High School Football: Vote Now: Mid-Penn Conference Week 2 Player of the Week

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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.

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High School Football: Sunday Morning QB-West Perry on a tear; Big Spring reclaims the Little Brown Jug; Mcd and CD score statement road victories

Scenes from West Perry’s 41-7 victory against Newport

High School Football: Andy Shay’s Elite 11 Teams After Week 2

Pennsylvania high school football: Scores, highlights from Week 2 in Mid-Penn Conference and midstate

Drew Branstetter, so., QB, Camp Hill: Branstetter guided the high-flying Lions to a 50-7 win over York Catholic with 261 yards and three touchdowns on 21-of-27 passing. He hit Alex Long 10 times for 148 yards.

Kam Chisholm, sr., WR/DE, Steel-High: Chisholm scored on a 50-yard catch-and-run from Alex Erby then blocked a punt and scooped it up for another score in the first quarter as the Rollers routed Eastern High (Washington, D.C.) 46-26. Chisholm finished with five catches for 105 yards and a two-point conversion.

Austin Duplessie, jr., DT, Upper Dauphin: We need some defense in this list, and Duplessie provided plenty in Week 2. The junior recorded three sacks and 11 total tackles, including nine solo and four for loss, in UDA’s 43-12 win over Shenandoah Valley.

Ben Fickel, sr., KR/DB, Big Spring: The Bulldogs’ 13-year nightmare is over, and Fickel was the savior. The senior returned a kickoff 88 yards for a touchdown and two plays later swiped a Shippensburg pass for a 30-yard pick-6 to hand Big Spring a 21-7 victory and return the Little Brown Jug to Newville for the first time since 2010.

Derek Gibney, sr., QB, Susquenita: Consider this a 2-for-1 nomination, with Gibney looking frequently for brother Drew in a 42-7 win over Biglerville. Derek finished 18 of 26 for 287 yards and three scores (plus a 1-yard TD plunge), and he connected with his bro eight times for 162 yards and two of those touchdowns.

Ian Goodling, jr., WR/LB/K, West Perry: Goodling broke a record held by a renowned former Mustang on Friday night in a 41-7 win over Newport. The junior caught 10 passes for 166 yards, giving him 2,284 career yards to pass West Perry great Chase May, who graduated in 2013 with 2,168 yards. Goodling also added a sack and made five PATs.

Andy Jean, sr., WR, Chambersburg: Jean was efficient when targeted during the Trojans’ 51-7 win over Northern, hauling in five passes for 117 yards and two touchdowns covering 48 and 57 stripes.

Matthew McNair, sr., RB/S, Boiling Springs: McNair contributed in multiple ways to the Bubblers’ 21-7 win over Bermudian Springs. The senior toted the rock 17 times for 109 yards and a score, caught a pair of passes for 15 more yards and led the defense with eight tackles (four solo).

Messiah Mickens, so., RB, Trinity: Probably need to expect this name to appear most weeks the next few years. Mickens shredded Moore Catholic (N.Y.) for 244 yards and four touchdowns on 18 carries in a 37-16 Shamrocks win. The Penn State verbal commit scored on runs of 51, 3, 2 and 71 yards.

Bron Mosley, sr., RB, Altoona: The Mountain Lions rolled Taylor Allderdice 35-21 thanks to Mosley’s efforts. The senior bulldozer gashed Allderdice for 124 yards on 16 carries and scored TDs of 3 and 53 yards. He also caught two balls for 56 yards.

Key’Ron Plummer, sr., QB, Central Dauphin: Plummer led the Rams to a comeback victory, their first of the season, 36-35 in overtime over Wilson, with a 4-yard hookup to Jett Franz and successful two-point conversion (also to Franz). The senior finished with 106 passing yards and 77 rushing, plus two TDs throwing and two more on the ground.

Marcus Quaker, sr., QB, West Perry: The electric quarterback set a career high with 306 passing yards in the Mustangs’ 41-7 romp of Newport. He also rushed for 51 more stripes and threw three TDs of 13 (to Cole Brown), 11 (to Ian Goodling) and 31 yards (to Bryce Smith),

Ty Salazer, jr. WR, State College: Salazar lit up Downingtown East, despite a 28-26 loss, for 229 yards and three touchdowns, including a 70-yarder, on 13 carries. Hat tip to QB Eddie Corkery in this one; he finished 23 of 46 for 356 yards and four TDs.

Deakon Schaeffer, sr., RB, Mifflin County: Schaeffer had a monster performance in a 23-6 win over Shikellamy, ripping off 274 rushing yards and two touchdowns on 37 carries. He also added three receptions for 33 stripes.

Stone Saunders, jr., QB, Bishop McDevitt: The Crusaders needed every one of Saunders’ four scores (two passing and two rushing), including the game-winning plunge from 3 yards out to edge DePaul Catholic (Md.) 46-42. He finished with 243 passing yards.

This poll has ended (since 1 year).
Ben Fickel, sr., KR/DB, Big Spring:
48.17%
Kam Chisholm, sr., WR/DE, Steel-High:
39.49%
Key’Ron Plummer, sr., QB, Central Dauphin:
3.59%
Deakon Schaeffer, sr., RB, Mifflin County:
3.26%
Austin Duplessie, jr., DT, Upper Dauphin:
3.02%
Matthew McNair, sr., RB/S, Boiling Springs:
1.00%
Derek Gibney, sr., QB, Susquenita:
0.77%
Stone Saunders, jr., QB, Bishop McDevitt:
0.16%
Ty Salazer, jr. WR, State College:
0.15%
Messiah Mickens, so., RB, Trinity:
0.12%
Ian Goodling, jr., WR/LB/K, West Perry:
0.08%
Marcus Quaker, sr., QB, West Perry:
0.07%
Drew Branstetter, so., QB, Camp Hill:
0.05%
Andy Jean, sr., WR, Chambersburg:
0.04%
Bron Mosley, sr., RB, Altoona:
0.02%

High School Football: Sunday Morning QB-West Perry on a tear; Big Spring reclaims the Little Brown Jug; Mcd and CD score statement road victories

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You have to enjoy the roller-coaster ride as a rural public school program, where the influx of talent is going to be up and down. West Perry has been on a tear like this one other time in the last half century, when a guy named Musa Smith was the running back in the late 1990s.

Those Mustang teams were much more than Smith, though, during a magical two-year ride of high-level winning football. Smith was the superstar on a team that had several standouts and depth on both sides of the ball.

This West Perry team has that same flavor to it. The Mustangs have won 13 of their last 15 games dating back to last  year. This isn’t a proverbial winning program, either. Prior to last season when coach Bob Boden’s lads went 11-2, the Mustangs had a losing record two of the previous three years.

You could see this coming and a big reason, as was the case in the late 1990s, is the kelly-green-and-white clad Mustangs have a bona-fide superstar in QB Marcus Quaker.

They also have several standouts, including wide receiver Ian Goodling. And in Friday night’s romp over fellow Perry County resident, Newport, Goodling became the all-time receiving yards leader in school history. The Quaker-to-Goodling combination is simply lethal.

On a night where Quaker accounted for 350-plus total yards of offense (303 passing and 51 rushing, Goodling hauled in 10 passes for 164 yards to eclipse the previous mark of 2,168 career receiving yards set by Chase May a decade ago.

Goodling still has eight regular season games and the postseason to pad his career mark. It’s hard to imagine him not eclipsing 3,000 career receiving  yards and perhaps even crushing the previous mark by 1,000 or more yards. It’s not a crazy thought. West Perry has big plans and big dreams this season.

Congrats to Goodling.

Big road wins for two Mid-Penn powers

Two of the top teams in the Mid-Penn Conference went on the road and came away with clutch victories that matter. Harrisburg went to Delaware Valley and cruised to a 33-0 victory. That sounds like a routine week for the Cougars. But it wasn’t the fact Harrisburg improved to 2-0, it was how they took care of business that stood out. This team made a jump from Week 1 to Week 2 — it just wasn’t as obvious to most. I see it, though.

It’s not surprising that McDevitt’s trip to New Jersey required every ounce in the tank to win. DePaul Catholic is on equal footing with McD and has a couple clear-cut advantages. The fact that McDevitt came from behind and then once it grabbed the lead with just under nine minutes to go didn’t surrender another point is impressive. That’s how you close out a game when the opponent is an equal. After surrendering 42 points in the better part of three quarters, McD’s defense slammed the door shut. Second come-from-behind win in as many weeks. That reveals the character of a team.

Gamblin’ Rams get big payoff

On the road at Wilson is a tough road win under normal circumstances. Despite Central Dauphin clearly being better than a year ago, the Rams were facing an 0-2 start squad in the chops.

In a back-and-forth game throughout regulation, Wilson scored in the final four minutes to force overtime and then scored first in the extra session to take a 35-28 lead.

Rams QB Key’Ron Plummer hooked up with Jett Franz on a 4-yard touchdown pass in the extra session to put the Rams a PAT away from double OT. Except CD coach Glen McNamee, who isn’t a big gambler, opted to step outside the box and go for the win–his 150th!. In my book, on the road and having the luxury of having the ball second, you dictate the terms. He went for the two-point conversion, a great call either way in my book. Plummer and Franz hooked up again and now CD is 1-1, picking up steam after a 36-35 victory.

Big Spring’s big win

Lastly, congratulations to Big Spring for subduing Shippensburg 21-7 to claim the Little Brown Jug. I love rivalry games with a prize and a great name — they are just special. The Bulldogs last celebrated with the LBJ in 2010. That’s nearly a generation of losing to your arch rival erased. That’s more than a dozen straight losses. I’m sure there’s still some celebrating going on in and around Newville. Well done, Bulldogs!

Mustangs Stampede Over Buffaloes, 41-7 to Claim PeCo Title

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By: Luke Roman | Sept. 02, 2023 | A @wpfbstats exclusive

Marcus Quaker came out gunning at Katchmer Field on Sept. 1. The senior quarterback completed 21 of his 26 passes for 306 yards and three scores while leading the Mustangs to a 41-7 victory over Newport to claim the second annual Perry County football championship.

Ian Goodling was Quaker’s top target, the senior hauled in 10 balls for 166 yards to surpass Chase May’s career receiving yardage record of 2,168 which had stood since 2013. Goodling now has 2,284 career yards. Goodling, Bryce Smith and Cole Brown each pulled down a touchdown in the rout.

“We saw some holes where we thought we could throw the ball,” said Mustang coach Bob Boden. “We didn’t run as much as normal because we wanted to get our passing game going. Quaker-Goodling is probably one of the best combos in the Mid-State.”

In all, West Perry racked up 549 yards, averaged 8.5 yards per snap while picking up 29 first downs. The Mustangs’ 549 ranks as the third most total offensive yards in a single game in program history. Caleb Gutshall only carried four times, but he made them count as two of his totes ended in the end zone. Junior Brad Hockenberry plowed his way to 85 yards on seven carries.

 The defense did its part too, limiting the scrappy Buffaloes to just 171 stripes including just 50 in the first half. Hockenberry pulled down an interception. Gutshall, Goodling, Cody Erno, and Ty Keller each delivered a sack.

Buffalo sophomore Dalton Kratzer ran for 131 yards and accounted for the lone Newport tally which came on a 50-yard third quarter dash to pay dirt.

Late in the game, Evan Jutba led the Mustangs to one final score finishing the march himself with a one yard plunge to put the final explanation point on the resounding victory.

High School Football: Andy Shay’s Elite 11 Teams After Week 2

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11. Trinity2-0NR
Welcome to the Elite 11, Shamrocks. Couple of impressive victories to start the season and can now show their colors with a tilt against No. 7 Wyomissing on deck.
10. Steel-High2-011
Cruised against Washington D.C. based Eastern, rolling up 27 first-quarter points while the Rollers’ defense snared two turnovers in the opening 12 minutes.
9. Cocalico1-110
Behind a defense that allowed only 155 total yards to Solanco, the Eagles picked up win No. 1 with a 35-point romp.
8.Exeter Township2-08
Eagles trailed Boyertown 14-9 at halftime before responding with 20 unanswered points to hold off the Bears.
7. Wyomissing2-07
Spartans made easy work of Pottsville and so far have outscored the opposition by a combined score of 96-7. They haven’t been tested, but the next two opponents, Trinity and Berks Catholic, have some quality.
6. State College1-13
Mildly troubling is that the Little Lions fell behind 28-7 to Downingtown East before putting together a late rally. State College had a 50-yard field to win it come up just short, but that sluggish start should provide this team a valuable lesson.
5. Central York1-06
Wins to start the season over Central Dauphin and now Cumberland Valley, the latest being a 14-0 tussle where the Panthers’ defense delivered a result, sets the table for another stellar regular season.
4. Manheim Central2-05
Barons used a TD pass in the final minute from Raymond Lewis to Aaron Enterline to edge Smyrna from Delaware by a point on the road.
3. Manheim Township2-04
Took Dallastown out behind the woodshed with 42 first-half points to post an easy victory. The power and balance of the Blue Streaks’ offense is impressive. Next up is No. 2 Harrisburg.
2. Harrisburg2-02
Cougars took their show on the road and dominated Delaware Valley from start to finish, led by a defense that posted a shutout. QB Shawn Lee Jr. accounted for three of the four offensive touchdowns with two passing and one rushing.
1. Bishop McDevitt2-01
Second consecutive week the Crusaders had to rally in the second half to get the victory. DePaul Catholic (N.J.), a state title winner like the Crusaders a year ago, led by 15 at halftime. It was a toss-up game, and McD showed its mettle again in the fourth quarter.

Pennsylvania high school football: Scores, highlights from Week 2 in Mid-Penn Conference and midstate

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The second week of the Pennsylvania high school football season is upon us. Actually, it already started last night with a couple Mid-Penn Conference tilts.

Week 2 marks the midway point of the non-league slate here in the midstate, which means some intriguing matchups between Mid-Penn and York-Adams League teams, Berks teams and even teams Western Pennsylvania and out of state.

So 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, and you can follow our Twitter feed below for even more minute-by-minute updates.

PIAA football: Week 2 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 2 of the PIAA high school football season:

And if you missed any of our season previews, you can catch up here: 

Mid-Penn Conference football schedule and scores: Week 1 results

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

Thursday’s results

  • Cedar Cliff 27, Mechanicsburg 9
  • Cedar Crest 33, CD East 7

Friday’s games

  • Bishop McDevitt 46, DePaul Catholic (N.J.) 42 Final
  • Altoona 35, Taylor Allerdice 21 Final
  • Governor Mifflin 28, Carlisle 21 Final
  • Central Dauphin 36, Wilson 35 Final (OT)
  • Chambersburg 51, Northern 7 Final
  • Central York 14, Cumberland Valley 0 Final
  • Harrisburg 33, Delaware Valley 0 Final
  • Downingtown East 28, State College 26 Final
  • Hershey 35, Waynesboro 14 Final
  • Twin Valley 24, Lower Dauphin 21 Final
  • Mifflin County 23, Shikellamy 6 Final
  • Red Land 23, Northeastern 21 Final
  • Milton Hershey 34, Middletown 14 Final
  • East Pennsboro 28, Palmyra 14 Final
  • New Oxford 38, Gettysburg 20
  • Greencastle-Antrim 42, Berkeley Springs (W.V.) 6 Final
  • Susquehanna Township 42, Northern Lebanon 14 Final
  • Big Spring 21, Shippensburg 7 Final
  • Boiling Springs 21, Bermudian Springs 14 Final
  • Camp Hill 50, York Catholic 7
  • Steel-High 46, Eastern 26 Final
  • Trinity 37, Moore Catholic 16 Final
  • West Perry 41, Newport 7 Final
  • Halifax 40, Midd-West 0 Final
  • Clear Spring (Md.) 21, James Buchanan 6 Final
  • Selinsgrove 38, Juniata 8 Final
  • Danville 51, Line Mountain 7
  • Susquenita 42, Biglerville 7 Final
  • Upper Dauphin 43, Shenandoah Valley 12 Final
  • Williams Valley 48, Pine Grove 6 Final
  • Tri-Valley 42, Panther Valley 12 Final

Pennsylvania high school football live updates and highlights

Click on this Twitter/X link to follow updates from area teams and reporters from tonight’s games.

Note: The link below may say we have not tweeted yet–especially on mobile devices– (Thanks, Elon!), but trust us, we’re tweeting and retweeting all the action tonight from around the Mid-Penn. Just click the link to our Twitter and follow along!

High School Football: Making the Grade- Cedar Cliff 27, Mechanicsburg 9

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Slowly but surely Thursday night Cedar Cliff sucked the life out of a mistake-prone Mechanicsburg squad that fell short on the execution level the Colts demanded.

Led by a ground game that churned out 240 yards on 56 totes, Cedar Cliff improved to 2-0 and kept the Wildcats winless with a 27-9 victory at West Shore Stadium.

Two long and methodical touchdown drives by the Colts, that combined chewed up nearly 17 minutes of game clock, were the difference in a game where Mechanicsburg had similar opportunities but failed to cash in.

Twice, once in each half, the Wildcats had first-and-goal from inside the Cedar Cliff 10-yard line and came away with only three points.

Workhorse Erik Schriver accounted for 124 of those 240 yards on the ground for the Colts on 28 carries. He also kicked in with a touchdown to go along with a pair of short TD blasts by QB Bennett Secrest.

Cedar Cliff’s defense stole the show in this one, producing two turnovers, standing tall in the red zone twice and limiting the Wildcats to fewer than 200 total yards.

Time to hand out some grades.

MECHANICSBURG WILDCATS

Quarterback: Junior Eli Reider came down to earth a bit in his second start after throwing for 300-plus yards in the opener. He threw two first-half interceptions and had two other picks that were clear drops by the Colts. He’s fine if the first option is open, but at the same time he also stares that primary target down and lets it fly. It was clear the passing playbook is still a work in progress. Only 47 passing yards. Grade: C-

Running back: Isaac Dollman is a capable back who runs tougher than his size. And he’s really fast. Needs to learn to loop a little less on those outside runs despite having all that speed. Cost his squad 8 yards running to the edge on a first-and-goal play from the 1-yard line. His cuts in the hole inside the tackles are something the Wildcats need to lean on a little more. His 5.7 yards per carry was well earned. Grade: B-

Wide receivers: The best weapon for the Wildcats is junior wideout Josh Smith. He does a little bit of everything, plays defensive back, punts and returns kicks. He needs more of the ball. Only two catches in the first half when Mechanicsburg went down 14-0. Overall, he finished with five catches and 49 yards. More targets are needed because he’s a playmaker. Mechanicsburg had only one other completion to a wideout, too. Grade: C

Offensive line: When given more chances in the second half to straight up run block on the inside, this group produced its best work of the evening. Clearly struggled to hold the edges down against a defense that was swarming to make sure the outside wasn’t open. Size isn’t their ally, and there were at least a half dozen clearly missed assignments that blew plays up. Grade: C-

Defensive line: Battling uphill all night because of the distinct and clear size disadvantage they faced, they simply wore down as the game grinded along. Sophomore Collin Stare was consistent all game and made two splash plays that stood out. They didn’t get pushed around and made the Colts earn their stripes. Grade: C+

Linebackers: Drew Freeland is only a sophomore and had no problem doing his job consistently. He reads the game quicker than his age and got off blockers to stuff a couple runs in tight space. OLB Dominick Baker didn’t let anything get around his edge and made several standout plays in space. This group has real potential. Grade: B-

Secondary: I’m going to call this group slightly underrated. Surrendered only one explosive play through the air and didn’t miss any coverage assignment in limited duty against an offense that slowly went from balanced to focusing on the ground game. Grade: B

Special teams: That missed 24-yard field goal was a body blow in the first half, especially after having first-and-goal at the 1. Loved the fake punt call, and Smith made something out of nothing. He also had an electric punt return. Coverage teams did their job, but that squib kick didn’t make any sense. Grade: C+

CEDAR CLIFF COLTS

Quarterback: Bennett Secrest has a gunslinger arm as a dual-threat, with his greatest asset being his running ability. Completed 9 of 14 passes and added 35 rushing yards. Made one nice deep out throw from the pocket. I saw a QB who can flat out cut loose with the ball on the move. I’d get him outside the pocket more and let him cut it loose. A few of the easy throws did not look so easy. Grade: B

Running back: Sneaky good and efficient is the best way to describe Erik Schriver. He took the majority of the carries but didn’t have those big runs that make you think he’s easily over 100 yards until you look down at the stat sheet and realize he has. Tyrail Hills didn’t show up until the fourth quarter when the Colts had the game in hand, but he chipped in 74 yards on 15 carries with a touchdown, ran with a purpose and didn’t go down on first contact. He needs more meaningful carries early. Grade: A-

Wide receivers: The combo of Nathan Lusk and Taeon Abraham is up to the task if called for heavy duty. That was pretty clear. Lusk only had four catches and Abraham was shut out on a night when the ground game stole the show. But you can tell there’s horsepower on the outside for a QB who is still getting his feet wet. Grade: B

Offensive line: At times in the first half it was a struggle for this group as the speed and athleticism of the undersized Wildcats kept showing up. But as the game wore on this group slowly and methodically took over in the trenches and leaned heavily on those pesky smaller dudes across from them. Grade: B

Defensive line: So here’s the mixed bag. They made several glaring mistakes and were burned but also made four or five splash plays at the right time behind the line of scrimmage. Acceptable because the result matters, but something tells me these lads have more in the tank. Grade: B-

Linebackers: So Blake Secrest is only a freshman and he already plays linebacker at this level like that? Yeah, the interception was nice, but he was around the ball all night. Remember his name. Senior Michael Jones was also a force, but that dropped INT will not be something he enjoys when going back over the film. Key is they played well straight up and maybe even better sideline to sideline closing down space. Grade: A-

Secondary: Nice read and interception by Lusk early to set a tone that the Colts knew where the ball was going. Provided run support on the edges, where Mechanicsburg wanted to play. And the tackling in space by this group was simply outstanding. Held a QB who threw for 300-plus yards last week to 47 passing yards. Yep, that works. Grade: A

Special teams: All I know is I’m not sure I remember extra points landing near the concession stand at the scoreboard end at West Shore Stadium. But Carter Enders has a really strong leg. The Colts’ coverage teams did not have a good night, and that fake punt big run was the result of poor tackling in space for sure. Kicking was solid, everything else needs more work. Grade: C+

High School Football: Results: Picks and Predictions for Week 2

EXPLAINING OUR PICKS: The 4th Down Magazine crew is back for Week 2 to make big predictions on all games involving Mid-Penn Conference teams, as well as Schuylkill-Colonial League games featuring former members of the now-defunct Twin Valley Conference.

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

Want to know who’s going to win Week 2’s games? Take a look below:

2023 Standings

Picker: Week 2 — Overall — Perfect Picks
Andy Sandrik: 26-7 — 51-13 — 0

Adam Kulikowski: 23-10 — 48-16 — 0

Andy Shay: 23-10 — 46-18 — 0

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

THURSDAY, AUG. 31

Cedar Cliff 27, Mechanicsburg 9

Andy Shay: Cedar Cliff 31, Mechanicsburg 21: Just feel the Colts have a wee bit more balance overall. Wildcats have more pop this year than last, but not sure it will be enough to push that Cedar Cliff defense to the brink.

Andy Sandrik: Cedar Cliff 30, Mechanicsburg 20: The Wildcats showed some fight against Carlisle last week, and I expect them to do the same against the Colts. But if Mechanicsburg marches into West Shore Stadium and actually pulls off the win, I’d consider it an upset.

Adam Kulikowski: Mechanicsburg 28, Cedar Cliff 26: The emergence of Eli Reider as a gunslinger for the Wildcats adds a dimension to this offense that we have not seen in recent years. 

Making the Grade: Cedar Cliff 27, Mechanicsburg 9

Cedar Crest 33, CD East 7

Andy Shay: CD East 29, Cedar Crest 21: Not exactly sure if the Panthers have all the ingredients to overpower the Falcons, but their debut in a mismatch was something. Cedar Crest can win by making CD East play from behind.

Andy Sandrik: CD East 31, Cedar Crest 13: Every year there’s a team that just flips the script and turns out to be 10 times better than anyone could have ever thought. It’s a little early to say that about East, but so far Lance Deane’s squad is pressing all of the right buttons.

Adam Kulikowski: CD East 34, Cedar Crest 20: Let’s not overreact to the Panthers’ 55-6 drubbing of Reading, but Lance Deane’s crew just might have the firepower to make some waves. 

FRIDAY, SEPT. 1

Altoona 35, Taylor Allderdice 21

Andy Shay: Altoona 20, Taylor Allerdice 14: Not sure either offense has the firepower to pull away. Dragons are looking for their first points of the season.

Andy Sandrik: Altoona 21, Taylor Allderdice 7: I doubt Altoona will be in a pleasant mood for this game after taking an L to heated rival Hollidaysburg last week.

Adam Kulikowski: Altoona 34, Taylor Allderdice 6: If there’s a silver lining to Altoona’s Week 1 loss, it’s the performance it received from senior running back Bron Mosley, who gashed Hollidaysburg for 120 yards on 13 carries (9.2 yards per carry). 

Governor Mifflin 28, Carlisle 21

Andy Shay: Carlisle 30, Governor Mifflin 20: Thundering Herd have a little more explosiveness than the Mustangs right now. Mustangs’ offense is searching for answers.

Andy Sandrik: Carlisle 39, Governor Mifflin 21: Carlisle will feel comfortable if this game turns into a shootout, but I don’t think I can say the same for the Mustangs.

Adam Kulikowski: Carlisle 34, Governor Mifflin 24: Coming off a 3-7 campaign, the boys from Shillington don’t appear to be out of the bad weather yet after dropping their opener 49-19 to Spring-Ford. 

Central Dauphin 36, Wilson 35 (OT)

Andy Shay: Central Dauphin 27, Wilson 14: Despite losing in Week 1, the Rams showed plenty of pop on offense. Focus will be on tighter defense. Falling to Roman Catholic is not a big deal for the Bulldogs. Losing by 35 is what stands out.

Andy Sandrik: Central Dauphin 28, Wilson 14: It seems like CD’s stock is up, while Wilson’s is down. But don’t count out the Bulldogs, who haven’t lost to the Rams since 2018.

Adam Kulikowski: Central Dauphin 28, Wilson 16: After a down year in Rams Country, CD sure looks like the version we became accustomed to over the last decade. 

Chambersburg 51, Northern 7

Andy Shay: Northern 20, Chambersburg 14: Neither offense showed much in Week 1, and that will probably continue in this one. Trojans’ defense will be under pressure to keep this close into the fourth quarter.

Andy Sandrik: Chambersburg 17, Northern 10: Just going on a hunch here, but Chambersburg seems to have enough defensively to keep this game within striking distance.

Adam Kulikowski: Northern 24, Chambersburg 16: Both teams are looking to answer questions heading into Week 2. Chambersburg QB Riley Harmon completed just 37% of his 24 pass attempts in Week 1 against Pope John Paul II in a 22-0 loss. 

Central York 14, Cumberland Valley 0

Andy Shay: Central York 35, Cumberland Valley 14: Hard to imagine after what I saw that the Eagles will be able to slow down Pitt recruit Juelz Goff. His fifth gear makes fast dudes look slow in the open field.

Andy Sandrik: Central York 32, Cumberland Valley 10: Even if CV can find a way to slow down Juelz Goff, it still needs to find a way to put points on the board. Too many things have to go just right for the Eagles to stay in contention.

Adam Kulikowski: Central York 38, Cumberland Valley 6: Back-to-back tough tests for an Eagles team breaking in some new weapons. Brighter days should be ahead for Josh Oswalt’s crew. 

Harrisburg 33, Delaware Valley 0

Andy Shay: Harrisburg 37, Delaware Valley 13: Cougars’ offense has too much balance for Delaware Valley, and never forget the impact Harrisburg’s defense can have early in a game.

Andy Sandrik: Harrisburg 42, Delaware Valley 14: It’s going to take some kind of an effort for Delaware Valley to keep its head above water against this dangerous Harrisburg squad, which can beat you about a dozen different ways.

Adam Kulikowski: Harrisburg 32, Delaware Valley 14: The Cougars can beat you in so many ways. Finding the firepower to keep pace with Calvin Everett’s club presents a major challenge to the Warriors. 

Downingtown East 28, State College 26

Andy Shay: State College 42, Downingtown East 20: This Little Lions offense is just getting started. DTE is a quality opponent and will provide more of a test for the defending District 6 champs.

Andy Sandrik: State College 35, Downingtown East 25: What breaks first, an Eagles defense that hasn’t allowed a single point, or an SC offense spearheaded by sophomore D’Antae Sheffey, who rushed for five TDs last week?

Adam Kulikowski: State College 45, Downingtown East 23: Sheffey has been limited to less than 100 yards rushing just four times in his first 15 varsity games. 

Bishop McDevitt 46, DePaul Catholic (N.J.) 42

Andy Shay: Bishop McDevitt 35, DePaul Catholic 14: Time for the running game and that offensive line to take a step forward for the Crusaders. That War Eagle D will travel well across state lines into New Jersey.

Andy Sandrik: Bishop McDevitt 44, DePaul Catholic 14: Just a reminder to the McDevitt bus driver that you DO NOT have to tip the gas station attendants in New Jersey.

Adam Kulikowski: Bishop McDevitt 42, DePaul Catholic 21: I fully expect the Crusaders to play a cleaner four quarters in Game No. 2 in the Garden State. 

Hershey 35, Waynesboro 14

Andy Shay: Hershey 42, Waynesboro 21: Raise your hand if you expected all that explosiveness from the Trojans right out of the gate (my hand is staying down). Indians also picked up a big Week 1 win, though.

Andy Sandrik: Hershey 35, Waynesboro 7: Waynesboro could very well find itself playing a long game of catch-up against a potent Hershey squad that’s shown it knows how to score a point or two.

Adam Kulikowski: Hershey 45, Waynesboro 13: Trojans showed plenty of firepower in Week No. 1 against Gettysburg. Next step is to sustain that success. This matchup has a feel-good vibe for the Trojans. 

Twin Valley 21, Lower Dauphin 14

Andy Shay: Lower Dauphin 21, Twin Valley 14: Expect a close shave all the way in a contest that looks like it could go either way. LD enjoys setting the tone and tempo of a game, and if that happens they are difficult to get off that mark.

Andy Sandrik: Twin Valley 21, Lower Dauphin 14: The Falcons were able to win a blowout over Middletown last week without their biggest hammer, Ty Millhimes. Repeating that feat again this week against a much tougher TV squad will be easier said than done.

Adam Kulikowski: Lower Dauphin 24, Twin Valley 20: Twin Valley coach Brett Myers is no stranger to foes like Lower Dauphin. Avenging the 17-14 loss to the Falcons last year, however, might prove to be more than the Raiders can handle in 2023. 

Mifflin County 23, Shikellamy 6

Andy Shay: Mifflin County 35, Shikellamy 14: The Huskies will get more of a test from the Braves’ defense this week but still will have too much lean from that offense for Shik to handle over 48 minutes.

Andy Sandrik: Mifflin County 21, Shikellamy 7: I like this matchup between two good defenses, each of which allowed only seven points in Week 1. The Huskies have a couple of good LBs in Parker Kearns and Owen Kipe, who combined for 23 tackles last week, and could make life tough for the Braves.

Adam Kulikowski: Mifflin County 28, Shikellamy 13: Huskies must account for Braves senior linebacker Luke Snyder, a 5-foot-10, 200-pound pit bull who racked up 13 takedowns in Week 1 and 120 tackles in the 2022 circuit.

Red Land 23, Northeastern 21

Andy Shay: Red Land 20, Northeastern 7: Expect a little more offense from the Patriots this week. And as long as the Red Land defense shows up the way it did in Week 1, the result will take care of itself.

Andy Sandrik: Red Land 14, Northeastern 0: Only seven points from the Patriots in Week 1, but I expect that number to grow against a Northeastern unit that gave up 41 in its opener. Look for Red Land’s defense to have an impact on this game.

Adam Kulikowski: Red Land 17, Northeastern 6: The Patriots opened the last two seasons dropping each of their first two matchups. Not this year. 

Milton Hershey 34, Middletown 14

Andy Shay: Milton Hershey 42, Middletown 0: Spartans are certainly riding high after that dramatic late-game victory over Susquehanna Township. And as expected, the Blue Raiders are going to struggle to be competitive.

Andy Sandrik: Milton Hershey 44, Middletown 7: I wish the competition was close enough to call this a trap game for Milton Hershey, but the Spartans are several steps ahead of Middletown at this early stage of the game..

Adam Kulikowski: Milton Hershey 48, Middletown 6: The Trojans found a little something about midway through the third stanza last week against Susquehanna. That last-second victory mojo carries forward another week against the Blue Raiders. 

East Pennsboro 28, Palmyra 14

Andy Shay: East Pennsboro 38, Palmyra 7: From my seat this is about the East Pennsboro defense being able to lock this one down more than anything. Cougars’ offense will be in the spotlight after putting up 50-plus a week ago.

Andy Sandrik: East Pennsboro 27, Palmyra 14: I’ll always stand behind the team with the reigning 4th Down Magazine Player of the Week. Congrats to Keith Oates III, who can pass, run and even play a little bit of defense.

Adam Kulikowski: East Pennsboro 34, Palmyra 13: It was nice to see the Cougars juice the scoreboard last week, dropping a 50-spot on Lebanon. But East Pennsboro is a much different squeeze. 

New Oxford 38, Gettysburg 20

Andy Shay: Gettysburg 34, New Oxford 28: They might have to come from behind to make this happen, but give me the Warriors and the best player on the field. 

Andy Sandrik: Gettysburg 27, New Oxford 21: I’m taking the 0-1 team to beat the 1-0 squad. I think Gettysburg QB Brady Heiser & Co. took a lot more out of playing Hershey in a shootout than the Colonials did easing in with a blowout win over Bermudian. 

Adam Kulikowski: Gettysburg 38, New Oxford 20: Warriors flexed plenty of offensive muscle last week but walked away empty handed. That won’t happen in Week 2. 

Greencastle-Antrim 42, Berkeley Springs (W.V.) 6

Andy Shay: Greencastle-Antrim 28, Berkeley Springs 7: There is a formula for this particular Blue Devils team built around good defense and patience on offense. It’s their path to victory, and keeping the Indians inside that box should not be a problem.

Andy Sandrik: Greencastle-Antrim 30, Berkeley Springs 7: Those grind-it-out wins, like Greencastle’s 17-14 victory over Big Spring last week, can build so much confidence. Look for the Blue Devils to win by a few more points this week. 

Adam Kulikowski: Greencastle-Antrim 28, Berkeley Springs 6: The Indians are currently on an 11-game skid dating back to the start of the 2022 season. You never want to kick a team while it is down, but this is one that should be a notch in the win column for the Blue Devils.

Susquehanna Township 42, Northern Lebanon 14

Andy Shay: Susquehanna Township 45, Northern Lebanon 13: You know what they say about the cornered dog, right? Expect him to be aggressive and attack. That is how I see the ‘Hanna Tribe this week.

Andy Sandrik: Susquehanna Township 44, Northern Lebanon 6: I get the sense that ‘Hanna has the personnel to dictate the pace of this game. And after last weekend’s loss to Milton Hershey, the Indians will probably be mad, too. 

Adam Kulikowski: Susquehanna Township 34, Northern Lebanon 17: Turning the page after a last-second loss is one of the toughest tasks in sports. Yet, in Week 2, that’s what Joe Headen’s crew must do. Expect the Indians to out-muscle Northern Lebanon in the trenches. 

Big Spring 21, Shippensburg 7

Andy Shay: Shippensburg 28, Big Spring 14: This has been a torture chamber of a rivalry game for the Bulldogs for more than a decade. This one isn’t a slam dunk for the Greyhounds, but they have a couple major advantages to work with.

Andy Sandrik: Shippensburg 28, Big Spring 19: Big Spring has to like its chances to finally compete with a Shippensburg squad that is still working on gelling its new-look lineup. Still, the ‘Hounds have all the pieces to extend the Bulldogs’ long run of misery in the Little Brown Jug game. 

Adam Kulikowski: Shippensburg 34, Big Spring 13: Pop quiz: When is the last time the Bulldogs won the Little Brown Jug? … Answer: you have to go all the way back to the 2010 season. 

Boiling Springs 21, Bermudian Springs 14

Andy Shay: Boiling Springs 21, Bermudian Springs 7: Both these squads have put in plenty of film work this week after less-than-stellar openers. Plenty of gaps that need filled all around; whoever takes one or two steps forward will prevail.

Andy Sandrik: Boiling Springs 14, Bermudian Springs 8: This has the potential to be a defensive struggle. Bubblers RB Gage Hughes gained 88 yards on 11 carries last week. He could be the difference-maker in this one. 

Adam Kulikowski: Boiling Springs 20, Bermudian Springs 6: Both teams struggled mightily to get out of first gear in their season opener. I’ll push my chips in on the Bubblers to have a little more octane in this one. 

Camp Hill 50, York Catholic 7

Andy Shay: Camp Hill 27, York Catholic 25: This one feels like it has all the makings of a wild and crazy affair that comes down to the final minutes to decide the outcome. Lions’ defense seems to be the unit that will impact the game the most.

Andy Sandrik: Camp Hill 28, York Catholic 20: Last year Camp Hill topped York Catholic with an upset win. I think the Lions win again this year, but this time as the favorite. 

Adam Kulikowski: Camp Hill 35, York Catholic 28: Lions pitched a shutout in Week 1 against Newport. York Catholic will present a tougher challenge. 

Steel-High 44, Eastern (Washington, D.C.) 26

Andy Shay: Steel-High 55, Eastern 6: The ability for the Rollers to stretch Eastern’s defense in a variety of ways will show up big time in this one.

Andy Sandrik: Steel-High 43, Eastern 10: All signs point to a mismatch favoring the Rollers.

Adam Kulikowski: Steel-High 49, Eastern 6: The Ramblers are traveling an awful long way to be taken behind the proverbial woodshed. 

Trinity 37, Moore Catholic (N.Y.) 16

Andy Shay: Trinity 40, Moore Catholic 14: The squad from New York has some quality but is a little green at the skill positions. T-Rocks’ offense is loaded and came out firing bombs in the opener. There’s your mismatch.

Andy Sandrik: Trinity 28, Moore Catholic 21: Trinity’s Messiah Mickens piled up 182 yards and two TDs on just 11 carries last week. That’s 16.5 yards a pop. Give the advantage to the Shamrocks at home. 

Adam Kulikowski: Trinity 34, Moore Catholic 33: Moore Catholic lost some key pieces from a nine-win team last year, including a 2,000-yard passer and 1,400-yard rusher. Right now with the lads Trinity has assembled, I’m giving them the edge. 

West Perry 41, Newport 7

Andy Shay: West Perry 49, Newport 0: If the Mustangs’ starters play more than a series or two in the second half, that would be a surprise.

Andy Sandrik: West Perry 44, Newport 0: How much West Perry wins this game by is completely up to West Perry. 

Adam Kulikowski: West Perry 55, Newport 13: Rebuilding a program isn’t an overnight process, and I don’t believe the Mustangs will have compassion for their county rivals.

Halifax 40, Midd-West 0

Andy Shay: Midd-West 32, Halifax 26: More of a level playing field than the Wildcats are used to most weeks. Taking the Mustangs’ experience here.

Andy Sandrik: Halifax 21, Midd-West 20: Coin flip all the way, but I’m going to pick against a Mustangs team still looking for its first points of the year. 

Adam Kulikowski: Midd-West 34, Halifax 20: Both teams continue to search for traction. A year ago, the Mustangs secured their only victory of the season against the Eagles, scoring 48 of their season total 74 points. 

Clear Spring (Md.) 21, James Buchanan 6

Andy Shay: James Buchanan 20, Clear Spring 19: Wins are hard to come by for these two programs. Taking the homer pick and going with the Rockets.

Andy Sandrik: James Buchanan 19, Clear Spring 17: This will be the first game of the season for Clear Spring. While James Buchanan lost its opener last week, I expect those four quarters of experience to pay dividends Friday. 

Adam Kulikowski: Clear Spring 21, James Buchanan 20: Clear Spring has won just three contests over the last two seasons — the Rockets have won four. Call it even after this one.

Selinsgrove 38, Juniata 8

Andy Shay: Selinsgrove 49, Juniata 14: So the Indians surrender 56 in the opener and the Seals have more lethal offensive weapons than Troy. If this game isn’t in the mercy rule early third quarter, it will be a surprise.

Andy Sandrik: Selinsgrove 44, Juniata 21: After giving up 56 points in Week 1, the last team Juniata wants to see is a lethal Selinsgrove outfit that knows 100 different ways to score a touchdown. 

Adam Kulikowski: Selinsgrove 45, Juniata 24: The Seals simply have too many weapons in their prime — a savvy junior QB in Mark Pastore, a 1,000-yard rusher in Tucker Teats and a breakout receiver in Gavin Bastian. 

Danville 51, Line Mountain 7

Andy Shay: Danville 42, Line Mountain 28: Eagles have plenty to be optimistic about, and this will be a full-metal-jacket test. Hard to see a path to victory for Line Mountain against this level of quality.

Andy Sandrik: Danville 44, Line Mountain 26: This is a loaded Line Mountain team that could very well conquer the Liberty Division, but Danville is a program that has been on a whole different tier in recent years. 

Adam Kulikowski: Danville 45, Line Mountain 30: This is a wonderful early test for Line Mountain. Each team dropped a haymaker on their opponent in Week 1 (Danville 53-6 over Bloomsburg, Line Mountain 54-12 over Athens) but Danville has the pedigree after a 12-1 season a year ago. Giving the edge to the Ironmen. 

Susquenita 42, Biglerville 7

Andy Shay: Susquenita 27, Biglerville 13: All I know is the Blackhawks and that QB are going to take their shots and land a few. Biglerville’s strength defensively is close to the line of scrimmage, and Susquenita will challenge the Canners’ secondary.

Andy Sandrik: Susquenita 23, Biglerville 12: If Susquenita can put up 22 points against West Perry, I can trust the Hawks to put up at least that many against the Canners.

Adam Kulikowski: Susquenita 35, Biglerville 10: Biglerville possesses a nice pair of linebackers in juniors Landen Taylor and Noah Fulton — each had 11 tackles in Week 1. But Derek Gibney can sling it, there’s no doubt about that. In this matchup, his arm can be the X-factor. 

Upper Dauphin 43, Shenandoah Valley 12

Andy Shay: Shenandoah Valley 34, Upper Dauphin 6: Too much power and flash from the Blue Devils’ ground game for the Trojans to stay competitive. 

Andy Sandrik: Shenandoah Valley 28, Upper Dauphin 21: In addition to searching for its first TD of the season, Upper Dauphin will also be looking to find a way to slow down the Blue Devils’ rushing attack, which is averaging 10.9 yards per carry. 

Adam Kulikowski: Shenandoah Valley 45, Upper Dauphin 10: Upper Dauphin mustered just 111 total yards of offense in Week No. 1 against Williams Valley. It will need to find another gear to keep pace with the Blue Devils on Friday night. 

Williams Valley 48, Pine Grove 6

Andy Shay: Williams Valley 42, Pine Grove 13: Should only take RB Alex Achenbach half the number of carries this week to do the damage that needs done to secure victory. That number would be 20 totes. Yes, he had 40 a week ago.

Andy Sandrik: Williams Valley 35, Pine Grove 12: I’ve come to know the Vikings over the years as a program that loves to score points in bunches. And WV still does that, but I was impressed with the unexpected shutout the Vikes pitched against Upper Dauphin in Week 1.

Adam Kulikowski: Williams Valley 48, Pine Grove 13: As long as Achenbach has two good wheels, the Vikings will ride their big dog as far as he’ll carry them — even if that means another 40-carry game. 

Tri-Valley 42, Panther Valley 12

Andy Shay: Tri-Valley 33, Panther Valley 20: The best player on the field suits up for Tri-Valley, and his impact on a game is pretty high-level. That’s enough for me. 

Andy Sandrik: Tri-Valley 28, Panther Valley 21: Smell test says this could very well be a one-possession game. Noah Porter, a one-man wrecking ball, could be the difference-maker this week. 

Adam Kulikowski: Tri-Valley 34, Panther Valley 14: The Bulldogs possess the X-factor in Porter. He carried the load in Week 1 against Minersville, toting the rock 28 times and hauling in four receptions to power Tri-Valley’s offense. 

High School Football: Mid-Penn Conference News and Notes

Each week, we’ll take a look through the Mid-Penn Conference, highlighting notes that stood out to us and news you need to know.

Week 1 is in the books, kicking off what should be the makings of an entertaining 2023 season. A second week of non-conference games is upon us Thursday night. Here are five observations from the week that was and the weeks coming up.

To share updates on your team for a future edition of our News and Notes, email us at 4thdownmagazine@gmail.com

Week 1 moments to remember

Milton Hershey and Susquehanna Township provided plenty of dramatic moments in their season opener Friday night at Roscoe Warner Field. Susquehanna Township entered the year with high expectations under coach Joe Headen — tabbed by our own Andy Sandrik as the favorite to win the Mid-Penn Colonial Division. And for three-and-a-half quarters, the Indians looked the part.

Then Milton Hershey coach Jeff Boger opened up the offense. That’s when the fireworks exploded.

Moments after the Spartans took the lead, Indians QB TD Evans found Lex Cyrus for a 74-yard touchdown with just more than a minute left to play. Many on the Indians’ sidelines likely thought they had escaped with the win. But Boger’s crew wasn’t done. After a last-second touchdown pulled Milton Hershey to within a point, Boger gambled on a two-point conversion. Angel Roberts hauled in the game-winner from Jason Burney to ignite the celebration on the Spartan sidelines.

Arguably the best Week 1 tilt in the Mid-Penn.

Cheers to the boys at Palmyra

The Cougars earned a much-needed victory Friday night in their season opener against Lebanon. But it’s how they did it that perhaps raised some eyebrows — that’d be the 50-spot they laid on the Cedars.

After scoring just 82 points during the entire 2022 circuit, the Cougars flashed the potential for a much brighter campaign in 2023. A tough test awaits Chris Pavone’s squad Friday night, however, with East Pennsboro on the docket.

A tradition unlike any other

Shippensburg and Big Spring will battle for the Little Brown Jug Friday night in Newville. Can Big Spring break Shippensburg’s lock-tight grip on that jug? If they do, it will be quite the upset. Eric Foust’s gents have dominated the matchup since Big Spring last won in 2010.

The tradition of the Little Brown Jug dates all the way back to 1956 — you can read a recount of how the tradition began from the Shippensburg News-Chronicle.

Centennial celebration

The East Pennsboro Panthers will play their 1,000th game Sept. 15 when they face Gettysburg. This is also the centennial season for the boys in black and orange.

Zack Kuntz doesn’t make the 53-man, added to Jets practice squad

Former Camp Hill standout and Penn State recruit Zack Kuntz got the call no one in the NFL wants when the New York Jets released the seventh round (220th overall) pick Tuesday. He was added to the Jets practice squad Wednesday. The 6-foot-7, 255-pound former Penn State recruit hauled in a touchdown against the Carolina Panthers on Aug. 12. After transferring to Old Dominion in 2021, the Camp Hill star snagged 73 passes for 692 yards and five touchdowns. Kuntz’s preseason line included six receptions for 41 yards and a touchdown.

High School Football: Week 1 Colonial-Schuylkill League Player of the Week

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The first 4th Down Magazine Player Colonial-Schuylkill League Player of the Week has been picked.

Tri-Valley running back Noah Porter won a tight one with an incredible 4,873 votes, with five midstate players in the 4th Down coverage area picking up 11,746 total votes. Porter certainly earned the fans’ respect after he ran for 154 yards on 28 carries and caught four balls for 79 yards, scoring a pair of touchdowns in a 38-34 loss to Minersville.

The junior edged out another running back from Williams Valley, Alex Achenbach, who had 4,649 votes, for the season-opening POTW victory. We’ll get a chance to see both backs square off head-to-head in Week 10 for the annual rivalry game between the two teams.