Mid-Penn Conference News and Notes: Commonwealth Division

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Each week during the 2021 season we’ll offer some news, notes, tidbits and opinions from each of the five divisions in the Mid-Penn Conference.

Harrisburg battle tested heading into home bout against Carlisle:

Harrisburg has played one of the top five schedules in District 3 through the first month of the season based on the Cougars’ opponents winning percentage. To come out with a 3-1 record has to exceed expectations. No rest for the competitive weary, though, as Carlisle is paying a visit to Severance Field Saturday. The Thundering Herd are also 3-1 and coming off their first loss of the season. Carlisle is better equipped to compete at this level after clearing some cobwebs and figuring out they can compete at this level down the stretch against Cumberland Valley. If this one isn’t tight, color me surprised.

CD likely to return to action Friday:

All indications are Central Dauphin will return from a two-week COVID-19 hiatus to travel down Interstate 81 to pay a visit to the Trojans in Chambersburg. Going 21 days without playing will be a factor for sure in this game. That start, stop, restart trio is trickier to navigate than you might think based on results and feedback I got after last season. You are happy to be out there again, but it’s all sort of new and different again. It will be interesting to see what the Rams bring to the table. They were still working on the building blocks when the shutdown happened. CD is playing catch-up for sure. It does, however, give them an additional dog in the fight.

Commonwealth heavyweights collide at The Speedway:

I have no idea what’s going to happen Friday night when State College visits The Speedway to take on CD East. It’s such a pivotal game for both clubs, and I can easily give you five quick reasons why each team could win. This is the most intriguing game in the entire Mid-Penn Conference this week. 

Mid-Penn Conference News and Notes: Liberty Division

Each week during the 2021 season we’ll offer some news, notes, tidbits and opinions from each of the five divisions in the Mid-Penn Conference.

Perhaps this is the weekend …

Stung repeatedly throughout its first four outings while yielding large numbers of points, Earl Mosley’s winless Halifax Wildcats (0-4) have a chance to reel in a much-needed result when something called Renaissance Academy (0-2) makes the lengthy trek from suburban Philadelphia (Phoenixville) to northern Dauphin County.

If the ‘Cats are going to get it done, sophomore quarterback Carter Enders will be the guy lighting the fuse. Running the ball has not been a Halifax strength thus far, but if Enders can find a rhythm throwing it, classmate Peter Ranck will catch it.

 Line Mountain looking to get back into action

Shut down last weekend, Line Mountain (0-3) will be trying to pin down its first victory when a sliding Camp Hill side (2-2) pulls into Ressler Field for a Mid-Penn crossover. Virtually disdaining the ground game, Tim Bigelow’s Lions are going to toss the ball all over the yard, meaning Brandon Carson’s Eagles will need to get some pressure up front and quality coverage deep from the likes of Aidan Herb, Aidan Kritzer, Nolan Baumert and Connor Finlan.

Camp Hill used big plays on third and fourth down a season ago en route to a 35-28 victory, even though Jacob Feese and Garret Laudenslager each collected 100-plus yards for the Eagles. Carson’s Eagles showed signs of generating consistent offense two weeks ago in their loss to Middletown, but getting backs Beau Keim and Ian Bates untracked is key. So is keeping sophomore quarterback Nick Snyder upright so he has time to throw. Tight end/kicker Brayden Boyer, who has been Snyder’s favorite target while providing all of the Eagles’ points in Weeks 1 and 2, may be a player to watch.

Several squads hoping to halt skids

While Susquenita (2-1) will be looking to rebound from its 60-20 shellacking at Big Spring with a victory over visiting Boiling Springs, several other Liberty squads are stuck in longer slides. Juniata (2-2) has lost two straight, but the Indians will host a Middletown outfit (2-1) that’s won two in a row. … James Buchanan (1-3) has dropped its last two, but the Rockets will meet a Big Spring bunch (3-1) that can bank big numbers in a hurry. … And Newport (1-3) will try to halt a three-game skid when Trinity (2-1) rumbles into Katchmer Field.

Upper Dauphin’s two-game win streak on hold

Turning back Mid-Penn Capital programs Trinity and Camp Hill,  surging Upper Dauphin (3-1) was all set to entertain top-ranked Class 1A hammer Steel-High (4-0) at Trojan Stadium. Kent Smeltz’s club will be idled, however, since UD is dealing with COVID-19 issues. Christian Snyder, Brady Morgan and Alex Hepler combined for nearly 300 rushing yards and five touchdowns in the Trojans’ 42-12 success at Camp Hill. Hepler also caught a 42-yard TD pass from Wil Laskowski for an Upper Dauphin outfit that was sitting on a 28-6 halftime cushion. Steel-High has yet to be tested thus far, collecting 50 or more points in all of its four victories.

Stock up, Stock down after Week 4 of the High School Football Season

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We’re taking a look around our coverage area to see who helped themselves this week and who did not as we move into Week No. 5 of the high school football season.  

STOCK UP

Cedar Cliff RB Jontae Morris:

When you are in a tight spot and have a clutch running back your quarterback can turn and hand the ball to knowing that dude is going to deliver more often than not, that ends up being a difference maker. Cedar Cliff was in a dog fight with West Shore School District rival Red Land. The Colts have a clutch running back, but he’s been getting back to form this season after losing all of last year to a torn ACL. The recovery from any injury like that is always as much mental as physical. Morris is a talented back and was working back into form. Against the Patriots in a tight game he exploded for 224 yards and three touchdowns to pilot the Colts to victory. Morris is back. Through four games he’s totaled 553 yards, has six touchdowns and is averaging a stellar 7.5 yards per carry. This was the game where they needed him to be all the way back, and he delivered. Everybody loves a good comeback story.

East Pennsboro RB Sy Burgos:

East Pennsboro running back Sy Burgos is a lethal east-west type back who probes for a crack to turn on the jets. When that happens, he’s gone. Everyone knows that’s his game in a nutshell. I’m here to say that thinking might need to be re-evaluated after what he did down the stretch in a come-from-behind win over Greencastle-Antrim. Give the Blue Devils defense full credit, they had the Panthers and Burgos bottled up with their outside runs. He broke free once and that was it. So, the Panthers went with a Plan B the second half. The offense, behind an OL that moves folks out of the way, went straight north-south and scrapped the edge stuff. There was Burgos hitting the hole with authority, slamming away and getting yards after contact. And if a seam existed he was off to the open spaces in a real hurry. And when we say slamming away and hitting the hole, this was out of the old-school Power-I formation with a fullback leading the way with every run inside the tackles. It was impressive for a guy with so much talent in open spaces to work that hard in the tough-yards quarters.

Mid-Penn Colonial Division:

The Wild, Wild West of the Mid-Penn Conference, aka the Colonial Division, is off to the races. Where this ends up is still a mystery even after the first week of division games. Shippensburg is 4-0, but Waynesboro, Mechanicsburg and East Pennsboro are each 3-1. Northern is 2-1 and Greencastle-Antrim — trust me when I say this team is going to present those upper echelon teams some real problems — and West Perry are each 2-2. Shippensburg and Waynesboro are the odds-on favorites right now, but Mechanicsburg has found its identity and East Pennsboro has some weapons. And I can’t emphasize enough, the Blue Devils are going to create mayhem by knocking off one of those one-loss teams. Enjoy the ride!

STOCK DOWN

Greencastle-Antrim’s discipline: 

You can point out 10 different ways to analyze a loss in a close game that comes down to the wire. I’m not sure Greencastle-Antrim has to look further than five 15-yard penalties in a one-score loss to East Pennsboro. What I’m talking about is small disadvantages in an air-tight game. That’s 75 yards of field position when every yard matters. That’s almost like starting the game down 7-0 from my chair. I’ve been to four games this season, and I’ve seen three of them clearly over officiated. And by that I mean they don’t have a feel for the game, instead they are making strictly by-the-book calls. And this game was massively over officiated. Still, when you rack up that many 15-yard calls against you, the margin for error shrinks dramatically.

Line Mountain, Halifax: 

Line Mountain and Halifax, a couple former Tri-Valley League squads who are now members of the current Mid-Penn Liberty Division, are struggling big time. They have a combined record of 0-7 overall and are each battling a different enemy. The Eagles can’t score, registering only 12 points in 12 quarters. Halifax and its short roster has allowed a staggering 231 points in only four games. The Wildcats have scored some points, but allowing nearly 58 points a game creates an instant inability to compete. Tough seeing a couple of TVL hammers scrambling to be competitive in the MPC this season.

Eric F. Epler’s State High School Football Rankings after Week 4

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Class 6A — Record — Previous rank 

1. St. Joseph’s Prep (12)          — 2-1   — 1 

2. Pittsburgh C.C. (7)               — 3-1   — 3 

3. La Salle College HS (12)       — 4-0   — 7 

4. Central York (3)                   — 3-0   — 4 

5. North Penn (1)                    — 4-0   — 5 

6. Archbishop Wood (12)        — 3-1   — 2 

7. Mount Lebanon (7)             — 4-0   — 6 

8. Garnet Valley (1)                 — 4-0   — 8 

9. Parkland (11)                      — 3-0   — 10 

10. Downingtown East (1)      — 4-0   — NR 

Teams to watch: Central Dauphin East (3) 3-1, Harrisburg (3) 3-1, McDowell (10) 3-0, Nazareth (11) 3-1, North Allegheny (7) 3-1, York High (3) 3-1. 

Class 5A — Record — Previous rank 

1. Governor Mifflin (3)            — 4-0   — 1 

2. Imhotep Charter (12)          — 2-1   — 2 

3. Cathedral Prep (10)            — 4-0   — 3 

4. Gateway (7)                        — 3-1   — 6 

5. Upper Dublin (1)                 — 3-1   — 4 

6. Academy Park (1)                — 3-0   — 7 

7. Moon (7)                             — 4-0   — 8 

8. Manheim Central (3)          — 4-0   — 9 

9. Whitehall (11)                     — 3-1   — 5 

10. Peters Township (7)          — 3-1   — NR 

Teams to watch: Chester (1) 4-0, South Fayette (7) 3-1, Strath Haven (1) 4-0, Unionville (1) 4-0. 

Class 4A — Record — Previous rank 

1. Thomas Jefferson (7)          — 3-0   — 1 

2. Jersey Shore (4)                  — 4-0   — 2 

3. Belle Vernon (7)                  — 3-0   — 3 

4. Bishop McDevitt (3)            — 2-1   — 4 

5. Valley View (2)                    — 4-0   — 6 

6. Berks Catholic (3)                — 3-1   — 7 

7. Aliquippa (7)                       — 2-1   — 8 

8. Allentown C.C. (11)             — 3-1   — 5 

9. Northwestern Lehigh (11)  — 4-0   — NR 

10. McKeesport (7)                 — 3-1   — 9 

Teams to watch: Bishop Shanahan (1) 3-1, Bonner-Prendergast (12) 3-1, Hampton (7) 4-0, Pope John Paul II (1) 2-2.  

Class 3A — Record — Previous rank 

1. North Schuylkill (11)           — 4-0   — 1 

2. Central Valley (7)                — 4-0   — 2 

3. Wyomissing (3)                   — 4-0   — 3 

4. Notre Dame-GP (11)           — 4-0   — 4 

5. Scranton Prep (2)                — 3-0   — 5 

6. Bedford (5)                          — 4-0   — 6 

7. Central Martinsburg (6)      — 4-0   — 7 

8. Neumann-Goretti (12)        — 2-1   — 8 

9. North Catholic (7)               — 4-0   — 9 

10. Clearfield (9)                     — 4-0   — 10 

Teams to watch: Avonworth (7) 3-1, Danville (4) 4-0, Penn Cambria (6) 4-0, Wyoming Area (2) 3-1.  

Class 2A — Record — Previous rank  

1. Southern Columbia (4)        — 4-0   — 1 

2. Farrell (10)                          — 3-0   — 2 

3. Sto-Rox (7)                          — 4-0   — 4 

4. Washington (7)                   — 4-0   — 5 

5. Richland Township (6)        — 3-1   — 3 

6. Bellwood-Antis (6)              — 4-0   — 6 

7. Windber (5)                         — 4-0   — 7 

8. Serra Catholic (7)                — 4-0   — 8 

9. Wilmington (10)                  — 2-1   — 9 

10. York Catholic (3)               — 3-0   — 10 

Teams to watch: Conwell-Egan (12) 3-1, Karns City (9) 4-0, Ligonier Valley (7) 4-0, Mount Carmel (4) 3-1, Northern Lehigh (11) 2-2. 

Class 1A — Record — Previous rank  

1. Steelton-Highspire (3)         — 4-0   — 1 

2. Old Forge (2)                       — 3-0   — 2 

3. Muncy (4)                            — 3-1   — 4 

4. Tri-Valley (11)                     — 3-0   — 5 

5. Canton (4)                           — 4-0   — 7 

6. Redbank Valley (9)              — 3-1   — 8 

7. Juniata Valley (6)                — 3-0   — 9 

8. Our Lady of Sacred Heart (7) — 3-0 — NR 

9. Portage (6)                          — 4-0 — NR 

10. Homer-Center (6)             — 3-1 — NR 

Teams to watch: Bishop Canevin (7) 4-0, Clairton (7) 1-2, Keystone (9) 3-0, Williams Valley (11) 3-1. 

How Mid-Penn alums did in college this week: Zack Kuntz making a home at Old Dominion; Bill Williams finds paydirt; Forrest Rhyne’s big game and more

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Five-star performance

In this section, we’ll feature one former Mid-Penn player who had a particularly impressive week in college football.

It wasn’t the outcome he was surely looking for, but Zack Kuntz continued to impress Saturday in Old Dominion’s loss.

The tight end formerly from Camp Hill and Penn State scored his first career NCAA touchdown Saturday in a 45-17 loss to Liberty. The defeat dropped ODU to 1-2 this season.

Kuntz entered the 2021 campaign with just three receptions and 26 yards in three seasons in Happy Valley. He eclipsed those numbers in Week 3 alone, going for 60 yards on four grabs. And he added a tackle, his second this season. His TD came from 30 yards out on a strike from D.J. Mack Jr. with 42 seconds left in the first half. It cut the deficit to 28-17 following a 12-play, 75-yard drive.

Since transferring, Kuntz is now at 10 receptions for 140 stripes through three games.

Closer look

In this section, we look at some of the former Mid-Penn standouts that had big weeks a little closer to home.

Camp Hill grad Bill Williams scored a late touchdown and finished with 65 yards on 12 carries (plus a 31-yard kick return) in Shippensburg University’s 62-33 blowout win over Clarion to improve to 3-0. Lower Dauphin’s Evan Morrill caught an 11-yard pass in the win, and Middletown’s Laron Woody finished with three tackles for the SU defense. 

In on the action

In this section, we’ll list off some of the performances from former Mid-Penn players now in the college ranks

• William & Mary’s Kane Everson (Harrisburg) had a tackle in a 27-7 win over winless Colgate, whose QB, Cedar Cliff product Grant Breneman, was 9-of-16 for 74 yards and was sacked four times. Breneman also had 33 total rushing yards.

• Rhode Island’s Christian Arrington (Cumberland Valley) had four tackles in a 45-24 win over Brown to improve to 3-0.

• Texas A&M’s Andre White (Harrisburg) had three tackles in the Aggies’ 34-0 win over New Mexico to improve to 3-0. 

• Forrest Rhyne (Waynesboro) tied for Villanova’s team lead with eight tackles in a 34-27 win over Richmond. The Wildcats are now 3-0.

• IUP Raunya Mitchell (Susquehanna Township) had a tackle in a 37-21 loss to No. 11 (Division II) Shepherd.

• Cedar Cliff grad Jaheim Morris led Millersville with four carries and 23 yards, but the team lost to California (Pa.) 30-0 to fall to 1-2.

By the numbers: A look at the statistical leaders in Week 4

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Statistics unavailable for James Buchanan, Lower Dauphin and Red Land

Did not play: Line Mountain, Central Dauphin, Northern York, Tri-Valley

Passing (Com-Att-INTs-Yards)

Isaac Whiteash, Williams Valley: 20-36-1-349, 1 touchdown

Alex Erby, Steel-High: 19-28-1-289, 4 touchdowns

Finn Furmanek, State College: 11-22-0-249, 1 touchdown

Stone Saunders, Bishop McDevtt: 9-15, 232, 6 touchdowns

Terrence Jackson-Copney, CD East: 6-9-0-216, 3 touchdowns

Peyton Shore, Camp Hill: 11-22-2-195, 1 touchdown

Ethan Eisenberg, Big Spring: 5-5-0-186, 3 touchdowns

Derek Gibney, Susquenita: 9-25-3-178, 1 touchdown

Jermere Jones, Chambersburg: 6-15-1-171, 2 touchdowns

Isaac Sines, Cumberland Valley: 10-22-1-167, 2 touchdown

Colin Lunde, Boiling Springs: 11-19-0-159, 2 touchdowns

Kenneth Emile, Milton Hershey: 13-20-4-159, 2 touchdowns

Tucker Chamberlin, Shippensburg: 7-9-1-140, 2 touchdowns

Taylor Conrad, Greencastle-Antrim: 11-17-1-122

Zakii Lewis, Harrisburg: 5-12-3-120, 1 touchdown

Bamm Appleby, Middletown: 6-9-1-119, 1 touchdown

Daniel Painter, Hershey: 6-18-1-117

Louis Shank, Carlisle: 9-27-0-107, 2 touchdowns

Logan Parks, Mifflin County: 8-21-3-103

Louis Lindsay, Waynesboro: 6-10-0-92, 1 touchdown

Aaron Kanagy, Juniata: 4-13-0-91

Mason Messick, Newport: 7-12-0-90

Ethan Dorrell, Cedar Cliff: 8-15-0-88, 1 touchdown

Marcus Quaker, West Perry: 7-20-2-85

East Pennsboro running back Sy Burgos races to a touchdown to lead East Pennsboro past Greencastle-Antrim 27-19 Friday in Enola. (Adam Kulikowski/4th Down)

Rushing (Att-Yards)

Parker Sample, Mechanicsburg: 22-245, 4 touchdowns

Marquese Williams, Bishop McDevitt: 9-230, 3 touchdowns

Jontae Morris, Cedar Cliff: 26-230, 3 touchdowns

Sy Burgos, East Pennsboro: 21-210, 2 touchdowns

Marcel McDaniels, CD East: 25-187, 1 touchdown 

Daivin Pryor, Steel-High: 13-167, 3 touchdowns

Ethan Stroup, Altoona: 26-151, 1 touchdown

Lane Lehman, Pine Grove: 28-140, 2 touchdowns

Tyler Rossi, Trinity: 10-132, 4 touchdowns

Logan Schmidt, Big Spring: 4-128, 3 touchdowns

Christian Snyder, Upper Dauphin: 18-119, 2 touchdowns

Daniel Painter, Hershey: 6-18-1-117, 1 touchdown

Traevon Kater, Shippensburg: 10-112

Brady Morgan, Upper Dauphin: 12-94

Alex Achenbach, Williams Valley: 22-92, 1 touchdown

Jaeion Perry, Steel-High: 2-88

Devin Shepherd, East Pennsboro: 8-85

David Neibauer, Greencastle-Antrim: 18-84, 1

Cyncir Bowers,Bishop McDevitt: 7-82, 1 touchdown

Dillon Wakefield, Big Spring: 13-80, 1 touchdown

Alexander Hepler, Upper Dauphin: 9-78, 3 touchdowns

Ezeekai Thomas, Carlisle: 12-76, 2 touchdowns

Mikel Holden, Waynesboro: 18-73, 1 touchdown

Louis Lindsay, Waynesboro: 9-73, 2 touchdowns

Joseph Menke, Boiling Springs: 16-72, 2 touchdowns

Audric Bryant, Middletown: 3-68, 3 touchdowns

JaQuan Berrier, Hershey: 15-68, 1 touchdown

Tavon Cooper, Greencastle-Antrim: 8-67

Javon White, Susquehanna Twp.: 14-66 

Colin Ibarra, Pine Grove: 12-65, 1 touchdown

Finn Furmanek, State College: 8-64, 1 touchdown

Hunter Thoman, West Perry: 8-63

Seth Laub, Juniata: 5-62

Jefferey Lougee, Mechanicsburg: 8-60 1 touchdown

Derek Gibney, Susquenita: 13-60, 2 touchdowns

Receiving (Rec-Yards)

Hunter Wolfgang, Williams Valley: 6-170, 1 touchdown

Malachi Scott, Chambersburg: 3-157, 1 touchdown

Mehki Flowers, CD East: 5-150, 2 touchdowns

Grant Hall, Big Spring: 3-122, 1 touchdown

T.J. Yoder, State College: 3-118

Rell Ceasar, Steel-High: 5-107, 2 touchdowns

Mario Easterly, Bishop McDevitt: 5-95, 3 touchdowns

Tyrone Moore, Steel-High: 10-93, 1  touchdown

Griffin Huffman, Cumberland Valley: 4-89, 2 touchdowns

Daivin Pryor, Steel-High: 3-89, 1 touchdown

Christian Doi, Camp Hill: 5-89

Bryce McKee, Susquenita: 2-84, 1 touchdown

Kyle Williams, Harrisburg: 2-78, 1 touchdown

Branden Price, State College: 3-75, 1 touchdown

Isaac Wilson, Mifflin County: 5-72

Eli Hargrove, Carlisle: 5-72, 1 touchdown

Anthony Smith, Shippensburg: 2-70, 1 touchdown

Brody Rhodes, Waynesboro: 2-67, 1 touchdown

Tymere Thornton, CD East: 1-66, 1 touchdown

Carson Garvey, Boiling Springs: 3-64

Brady Evans, Williams Valley: 5-62

Caleb Godbout, Newport: 2-61

Erby Weller, Shippensburg: 3-56

Josh Bomberger, Juniata: 2-56

Kamil Foster, Bishop McDevitt: 1-54, 1 touchdown

Marcus Boyle, Boiling Springs: 1-51, 1 touchdown

Logan Schmidt, Big Spring: 1-50, 1 touchdown

Elite 11: A ranking of our top 11 teams after Week 4

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Each week, we’re scouring the Mid-Penn, Lancaster-Lebanon, York, and Berks conferences to determine the top 11 teams in the area regardless of classification. Take a look at which teams made the cut after Week 4. Disagree, let us know on Twitter (@4thdownmag) and Facebook.

11. Wyomissing4-011
Handed previously unbeaten Hamburg its first loss of the season … by 40 points. Spartans defense has found its groove.
10. Cedar Cliff3-110
Colts eventually pulled away from West Shore School District rival Red Land behind 224 yards and three touchdowns from RB Jontae Morris.
9. Steel-High4-09
Rollers were held to their lowest point total this season, scoring ONLY 53 points in a win over Juniata. Still averaging 60-plus per outing.
8.Exeter Township2-25
Couple of quality losses for sure, but putting up only 14 against Hempfield in a narrow loss puts setback No. 2 at the feet of the offense.
7. Hempfield2-2NR
The Black Knights have played a super tough schedule and have been in every game and just held high scoring Exeter Township to only 14 points. Welcome!
6. CD East3-18
Quality road win at previously unbeaten Altoona that saw the Panthers flash balance on offense to go along with rock solid defense. Complete game.
5. Manheim Central4-06
Nice road win for the Barons at Perkiomen Valley, coming from a touchdown behind at intermission and scoring 29 second-half points to stay unbeaten. Offensive balance is tough to handle.
4. Bishop McDevitt2-14
Palmyra was coming off a short week after playing on a Monday night and getting its first win, and the Crusaders had an extra week off after COVID-19 issues. Of course it wasn’t pretty. McD went for 70-plus.
3. Harrisburg3-13
Took a game with No. 1-ranked Governor Mifflin on the road with less than 36 hours notice and made it a game for a half. Mustangs showed their pedigree in the second half, and that was expected. The Cougars aren’t looking for moral victories, so I’ll say this was a quality loss.
2. Central York3-02
Had an idle week, and the worst part for CY and their start quarterback is the best competition they will face this season is pretty much all behind them.
1. Governor Mifflin4-01
Took a few body blows from Harrisburg and absorbed them well before returning to the bully on the block and running away from the Cougars in the second half. Elite on many levels and playing like it.

Results: Week 4 Picks and Predictions

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RECORDS (This week — Overall):

Andy Shay: 17-3 — 79-25

Andy Sandrik: 15-5 — 72-32

Geoff Morrow: 16-4 — 70-34

Adam Kulikowski: 16-4 — 67-37

Friday

Green Street Academy (Md.) 60, James Buchanan 0

Andy Shay: Green Street Academy 28, James Buchanan 14: I’d give the Rockets a fair shot in this one. Do they have enough firepower to keep up, I wonder?

Geoff Morrow: Green Street Academy 39, James Buchanan 15: The Baltimore charter school was only founded in 2010, but the Chargers’ football program quickly found a winning formula, albeit against lower-level competition. Rockets will likely have their hands full.

Andy Sandrik: Green Street Academy 42, James Buchanan 7: These Pa. and Md. matchups always throw me for a loop, but I’ll go with the Chargers, who opened their season earlier this month with a 66-0 win.

Adam Kulikowski: Green Street Academy 47, James Buchanan 13: The Chargers trek in from Baltimore with a 66-0 victory in their opening week in hand. Dropping 30 first-quarter points against PACE says they have some gents who could give the Rockets fits.

Bishop McDevitt 75, Palmyra 7

Andy Shay: Bishop McDevitt 49, Palmyra 7: Crusaders were off with COVID-19 last week, and Palmyra picked up a win Monday night. That’s enough right there to make McD a heavy favorite alone.

Geoff Morrow: Bishop McDevitt 47, Palmyra 14: Tough spot for the Cougars coming off a short week. That and the supremely talented Crusaders are champing at the bit to get back out on the gridiron.

Andy Sandrik: Bishop McDevitt 44, Palmyra 7: Congrats to the Cougars on landing that first win last week. This test against Bishop McDevitt, though, will be much, much harder.

Adam Kulikowski: Bishop McDevitt 48, Palmyra 7: Crusaders are set to return after missing a week due to COVID issues. The ‘Dub is their cross to bear. 

Mechanicsburg 39, Boiling Springs 34

Andy Shay: Boiling Springs 27, Mechanicsburg 14: Love when teams have to pick up the COVID-19 game-wrecking pieces and just say, “Let’s go play!’ This is a good matchup for both teams. The Wildcats will ask questions of the Bubblers that haven’t been asked this season. And Boiling Springs will have most of the answers.

Geoff Morrow: Boiling Springs 25, Mechanicsburg 14: Minimal history between these Cumberland County programs, though both athletic departments deserve praise for hustling to get this game scheduled. Bubblers have earned the pick, but Wildcats will be a tough out and are more than capable of undoing the bubbling momentum. 

Andy Sandrik: Boiling Springs 28, Mechanicsburg 21: I think the Bubbs have done enough to be favorites on the road. Mechanicsburg’s defense, however, will keep this game within reach.

Adam Kulikowski: Boiling Springs 28, Mechanicsburg 27: Another week, another last-minute matchup that has plenty of intrigue. I have to say, I do enjoy the off-the-menu matchups that the COVID chaos creates, though I hate that it comes at the expense of teams struggling with the pandemic. 

CD East 27, Altoona 10

Andy Shay: CD East 21, Altoona 14: For me, this matchup all comes down to whether the CDE defense can slow down the Mountain Lions’ run game enough to be a difference-maker. Altoona is unbeaten and will be a test, but it’s nothing the Panthers haven’t already seen.

Geoff Morrow: CD East 23, Altoona 16: Potential here to be one of the better games of the week. Unlike a lot of Harrisburg-area programs, Panthers don’t seem too fazed by a trip to Altoona. Something about that Horseshoe Curve sucks the soul from those who aren’t prepared.

Andy Sandrik: Altoona 28, CD East 20: The Mountain Lions seem comfortable in deep water, winning two straight games by one possession. I get the sense they can outlast CD East in a close game. Of course, the great equalizer is the Panthers’ defense, which has gotten stronger every week.

Adam Kulikowski: CD East 28, Altoona 27: Love this test for both teams. We know CD East presents plenty of speed on defense. Is that enough to slow down Mrs. 4th Down’s Mountain Lions? 

Cumberland Valley 27, Carlisle 24

Andy Shay: Cumberland Valley 17, Carlisle 14: Something tells me the Eagles are turning a corner. And for all the Herd’s early season fireworks, the opposition hasn’t provided enough of a test to have Carlisle ready for the CV defense. I respect Carlisle’s D as well.

Geoff Morrow: Carlisle 22, Cumberland Valley 20: When the Herd last beat CV way back in 2004, TikTok was simply the sound clocks made, “Friday Night Lights” was a brand-new movie starring the guy from Dawson’s Creek, and Doja Cat was 9 years old. This could be legendary for the Thundering Herd. Or it could be 17 in a row for the Eagles.

Andy Sandrik: Carlisle 26, Cumberland Valley 22: Like many of you, I was quite surprised to see CV knock off Spring-Ford last week. I expect this game to be close, but I’m leaning toward a well-stocked Carlisle squad that has a metric ton of old scores to settle in the Commonwealth. It starts with CV, which has won 16 straight against the Herd.

Adam Kulikowski: Cumberland Valley 24, Carlisle 21: The Eagles are coming off a wild victory against a stout Spring-Ford club. Eagles have the defense needed to keep the root beer flowing for one more week.

State College 38, Chambersburg 22

Andy Shay: State College 35, Chambersburg 14: The Trojans have been taking steps forward, but not sure they’ve taken enough to go 48 minutes with the Little Lions. I still think it’s a close game at halftime, though.

Geoff Morrow: State College 35, Chambersburg 20: Speaking of long droughts, I can’t even find the last time the Trojans beat the Little Lions, if ever. This could be an interesting game, though, if the confident Trojans start fast and the hosts get sloppy.

Andy Sandrik: State College 30, Chambersburg 21: Gotta love the hustle from Chambersburg, which is off to two wins in three tries, but it’s going to take quite an effort for the Trojans to steal a road win from SC.

Adam Kulikowski: State College 37, Chambersburg 14: For the Trojans to come out on top, they will need to handily win the turnover battle. The Little Lions have lost five fumbles over their first three games. 

East Pennsboro 27, Greencastle-Antrim 19

Andy Shay: East Pennsboro 34, Greencastle-Antrim 27: Nobody in the MPC has made a bigger jump out of the gate this season than the Blue Devils. If they keep this game in a box, they will win. The lightning rod for the Panthers, Sy Burgos, is the difference-maker. 

Geoff Morrow: East Pennsboro 24, Greencastle-Antrim 16: It’s tough to imagine one player making such a dramatic difference in the ultimate team sport like football, but, hey, the numbers don’t lie for Burgos & East Penn. Though Blue Devils will be ornery.

Andy Sandrik: East Pennsboro 41, Greencastle-Antrim 24: You might not remember Greencastle’s season-ending win over East Penn, but I’ll bet the Panthers do.

Adam Kulikowski: East Pennsboro 38, Greencastle-Antrim 28: The return of Sy Burgos completely changed the offensive makeup of the Panthers, and that bodes well for the boys in Enola.

Trinity 70, Halifax 0

Andy Shay: Trinity 42, Halifax 0: So, the T-Rocks have been in choppy waters since the opening week bombshell they dropped. This will get them back on course, no problem.

Geoff Morrow: Trinity 59, Halifax 6: If my math is correct, this foursome of “experts” is now 0-8 in picking Trinity football games. Barring forfeit, we will be 4-8 after this weekend. 

Andy Sandrik: Trinity 49, Halifax 0: Much respect to Upper Dauphin, which humbled all the experts with its win over Trinity last week. None of this is good news for Halifax.

Adam Kulikowski: Trinity 45, Halifax 7: Sometimes you just need a week to regroup, gather yourself and continue to define your identity. The ‘Rocks have that opportunity this week with a depleted Halifax squad on deck.

Governor Mifflin 49, Harrisburg 13

Andy Shay: Governor Mifflin 28, Harrisburg 21: Well, how about this last-minute matchup for a ring-the-bell game? Harrisburg will show up, and this will be a test the Mustangs know is coming and are prepared for. The Mifflin OL is a difference-maker.

Geoff Morrow: Governor Mifflin 35, Harrisburg 28: It’s tempting to pick the Cougars if only because they’re the most fearless bunch in the state. But the newly crowned No. 1 Mustangs have been ridiculously impressive in trouncing early (and capable) competition. No trouncing here, as this is a spectacular last-minute matchup.

Andy Sandrik: Harrisburg 26, Governor Mifflin 25: It doesn’t matter if you ask the Cougars to play on another planet, they’re going to show up ready to give you a game.

Adam Kulikowski: Governor Mifflin 33, Harrisburg 31: The Mustangs aren’t going to beat you through the air — GM has less than 60 passing yards in three contests — but that dude, Nick Singleton, sure can be a one-man destructor.

Lower Dauphin 21, Mifflin County 3

Andy Shay: Lower Dauphin 20, Mifflin County 7: If nothing else, LD has shown toughness and fight this season. And, in this game, that will be enough to make it two in a row. 

Geoff Morrow: Lower Dauphin 23, Mifflin County 8: LD closed last season with a triumph over the Huskies, ending a dreadful losing skid for the boys from Hummelstown. I think MiffCo’s defense will keep it close, but until the Huskies sniff out the end zone on an even occasional basis, it’s tough to pick ‘em.

Andy Sandrik: Lower Dauphin 21, Mifflin County 7: All signs point to a road victory for the Falcons, who are facing a MiffCo squad averaging 2.67 points per game.

Adam Kulikowski: Lower Dauphin 28, Mifflin County 7: One week after breaking a losing streak that dated back to 2019, the Falcons should be on a winning streak by Saturday morning. 

Milton Hershey 25, Hershey 20

Andy Shay: Milton Hershey 28, Hershey 14: It’s pretty obvious Hershey struggles to score. The Spartans are not exactly lighting it up defensively, either. The Trojans’ defense has been solid and will continue to be, but the Spartans have enough pop to get what they need.

Geoff Morrow: Hershey 14, Milton Hershey 13: Spartans have won five of the last six Cocoa Bean Bowls, the legendary series which skipped last year with Milton Hershey canceling its season. Even in defeat, I think Hershey gained some confidence last week, while the Spartans, who SHOULD be favorites here, seem to still be figuring things out.

Andy Sandrik: Milton Hershey 21, Hershey 7: I keep getting the sense that Hershey can trap the Spartans this year, but points have been so hard to come by for the Trojans that I just can’t pull the trigger.

Adam Kulikowski: Milton Hershey 35, Hershey 21: I need to see the Trojans muster a little more juice on offense before I pick them to knock off a quality opponent. 

Middletown 42, Newport 7

Andy Shay: Middletown 28, Newport 6: The Blue Raiders are still working out the details offensively, but their defense will come through and deliver the goods in this one. Buffs have not flashed at all.

Geoff Morrow: Middletown 29, Newport 7: This is probably the most winnable game left on the Blue Raiders’ schedule, which features a consistent flow of quality opponents the rest of the way. Better make it count.

Andy Sandrik: Middletown 28, Newport 14: It’s been a rough couple of weeks for the Buffs, who have had very little go their way in lopsided losses to West Perry and Steel-High, but this game is a good opportunity for Newport to play competitive football.

Adam Kulikowski: Middletown 21, Newport 7: Both teams have some nice pieces to the puzzle, but neither has a complete set at this point. That brute, Tajae Brodie, is a difference-maker in this battle especially with Andrew Bates ailing for the Buffs.

Cedar Cliff 35, Red Land 21

Andy Shay: Cedar Cliff 42, Red Land 14: The Colts are miffed at the offensive performance they displayed against CD East. That balance will show up in this one. Patriots have been close twice in three weeks and can’t get over the hump. The rivalry matters, though.

Geoff Morrow: Cedar Cliff 35, Red Land 21: When I was at the now-defunct Lemoyne Middle School way back in the very early ‘90s, the Cedar Cliff kids called us Red Land kids “farmers.” It was meant as an insult, I guess, but I never really understood or cared, because my dad’s cousin ran a farm and lived in Elizabethtown, not Etters. Anyway, I say all that to give a shout-out to all my former classmates, whether Colts or Patriots. But I’m East Shore now.

Andy Sandrik: Cedar Cliff 32, Red Land 17: Still waiting for the Red Land puzzle to get pieced together this season. Colts will be looking to light up the scoreboard after getting humbled by the CD East defense last week.

Adam Kulikowski: Cedar Cliff 35, Red Land 28: The Colts saw speed against the Panthers that they had not experienced in 2021. Gillen’s crew shakes off the setback against a Patriots team still searching for its identity. 

Big Spring 60, Susquenita 20

Andy Shay: Big Spring 34, Susquenita 27: This game is going to be all about dictating tempo and controlling the chaos that happens in between. Bulldogs’ balance and depth has to be the difference-maker or the ‘Hawks will crash the party.

Geoff Morrow: Big Spring 27, Susquenita 26: Break out the ‘Nita! Last week’s win over Camp Hill is even more impressive when you consider it was a short week, as the Blackhawks’ previous game was just four days earlier. The Fightin’ Hockensmiths have a tough one this week, though. 

Andy Sandrik: Big Spring 42, Susquenita 24: I think Big Spring has the personnel to control the ball and hold off the ‘Hawks, but week after week, Susquenita keeps proving us wrong.

Adam Kulikowski: Susquenita 26, Big Spring 24: This is the week ‘Nita can quiet the doubters. Let’s goooooooo!!

Upper Dauphin 42, Camp Hill 12

Andy Shay: Camp Hill 28, Upper Dauphin 26: I could easily give you three or four reasons why each of these teams is going to win. The Trojans have been consistently tough. The Lions have been a bit up-and-down. If Brady Morgan gets his, the Lions go down.

Geoff Morrow: Upper Dauphin 33, Camp Hill 28: I kind of want to pick Camp Hill, but I’m last to pick this game, and I couldn’t help but notice Shay picked the Lions. And, since he’s already running away with the “picks” lead, I need to join the other As and get on the Upper Dauphin bandwagon and work to close the gap on AShay. Rarely do I care about or employ strategy and go against my instinct, but this is that rare exception.

Andy Sandrik: Upper Dauphin 28, Camp Hill 21: Love the production UD is getting from RB Brady Morgan, a 5-foot-6 spark plug averaging 102 rushing yards per game, who is also the Trojans’ leading receiver.

Adam Kulikowski: Upper Dauphin 35, Camp Hill 31: The Trojans have played much of the season without pieces for a variety of reasons. UD getting healthy should provide another gear for this team just in time for the heart of the season. 

Waynesboro 29, West Perry 6

Andy Shay: Waynesboro 42, West Perry 29: Indians better be ready for the kitchen sink to be thrown at them from the Mustangs, because you know those gadget plays are coming. I respect that. Just feel the Indians have more depth in terms of weapons.

Geoff Morrow: Waynesboro 29, West Perry 27: I remember a time not too, too long ago when both of these programs — not to be mean — weren’t very good or much fun to watch. Today? Two truly accomplished, entertaining programs. Kudos to the kids and coaches at both schools.

Andy Sandrik: Waynesboro 30, West Perry 24: Waynesboro is one of the fastest — and meanest — teams in the Colonial, but are the Indians among the smartest? We’ll find out Friday when the Mustangs, not afraid to run a gadget play or two, show up to Buchanan Auto Stadium to test ‘Boro’s football IQ.

Adam Kulikowski: West Perry 35, Waynesboro 34: This should be a dandy matchup between two clubs that love to play that punch-you-in-the-mouth brand of football. Quick question, Mustang fans: Do you disown Sandrik for siding with his friend, Waynesboro coach Josh Sprenkle, over his alma mater?

Minersville 47, Williams Valley 24

Andy Shay: Williams Valley 32, Minersville 15: From my seat, this game comes down to what happens up front when WV has the rock and the Miners’ defensive front has to defend. It’s that simple.

Geoff Morrow: Williams Valley 33, Minersville 16: Miners haven’t surrendered a point in two games since getting shellacked by Tri-Valley in their opener; however, the Vikings haven’t scored fewer than four touchdowns in any game vs. Minersville over the last decade. Advantage, Vikings.

Andy Sandrik: Williams Valley 28, Minersville 14: The Battlin’ Miners haven’t beaten WV since 2011. I think the streak continues, although this game has potential to be competitive.

Adam Kulikowski: Williams Valley 38, Minersville 14: Vikings continue to roll behind Alex Acherbach and his 7.9 yards per carry average.

Saturday

Shippensburg 37, Susquehanna Township 7

Andy Shay: Shippensburg 44, Susquehanna Township 6: Been an uphill climb for the Indians with all those points allowed, and it gets no easier here with the undefeated Greyhounds making a trip to Elmerton Ave.

Geoff Morrow: Shippensburg 42, Susquehanna Township 13: Indians — wait, are they still called the Indians? — have fallen on tough times, though I bank on Joe Headen steering the ship to safety sooner rather than later. It’s just not likely to happen against a buzzing bunch like the Greyhounds.

Andy Sandrik: Shippensburg 42, Susquehanna Township 12: Even at home, it’s hard to see a path to victory for Township, which is allowing 52 points per game.

Adam Kulikowski: Shippensburg 35, Susquehanna Township 7: The Greyhounds’ flag is firmly placed at the top of the Colonial Division. Indians are still searching for traction. 

Steel-High 53, Juniata 19

Andy Shay: Steel-High 54, Juniata 6: Brutal if you support the Indians in terms of losing your star QB for the season. Now you have to play this. Juniata was never going to win this game anyway; now it’s a matter of trying to stay competitive.

Geoff Morrow: Steel-High 59, Juniata 13: I love watching the Rollers and reading about their successes, but, seriously, their 2021 schedule is boring. This is like if Alabama just played Mercer every dang week.

Andy Sandrik: Steel-High 63, Juniata 6: Really bummed to hear about QB Jacob Condo going down for Juniata. This was likely to be a blowout, anyway, but the Indians were as eager as anyone to take on the Rollers with their best lineup. 

Adam Kulikowski: Steel-High 68, Juniata 7: Stepping in front of this Roller attack right now is a daunting task — especially after you lose your starting quarterback, Jacob Condo, for the season.

Pine Grove 26, Shenandoah Valley 8

Andy Shay: Pine Grove 14, Shenandoah Valley 7: Combined, these teams have scored five touchdowns in five games played. Neither has a win, so somebody is going to celebrate. I’ll take PG in a coin flip.

Geoff Morrow: Pine Grove 35, Shenandoah Valley 6: The Blue Devils haven’t won more than a single game in a season since 2015, whereas the Cardinals might be winless, but they’re mostly competitive and remember what it takes to win.

Andy Sandrik: Pine Grove 14, Shenandoah Valley 0: When in doubt, take the home team. I’m going with the Cards.

Adam Kulikowski: Pine Grove 21, Shenandoah Valley 7: A tough opening to the Cardinals’ season gets a little better Saturday night. 

POSTPONED: None.

CANCELED: Harrisburg at Central Dauphin; Line Mountain at Boiling Springs; Northern York at Mechanicsburg; Schuylkill Haven at Tri-Valley.

4th Down Magazine Players of the Week sponsored by Crown Trophy

Big School 6A-4A:

Parker Sample, jr., RB, Mechanicsburg — It was a career night Friday for the Wildcats’ top back. Sample ran 22 times for 245 yards and four touchdowns. The mammoth performance lifted Mechanicsburg to a thrilling 37-35 win over Boiling Springs in a matchup through together in 48 hours due to COVID-19 cancelations by the teams’ previously scheduled opponents. Sample’s first TD came from 51 yards out, then he added another 23-yarder on the second play of the next drive. His final scores came from 4 and 2 yards out.

Ethan Eisenberg, jr., QB, Big Spring — The Bulldogs’ offense is potent, in case you didn’t know. Eisenberg put together a flawless performance in a 60-20 rout of Susquenita. While Logan Schmidt scored three TDs and ran for 128 yards, Eisenberg was a perfect 5-of-5 passing, connecting on three touchdown tosses. In totaling 186 yards, Eisenberg hit Grant Hall for a 27-yard scoring strike and another later in the game. Schmidt caught the other TD pass before halftime.

Sy Burgos, sr., RB, East Pennsboro —  It wasn’t quite his Week 1 performance, but Burgos erupted for the second time this season with 210 yards on just 10 carries — 21 yards per pop, for you math majors — and scored twice, including a 66-yard burst with 2:14 left in the game that helped ice a 27-19 comeback win over Greencastle-Antrim.

Jontae Morris, sr., RB, Cedar Cliff — In case it wasn’t already obvious, it was a huge night for Mid-Penn running backs. Morris was one of five runners to eclipse the 200-yard mark, blitzing rival Red Land for 230 stripes and three TDs in a 35-21 victory, the Colts’ ninth straight in the series. Morris scored a 61-yard TD in the first quarter, then added a 3-yarder and a 1-yarder in the final two quarters.

Marquese Williams, jr., RB, Bishop McDevitt — The Crusaders put up basketball numbers in a 75-7 win over Palmyra. Williams also cracked 200 yards, rushing just nine times for 230 stripes (a tidy 25.6 yards per carry) while scoring three times. His longest run of the day was an 89-yard score at the end of the first half that made it 55-7. 

Stone Saunders, fr., QB, Bishop McDevitt — Williams wasn’t the only Crusader putting up crooked numbers. Saunders shined in a 9-for-15 day, with two thirds (yes, six) of those completions going for a touchdown. The rookie accounted for 232 yards passing, with five completions, 95 yards and three TDs going to Old Dominion commit Mario Easterly. 

Dion Bryant, sr., RB, Milton Hershey — The Cocoa Bean Bowl was back after a one-year hiatus. Bryant provided the fireworks in the 78th iteration of one of the midstate’s best rivalries, scoring three touchdowns, including the game-winner with 7:39 left in the game. Bryant scored a 1-yard TD in the first quarter, added a 36-yard TD reception in the second and then won it with a 7-yard rush in the fourth. He finished with 57 yards on 14 carries plus another 48 yards on two receptions.

Jacob Kauffman, sr., RB, Lower Dauphin — Three Keystone Division rushers broke the 200-yard mark this weekend, including Kauffman, who led the Falcons to their first two-game win streak since 2017. The 2-1 start is a significant benchmark for a program mired in a years-long rebuild. Kauffman rushed for 233 yards and three scores on 21 carries in Friday’s 21-3 win over Mifflin County, providing all but the extra points for LD. His scores came from 75, 56 and 26 yards. 

This poll has ended (since 3 years).
Parker Sample, jr., RB, Mechanicsburg
40.20%
Jontae Morris, sr., RB, Cedar Cliff
27.92%
Ethan Eisenberg, jr., QB, Big Spring
11.39%
Jacob Kauffman, sr., RB, Lower Dauphin
10.04%
Marquese Williams, jr., RB, Bishop McDevitt
3.07%
Stone Saunders, fr., QB, Bishop McDevitt
3.01%
Sy Burgos, sr., RB, East Pennsboro
2.24%
Dion Bryant, sr., RB, Milton Hershey
2.13%

Small School: 3A-1A:

Audric Bryant, sr, RB, Middletown — Bryant alone routed Newport on Friday. The senior rushed for three scores and returned a kickoff for another in the Blue Raiders’ 42-7 win over the Buffaloes. He had his hand in multiple facets, starting with a game-opening, 90-yard kick return TD. He added a 2-yard TD run later in the first plus second-quarter TD trots of 6 and 22 yards. He finished with 68 yards on three rushes plus another 38 yards on two receptions.

Alex Erby, so., QB, Steel-High — These performances are almost becoming ho-hum for the electrifying Erby. The sophomore was 19-for-28 for 289 yards and four touchdowns in the Rollers’ 53-19 win over Juniata, the latest rout for the squad from Steelton.

Daivin Pryor, sr., RB, Steel-High — Not to be outdone, Rollers back Daivin Pryor was in on five scoring plays in the 53-19 win over Juniata. It started with his 75-yard kick return touchdown, then continued with a pair of 38-yard scoring runs in the middle of the second quarter. Pryor then added a 6-yard score in the third and hauled in an 86-yard TD bomb from Erby in the fourth to finish with 167 yards on 13 carries and 89 more yards on three receptions.

Alex Hepler, jr, RB/LB, Upper Dauphin — Remarkably productive even though he didn’t touch the ball all that many times, Hepler rushed nine times for 78 yards and three touchdowns as the Trojans (3-1) decked Camp Hill 42-12. Hepler also caught a 42-yard touchdown pass and added two points on a successful conversion. Hepler’s efforts weren’t limited to just his time on offense, as he tied for the team lead with seven tackles. Hepler also registered a pair of sacks while totaling four tackles for loss.

Christian Snyder, sr, RB, Upper Dauphin — Just beginning to find a groove after missing time with an offseason hand injury that required surgery, Snyder banked 119 rushing yards on 18 carries and scored two touchdowns as Kent Smeltz’s Trojans wheeled past Camp Hill 42-12 in a Mid-Penn crossover. Snyder’s rushing output was a mere portion of a ground-oriented UD attack that rolled up 338 yards against the host Lions.

Lane Lehman, so, RB/DB, Pine Grove — A workhorse on Homecoming Night in southern Schuylkill County, the talented Lehman carried the football 28 times for 140 yards and a pair of touchdowns as the Cardinals cracked the victory column with a 26-8 conquest of Shenandoah Valley. Lehman scored on runs of 4 and 1 yards in the opening half. Lehman also added seven tackles.

Colin Ibarra, sr, RB/LB, Pine Grove — The metronome of Pine Grove’s aggressive defensive approach, Ibarra registered 17 tackles from his inside ‘backer spot as the previously winless Cardinals belted Shenandoah Valley 26-8 in a Colonial-Schuylkill crossover. Ibarra also saw a good amount of work in the offensive backfield, rushing 12 times for 65 yards and one score. His 3-yard blast in the second half merely added to the Cards’ comfortable lead.

Isaac Whiteash, jr, QB, Williams Valley — Throwing plenty, Whiteash completed 20 of his 36 pass attempts and added one touchdown, yet it wasn’t enough as Williams Valley suffered a 47-24 loss to Minersville in a Colonial-Schuylkill crossover. Whiteash wound up with 349 passing yards, with his lone score finding Hunter Wolfgang, who finished with six catches for 170 yards.

This poll has ended (since 3 years).
Colin Ibarra, sr, RB/LB, Pine Grove
35.79%
Isaac Whiteash, jr, QB, Williams Valley
17.74%
Alex Hepler, jr, RB/LB, Upper Dauphin
15.07%
Audric Bryant, sr, RB, Middletown
10.15%
Lane Lehman, so, RB/DB, Pine Grove
8.96%
Daivin Pryor, sr., RB, Steel-High
7.00%
Christian Snyder, sr, RB, Upper Dauphin
3.50%
Alex Erby, so., QB, Steel-High
1.78%