrisburg all eclipsed the 40 points scored plateau. That’s 10 teams scoring at least five touchdowns in a game in the same week. And none of those games were competitive.

Another reason to give yourself a week before the postseason fire starts to burn: there are a handful of tasty offerings on the docket coming up this week that will help clarify what to expect for those clubs with aspirations to play beyond Week 10.

These Week 7 matchups deserve extra attention: Lower Dauphin-Cedar Cliff, Greencastle-Antrim vs. Susquehanna Township, West Perry at Big Spring, Bishop McDevitt-Hershey and I’ll throw in East Pennsboro-Northern for good measure.

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.