Week 5 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

Thursday

Cedar Cliff 48, Lower Dauphin 20

Andy Shay: Cedar Cliff 35, Lower Dauphin 14: Falcons come in flying high with back-to-back wins for the first time since 2017. Colts are showing more balance on offense than ever, and that is a real problem.

Geoff Morrow: Cedar Cliff 27, Lower Dauphin 16: While the Falcons have allowed just 15 points total over the last two weeks (both victories), the Colts bring a different level of offense than those other clubs. In fact, the Cliff lit up LD for 95 points in two previous meetings. That kind of slugging won’t happen this year, but Falcons will need a special effort to pull the W.

Andy Sandrik: Cedar Cliff 28, Lower Dauphin 14: Falcons fans have to be happy with LD, which is off to a 2-1 start. It’s going to take their biggest effort yet, however, to go 3-1 with the Colts invading the Concrete Palace.

Adam Kulikowski: Cedar Cliff 35, Lower Dauphin 7: Great to see that 2-1 record in the ledger for the Falcons after some lean times in Hummelstown. Colts are the more battle-tested at this point.

Friday

Altoona at Cumberland Valley, 7

Andy Shay: Cumberland Valley 17, Altoona 7: I respect the Mountain Lions’ run game, and they will want to run the rock again just like the first four games when four out of five plays were a run. Eagles’ run defense has been solid all season. It’s strength vs. strength, and that nod goes to CV.

Geoff Morrow: Cumberland Valley 25, Altoona 14: I was likely to pick CV anyway, but no way in heck I’m picking against the Eagles now. Tim Rimpfel is a legend and was so revered by the Eagles’ community that the attendees will make it feel like a 12th man is out there with the boys in red and white. R.I.P., sir.

Andy Sandrik: Cumberland Valley 21, Altoona 7: How much wind was taken out of Altoona’s sails when the undefeated Mountain Lions were stuffed against CD East? This is a bad spot for ‘Toona coming against a CV team that not only has a superb defense, but an offense that is just starting to catch up.

Adam Kulikowski: Cumberland Valley 26, Altoona 24: This is sure to be an emotional game for an Eagles community grieving the loss of legendary coach Tim Rimpfel. Key for me is CV jumping out to an early lead to force the Mountain Lions to deviate from their run-based attack.

Big Spring at James Buchanan, 7

Andy Shay: Big Spring 49, James Buchanan 14: You might say the Bulldogs are feeling their offensive oats a little these days with 60 being the magic number. Could be another 60-point outing, but I say they get what they need and get out.

Geoff Morrow: Big Spring 57, James Buchanan 6: Believe it or not, this was just a two-touchdown game last year. But the Bulldogs are cooking with rocket fuel these days.

Andy Sandrik: Big Spring 64, James Buchanan 19: Make it three straight 60-point outings for the Bulldogs.

Adam Kulikowski: Big Spring 55, James Buchanan 7: The way this team is performing, that Oct. 8 matchup against Boiling Springs could be mighty intriguing. This one, however, is not. ‘Dawgs cruise against a Rockets team still searching for a fuse. 

Boiling Springs at Susquenita, 7

Andy Shay: Boiling Springs 49, Susquenita 21: Time to get some work in on the defensive side of the ball for the Bubblers. That crew was cuffed around last week. Offense fires every week. Angry Boiling Springs a bit, maybe?

Geoff Morrow: Boiling Springs 52, Susquenita 23: Match an offense that’s been churning out chunks of yards and points all year with a defense that just surrendered 60 (and last year gave up 50+ to these Bubblers), and it’s not likely to be pretty. ‘Nita needs to right its ship. And fast.

Andy Sandrik: Boiling Springs 34, Susquenita 21: There’s no such thing as a good loss, but the Bubblers are certainly a better football team after their slugfest with Mechanicsburg last week. This has potential to be a statement game for Boiling Springs, but I have a feeling the ‘Hawks keep it close until halftime, if not longer. 

Adam Kulikowski: Boiling Springs 45, Susquenita 21: Boiling Springs and Mechanicsburg threw haymakers at each other for four quarters last week. Bubblers more than proved their mettle despite the setback. Expect Brad Zell’s crew to get back on track against the ‘Hawks.

Camp Hill at Line Mountain, 7

Andy Shay: Camp Hill 35, Line Mountain 14: Lions have been a tough squad to nail down, which means they have been inconsistent and are not taking care of the ball very well. Eagles struggle to score enough points to keep up.

Geoff Morrow: Camp Hill 23, Line Mountain 6: I trust the Lions about as much as I want to wrestle a real lion, but unless the Eagles went out and bought an offense during their COVID break, I won’t be picking them to beat any decent team.

Andy Sandrik: Camp Hill 42, Line Mountain 26: I think the Eagles roll up their most points yet this season, but Camp Hill ultimately comes away with win No. 3.

Adam Kulikowski: Camp Hill 38, Line Mountain 14: The Eagles have just 381 yards of offense … in three games this year. That paltry yield just won’t be enough to beat a Lions team that can move the ball.

Central Dauphin at Chambersburg, 7

Andy Shay: Central Dauphin 24, Chambersburg 14: Three weeks without trading paint is a long time when the other squad has been putting pieces in place each and every week. Rams return at the right time, but this won’t be easy.

Geoff Morrow: Central Dauphin 30, Chambersburg 10: I’m not all that moved by CD’s absence for most of September; this is a program that is always prepared. What DOES move me, though, is the history between these schools, and it has been written in dark, heavy ink by the Rams. Until Chambersburg can start beating teams like CD, it will remain a pest but not a Commonwealth contender.

Andy Sandrik: Central Dauphin 21, Chambersburg 18: The Rams will be playing a live opponent for the first time in 21 days. If the Trojans come out and start landing blows early, they’ve got a chance.

Adam Kulikowski: Central Dauphin 28, Chambersburg 14: Welcome back, Rams! The Gang Green should be hungry after spending a third of the season idle. The rust factor could make this a lower-scoring affair, but either way, I expect CD to roll. 

East Pennsboro at Northern York, 7

Andy Shay: East Pennsboro 35, Northern York 14: That battle in the trenches is going to be important, and something tells me the Panthers have a slight advantage there. Plus that ability to run the ball inside or outside and do damage is tough to defend. East Pennsboro pulls away late.

Geoff Morrow: Northern York 28, East Pennsboro 27: I recognize that this Sy Burgos kid is a beast for East Penn, and Northern was knocked down by COVID last Friday a week after getting slugged by Spring Grove. But Spring Grove is quite good, and I suspect the Polar Bears have regrouped in their spaceship and will find a way at home.

Andy Sandrik: East Pennsboro 24, Northern York 21: Northern’s best bet to win this game is ball control. The more the Polar Bears can keep Sy Burgos — averaging more than a first down per carry — off the field, the better chance they’ll have.

Adam Kulikowski: East Pennsboro 35, Northern York 28: That Panthers’ line looked really nice opening alleys for Sy Burgos to gallop through last week against Greencastle-Antrim. If they can do that again against the Polar Bears, a win should be in the cards.

Hershey at Red Land, 7

Andy Shay: Red Land 28, Hershey 20: The Patriots have gone the distance against better teams and have been much closer to at least a couple victories. This time they get across the finish line.

Geoff Morrow: Red Land 22, Hershey 19: Except for Hershey’s fall-in-a-hole disappearance against Carlisle, these teams’ combined eight losses have actually been somewhat (or very) closely contested battles. So this is NOT your typical 0-4 vs. 0-4 dud. I expect two worthy sides, strategizing and helmet-knocking, and the one with the fewest mistakes triumphing in the end.

Andy Sandrik: Red Land 21, Hershey 17: Coin-flip game for a pair of close-but-no-cigar teams looking to nail down that first win. Something tells me the Patriots find a way at home.

Adam Kulikowski: Red Land 24, Hershey 14: I had an early ticket on the Red Land bandwagon. I think this is the week the train actually leaves the station.

Mechanicsburg at West Perry. 7

Andy Shay: Mechanicsburg 38, West Perry 21: Even though the Wildcats are more of a running team this year, don’t forget they are still finding ways to rack up those chunk plays that swing a game. Mustangs have found ways to stay in games, and you have to respect that.

Geoff Morrow: Mechanicsburg 28, West Perry 20: How will the Wildcats react with actually having more than a day to prepare for this opponent? Ha. The Mustangs are a fun bunch, but Mechanicsburg appears to be rather quickly ironing its early season wrinkles. A warning: ‘Cats cannot look past this game to Ship next week, or West Perry will bite.

Andy Sandrik: Mechanicsburg 34, West Perry 28 (OT): Mustangs are playing much tougher than the numbers indicate, while the ‘Cats are just finding ways to overcome every challenge in front of them.

Adam Kulikowski: Mechanicsburg 35, West Perry 21: I haven’t quite been able to get a handle on what to expect from the Mustangs this year, but what I do know is that the Wildcats have found some of that special sauce that teams need to burn at a high level.

Middletown at Juniata, 7

Andy Shay: Middletown 33, Juniata 13: All I know is the Indians’ defense will show up and make it difficult on the Blue Raiders. Not sure what Juniata can do on offense, though. Seems like Middletown is starting to fit some of the puzzle pieces into place.

Geoff Morrow: Middletown 16, Juniata 14: Let’s start by assuming the Blue Raiders can find their way to Juniata. From there, I expect the Indians are comfortable at home and quite mad about many things. Though I think Middletown has the talent to prevail, I fully expect a nasty, tough skirmish.

Andy Sandrik: Middletown 32, Juniata 10: Make it three straight wins for the Blue Raiders, who might be able to distance themselves from the Indians and look ahead to Steel-High by the third quarter.

Adam Kulikowski: Middletown 35, Juniata 17: Juniata held Steel-High to its lowest point total all season — 53 points — last week. I expect the Indians’ defense to keep them in the game, but the Blue Raiders appear to be hitting their stride entering Week 5. 

Mifflin County at Bishop McDevitt, 7

Andy Shay: Bishop McDevitt 61, Mifflin County 3: Even if they played five times, every outcome would look like this. No fun making this pick, but reality is reality. Massive mismatch.

Geoff Morrow: Bishop McDevitt 63, Mifflin County 0: Did you know that the actual Bishop McDevitt — his name was Phillip Richard McDevitt, and he lived from 1858 to 1935 — was an 1877 graduate of Philly’s La Salle College High School, which is currently ranked No. 3 in the Class 6A state rankings? Both McDevitt high schools in PA are named after this dude, so I assume he had a wicked stiff-arm.

Andy Sandrik: Bishop McDevitt 55, Mifflin County 0: Pretty big mismatch here. McDevitt should have no problems this week.

Adam Kulikowski: Bishop McDevitt, 63, Mifflin County 6: Not a question here who leaves Rocco Ortenzio Stadium Friday evening with the ‘dub.

Pine Grove at Schuylkill Haven, 7

Andy Shay: Pine Grove 14, Schuylkill Haven 7: Points have been tricky for each offense this season. Don’t expect that to change in this one. Team that wins the turnover battle in a game like this is going to be celebrating.

Geoff Morrow: Pine Grove 26, Schuylkill Haven 13: My guess is the Cardinals have put that 0-3 start definitively behind them. Also, these schools are just 13 miles apart and don’t really have any history on the gridiron. So maybe the Hurricanes, off the previous two weeks, will surprise all of us.

Andy Sandrik: Pine Grove 21, Schuylkill Haven 14: I’m loving the hustle from 5-10, 145-pound sophomore Garrett Lehman, who leads Pine Grove in rushing and all-purpose yards. He could have his biggest game yet this weekend.

Adam Kulikowski: Pine Grove 17, Schuylkill Haven 14: Both clubs have struggled to score the rock in ‘21 with each team busting past the 14-point mark just once so far. Make that two for Pine Grove after Friday.

Renaissance Academy at Halifax, 7

Andy Shay: Halifax 30, Renaissance Academy 29: I give Wildcats QB Carter Enders the keys to this one and say throw it all game.

Geoff Morrow: Halifax 35, Renaissance Academy 28: As far as I can tell, the Knights have a decent chance to win the first game in program history, though it appears the varsity football program just started this year after COVID ruined 2020 for them. But I’m giving the hometown edge to the Wildcats, who possess a good bit of heart despite being outmanned in many (all?) of their league games.

Andy Sandrik: Renaissance Academy 27, Halifax 21: Raise your hand if this is your first time hearing about Renaissance Academy. Why not the Knights?

Adam Kulikowski: Halifax 35, Renaissance Academy 31: I could fit all I know about Renaissance Academy on a single crib note. That makes this a bit of a homer pick, but pencil me in for the Wildcats, who I think will be able to put up points behind the arm of Carter Enders.

State College at CD East, 7

Andy Shay: CD East 21, State College 17: This one is a bit tricky. State College’s offense, particularly through the air, has some juice. The Panthers’ defense is sound and getting stronger. What gives?

Geoff Morrow: CD East 27, State College 21: It’s been hammer after hammer after hammer after hammer for the Panthers. That either wears you out or makes you tough, and I KNOW it’s the latter for this group. Little Lions haven’t been tested like that this year, so East could — maybe should — snag its first win vs. State High since 2014.

Andy Sandrik: CD East 24, State College 10: I think CD East has enough offense to match TDs with State College, if necessary, but the real star of the game could very well be the Panthers’ defense, which just keeps getting better and better.

Adam Kulikowski: State College 28, CD East 27: What a matchup this should be at The Speedway Friday night. I love what East’s defense has been able to do as a fast, physical unit. I give the edge to Little Lions and QB Finn Furmanek, who have yet to throw a pick in 73 attempts.

Susquehanna Township at Greencastle-Antrim, 7

Andy Shay: Greencastle-Antrim 35, Susquehanna Township 14: The Blue Devils are more than just your ground-and-pound offense. They have some athletes on the outer edges, too. Much better than their 2-2 record.

Geoff Morrow: Greencastle-Antrim 29, Susquehanna Township 13: I don’t see the Indians getting blown out as they have been, but maybe this is their destiny until they get around to finally and officially dumping that nickname. It appears to have been wiped from the school’s website at least. Now they just need to find a replacement. How about Susquehanna Township Progress? “Pros” for short. “Prose” for the academic teams.

Andy Sandrik: Greencastle-Antrim 45, Susquehanna Township 21: Greencastle has had so many heart-pumping, down-to-the-wire games this season, so a close game is never out of the question, but all signs point to a Blue Devils blowout. 

Adam Kulikowski: Greencastle-Antrim 34, Susquehanna Township 17: The Blue Devils are not to be taken lightly — not with their physical line and a pair of quality backs at their disposal. Just ask East Pennsboro, which last week needed 20 fourth-quarter points to steal a win from the Franklin County boys.

Trinity at Newport, 7

Andy Shay: Trinity 42, Newport 20: It’s been a struggle for the Buffs, and now the injury bug has taken a bite off the apple. T-Rocks are in validation mode after a little up-and-down first 12 quarters.

Geoff Morrow: Trinity 52, Newport 21: While it’s still really early in the Jordan Hill era of Trinity football, I want to see the Shamrocks win on the road. They’re 2-0 with two comfy wins at home, and 0-1 with an eye-opening loss when the bus travels. Get it done with swagger up in the ‘Port, and maybe it’s time to give them some Capital consideration.

Andy Sandrik: Trinity 38, Newport 24: Is there a team in the Liberty with a tougher non-division schedule than Newport? If the Buffs can stay competitive here, that will be enough to show me they’ll be just fine when division play opens next week, even if they’re 1-4.

Adam Kulikowski: Trinity 35, Newport 20: Do the Buffaloes have enough firepower with Andrew Bates sidelined with an injury? Cupboard probably needs one or two more items to get past the Shamrocks.

Tri-Valley at Hamburg, 7

Andy Shay: Tri-Valley 31, Hamburg 20: So, a week off with COVID can have a slight impact on the offense. And it might. But defensively, I expect the Bulldogs to pick up right where they left off.

Geoff Morrow: Tri-Valley 14, Hamburg 13: I foresee a competitive conflict in Berks County, as the defensive-minded Bulldogs will need their best to slow the hungry Hawks. An interesting, if rare, matchup.

Andy Sandrik: Hamburg 16, Tri-Valley 9: Maybe I’m overestimating Hamburg’s offense, but nobody has been able to shut out the Hawks, not even Wyomissing.

Adam Kulikowski: Tri-Valley 34, Hamburg 24: The Bulldogs were on quite the roll before a COVID hiatus sidelined T-V last week, yielding just seven points in three games while tallying 102 points.

Waynesboro at Shippensburg, 7

Andy Shay: Shippensburg 28, Waynesboro 26: There has been a quiet calm to the way the Greyhounds have gone about their business this season. That workmanlike approach will serve them well against the Indians. And if you don’t think Waynesboro is fully capable of winning this game, you would be wrong.

Geoff Morrow: Shippensburg 25, Waynesboro 21: I get the feeling that if Ship coach Eric Foust looked out his window at lunchtime and saw Bigfoot fighting a green alien, he’d mumble under his breath, “Hmm, interesting,” and then turn back to his sandwich and take a bite. In other words, it’s back to business. I think that kind of focus-on-the-task-at-hand attitude serves the Greyhounds well in this crucial Colonial scrap.

Andy Sandrik: Shippensburg 24, Waynesboro 15: Shippensburg would prefer to run the ball anyway, but when it does come to airing it out, will the ‘Hounds be going to Erby Weller (83 ypg), who likely draws the coverage of all-state DB Rhyan Day? This matchup could prove to be the difference in the game.

Adam Kulikowski: Waynesboro 26, Shippensburg 24: Look, Shippensburg is the team to beat in the Colonial. And hats off to Coach Foust and the Greyhounds because just about every year that statement is true. But tattoo the bullseye to their backs long enough, and someone is going to hit it. Maybe that is Waynesboro this week.

Williams Valley at Bloomsburg, 7

Andy Shay: Williams Valley 33, Bloomsburg 13: There have been individual flashes on offense for the Vikings, but they haven’t put together an outing where they pull both the run and pass together and just roll offensively. This could be that game.

Geoff Morrow: Bloomsburg 26, Williams Valley 21: I see this as a problem spot for the Vikings, whose hard-charging ship through the regular season was swamped unexpectedly last weekend. Meanwhile, after losses to three tough teams, the Panthers tasted victory for the first time last week and undoubtedly crave a lot more.

Andy Sandrik: Williams Valley 21, Bloomsburg 17: None of us saw the uppercut coming, the one from Minersville that ended the Vikings’ perfect season last week. Winning this road game is not automatic.

Adam Kulikowski: Williams Valley 34, Bloomsburg 17: The Vikings have shown flashes with quarterback ​​Isaac Whiteash topping the leaderboard in Week 4 passing yards with 349 and Alex Achenbach consistently a top rusher. A healthy Vikings team down the stretch could be tough to beat.

Saturday

Carlisle at Harrisburg, 1

Andy Shay: Harrisburg 28, Carlisle 21: Key for the Thundering Herd will be showing up and believing they can compete from the very first minute. Cougars are a blue-collar group this year, so you know they believe in what they are doing. Harrisburg is comfortable in a tight game, and that will show up.

Geoff Morrow: Harrisburg 33, Carlisle 20: An interesting matchup pitting two teams who started 3-0, then suffered (very different) losses to strong foes in Week 4. It’s a great test for each program, gauging how the kids do after swallowing disappointment last week. In Carlisle, I might have taken the Herd; but at Severance, I will not pick against the Cougars.

Andy Sandrik: Carlisle 24, Harrisburg 16: If Carlisle can put together four full quarters, you better believe they’ve got a chance to compete with Harrisburg.

Adam Kulikowski: Harrisburg 34, Carlisle 24: Dropping a game against Governor Mifflin on short notice shouldn’t be a knock against the Cougars — especially after the tallies in the win column against Pine-Richland, Hazleton and Manheim Township to start the season. Kyle Williams and the Cougars flex their strength in the trenches to pound past Carlisle.

Palmyra at Milton Hershey, 1:30

Andy Shay: Milton Hershey 42, Palmyra 19: The Spartans have shown themselves to be a consistent squad offensively and find ways to get what they need on the scoreboard. Cougars are up against it here.

Geoff Morrow: Milton Hershey 33, Palmyra 20: There might be better ways to spend a Saturday afternoon in Derry Township, but not many. Despite some uneven performances from both sides, I expect a clean effort and a competitive contest.

Andy Sandrik: Milton Hershey 36, Palmyra 14: I think it’s going to be tough sledding for Palmyra, but the Cougars should have a little more room to work than in last week’s 75-7 loss to McDevitt.

Adam Kulikowski: Milton Hershey 38, Palmyra 14: Some elements of Palmyra’s game seem to be rounding into form; I’m just not sure the Cougars will put it all together before squaring off against a Spartans squad that has proven to be a tough out.

CANCELED: Steel-High at Upper Dauphin

POSTPONED: None.

News and Notes: Schuylkill League

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Pine Grove’s Gaffney to duel with former mentor

Fresh off a needed 26-8 victory over Shenandoah Valley that capped Pine Grove’s all-day Homecoming festivities, fourth-year Cardinals head coach Frank Gaffney will lead his squad into Schuylkill Haven’s Rotary Field searching for a second straight victory. Problem is the Cards (1-3) must get past a Haven program that once included the former Lebanon Valley All-American as its defensive coordinator. And while Pine Grove used a solid ground game fueled by Lane Lehman (28-140, 2 TDs) and Colin Ibarra (12-65, TD) to muscle by Shenandoah Valley, Gaffney’s former boss Mike Farr likely will have something ready — even though the Hurricanes (1-2) and Tri-Valley sat out last weekend while dealing with COVID issues. If Haven can gum up Pine Grove’s rushing attack in the Colonial-Schuylkill crossover, that will put plenty of pressure on Cards freshman Carson Lengle to make some plays at the quarterback position. Lengle was just 1 of 12 against Shenandoah Valley, hitting Aaron Crumrine for a 14-yard gain. When Haven has the ball, Ibarra will try to match or better the 17 tackles the senior backer accrued in the Week 4 success.

Williams Valley finds itself in unfamiliar territory

Despite receiving a career-best effort from junior quarterback Isaac Whiteash — he completed 20 of his 36 pass attempts for 349 yards and one touchdown — Williams Valley (3-1) dropped a 47-24 decision to Minersville. Alex Achenbach added 92 rushing yards and one touchdown on 22 carries, while Hunter Wolfgang latched on to six Whiteash throws, racking up 170 yards and one score. Offense was not the problem, however, as Minersville quarterback John Adams targeted 15 of his 21 heaves for 399 yards and five touchdowns. Brock Polinsky and Jared Graeff each hauled in six throws for 162 and 137 yards, respectively, while combining for four scores. Bloomsburg (1-3), meanwhile, showcased its speed at the skill positions by wheeling past Midd-West 40-21. Running back Madden Locke caught five passes for 127 yards and two touchdowns, while quarterback Liam Zentner completed 8 of his 14 attempts for 144 yards and three scores. Zentner also ran for another score. Defensively, Bloom stuffed the box throughout, limiting Midd-West to minus-11 rushing yards. The Panthers were stung by three long touchdown passes — all in the second half — so how Mike Kogut’s club plays things will be interesting.

Tri-Valley hoping to regain form quickly

Idled last weekend by COVID issues that cost his club a date with Schuylkill Haven, Jeff Sampson’s Tri-Valley Bulldogs (3-0) will hit the road for a non-league engagement with Hamburg (3-1). Senior quarterback Jonas McGrath put together solid outings in Weeks 1 and 2 with sophomore wideout Layne Yoder his primary target. Hamburg strung together three straight victories, but ran into perennial hammer Wyomissing and its winning streak promptly went poof. Hamburg has a pair of solid runners in Diohnny Ruiz (24-273) and Tristan Baer (34-221), but the Hawks’ Xander Menapace (25-40-0, 401 yards, 5 TDs) will throw it. Kevin McFarland (10-135) has been Menapace’s main target, but Ruiz and Baer can catch it as well.

4th Down Magazine Class 3A-1A Player of the Week sponsored by Crown Trophy of Harrisburg

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We got ourselves a defensive playmaker as a Player of the Week.

Pine Grove linebacker/running back Colin Ibarra is the Week 4 Small School POTY winner, making him a rare breed in the weekly poll. And deserved it was.

The senior snatched up an impressive 17 tackles from his inside spot to fuel the Cardinals’ first win of the season, a 26-8 victory over Shenandoah Valley. Ibarra didn’t just get things done on defense, though, he also contributed a 3-yard scoring run in the second half and finished with 65 yards on 12 totes. 

His performance coming off a confidence-boosting victory led to 603 votes for the bruiser, some 36% of the 1,685 cast this week for the small-school nominees. That number easily beat out Williams Valley QB Isaac Whiteash, who finished in second with 299 tallies.

Ibarra now has 48 takedowns this season, which leads Pine Grove, and the team’s lone fumble recovery, according to MaxPreps. His 12 carries last week were his first of the season and made him the second-leading rusher on the team.

The Cardinals visit Schuylkill Haven in Week 5 as they aim for a second straight win.

4th Down Magazine Player of the Week (Class 6A-4A) sponsored by Crown Trophy of Harrisburg

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It was a week of career performances for many Mid-Penn running backs, so it only makes sense that one of several 200-yard rushers ran away with (get it?) this week’s 4th Down Big School Player of the Week honors.

The Mechanicsburg faithful showed up in force to support their guy, junior back Parker Sample, lifting him to 681 votes to take home the Week 4 honors.

Sample was certainly deserving. The first-year starter had easily his best performance of his career, shredding Boiling Springs for 245 yards and four touchdowns on just 22 carries. Sample scored on runs of 51, 23, 4 and 2 yards to propel the Wildcats to a 37-35 victory over the Bubblers in a matchup put together in the 11th hour after both teams lost their previous opponents due to COVID-19 complications.

The output was his first career 100-yard game and more than doubled his yards for the season entering the game (now at 458). And the four scores were his first rushing TDs since a Week 1 loss to Carlisle.

Sample earned 40% of the vote this week, topping Cedar Cliff senior RB Jontae Morris’s 473 tallies.

Sample and the Wildcats are back in action Friday against West Perry as they aim to improve to 4-1.

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