2020 Pa. Football Writers’ Class 2A All-State Team

OFFENSE

Quarterback

Johnny Gilchrist, Riverside — 5-10, 185 senior
Will Spochart, Berlin Brothersvalley — 6-3, 175 senior
Logan Pfister, Chestnut Ridge — 6-2, 189 senior
Jack Krug, Brookville — 6-0, 195 senior

Running Back
Josh Hough, Beaver Falls — 6-3, 230 senior
Gavin Garcia, Southern Columbia — 5-9, 190 junior
Darren Miller, Wilmington — 5-11, 185 senior
Anthony Stallworth, Farrell — 6-0, 195 junior
Zack Miller, South Williamsport — 5-10, 175 senior
Ethan Susen, Wilmington — 5-9, 170 senior

Wide Receiver
Matt Whysong, Chestnut Ridge — 6-0, 171 junior
Brice Butler, Farrell — 5-9, 175 senior
Klay Fitzroy, Apollo-Ridge — 6-4, 198 senior

Tight End
Mason Leib, Penns Valley — 6-0, 210 senior 


Offensive Line
Connor Vass-Gal, Wilmington — 6-2, 320 senior
Gary Satterwhite III, Farrell — 6-3, 295 senior
Mitchell Myers, Beaver Falls — 6-2, 222 senior
Jacob Chimiak, Wilmington — 6-2, 315 senior
Mitch Miles, Laurel — 6-4, 295 senior
Weston Phanco, Wilmington — 6-2, 280 senior

Athlete
Zach Mallon, Bellwood-Antis — 6-2, 190 senior
Kellen Stahl, Richland — 5-11, 185 junior
Garrett Laudenslager, Line Mountain — 6-2, 200 senior

DEFENSE

Defensive Line  

Spencer Perry, Neshannock — 6-5, 230 senior
Connor Rager, Richland — 6-3, 270 senior
Dominick Bridi, Line Mountain — 6-1, 215 senior
Derek Berlitz, Southern Columbia — 6-1, 225 junior

Linebacker

Wade Kerstetter, Southern Columbia — 5-11, 210 senior
Tyler Jones, Beaver Falls — 5-9, 185 senior
Taidon Strickland, Farrell — 6-0, 210 junior
Nathan Waltman, Karns City — 6-5, 240 senior
Ian Eckenrode, Cambria Heights — 6-1, 195 senior
Diontae Givens, Sto-Rox — 6-1, 230 senior

Defensive Back
Caelen Bender, Wilmington — 5-10, 190 senior
Aaron Willis, Windber — 6-0, 165 senior
Darius Bruce, Westinghouse — 6-0, 187 senior
Jake Davis, Southern Columbia — 5-11, 165 senior

Specialist
Brady Glessner, Berlin Brothersvalley — 5-7, 133 senior

Athlete
Mason Reed, Wilmington — 6-0, 170 senior
Cole Serfass, Palmerton — 6-3, 200 sophomore

PLAYER OF THE YEAR: 
Gavin Garcia, Southern Columbia
COACH OF THE YEAR: 
Brandon Phillian, Wilmington

2020 Pa. Football Writers’ Class 1A All-State Team

CLASS 1A2020 Pa. Football Writers’ Class 1A All-State Team


OFFENSE

Quarterback

Brad Birch, Jeannette — 6-2, 190 freshman
Ben Schmidt, Homer-Center — 6-1, 203 senior
Bryce Herb, Williams Valley — 5-11, 180 senior
Alex Erby, Steelton-Highspire — 6-2, 185 freshman
 

Running Back

Cole Toy, Reynolds — 6-1, 195 senior
Dontae Sanders, Clairton — 6-2, 235 senior
Jaedon Zuzak, California — 5-9, 210 senior
Keegan Myrick, Bishop Guilfoyle — 6-0, 171 senior
Hunter Cameron, United — 5-11, 210 senior
Odell Greene, Steelton-Highspire — 5-11, 190 senior

Wide Receiver

James Sanders, Jeannette — 5-7, 150 senior
Damein Hammonds, Steelton-Highspire — 6-2, 175 senior
Brett Birch, Jeannette — 5-10, 170 junior
Mehki Flowers, Steelton-Highspire — 6-3, 195 junior

Tight End
Jesse Engle, Williams Valley — 6-1, 225 senior

Offensive Line
Cyllel Rose, Old Forge — 5-11, 260 sophomore
Rocco John-Daniello, Reynolds — 6-2, 290 senior
Luke Faber, Reynolds — 6-4, 250 senior
Isaac Harris, Muncy — 6-4, 235 junior
Colt Bickford, Glendale — 6-6, 315 senior
Da’Metrius Weatherspoon, Clairton — 6-7, 315 senior 

Athlete
Jay Pearson, Our Lady of the Sacred Heart — 5-11, 190 junior
Ben Terry, Mahanoy Area — 6-0, 170 senior

DEFENSE


Defensive Line

Cameron Maloney, Bishop Guilfoyle — 6-0, 215 senior
Tydre Holland-Ali, Steelton-Highspire — 6-3, 225 senior
Chad Morningstar, Tussey Mountain — 6-0, 271 senior
Joe Mansfield, Redbank Valley — 6-2, 180 junior
Andrew Yanoshak, Bishop Guilfoyle — 6-3, 241 senior

Linebacker

Colin Holzman, Old Forge — 5-8, 205 senior
Nate Schilling, Blacklick Valley — 5-11, 185 junior
Seth Rosey, Conemaugh Township — 5-6, 163 senior
Logan Williard, Williams Valley — 5-8, 155 sophomore
Tyler Clark, Williamsburg — 5-8, 182 senior
Ethan Gush, Muncy — 5-11, 185 senior

Defensive Back

Jackson Byer, Conemaugh Township — 5-11, 180 senior
Ryan Stahl, Halifax — 6-2, 185 senior
Jake Herman, Williams Valley — 6-0, 180 senior
Ross Eyer, Muncy — 6-4, 172 sophomore

Specialist
Bryan Hernandez, Steelton-Highspire — 5-10, 175 senior 

Athlete
Michael DiGregorio, Old Forge — 5-11, 165 senior
Tate Neiderer, Delone Catholic — 5-10, 175 senior

PLAYER OF THE YEAR: Mehki Flowers, Steelton-Highspire
COACH OF THE YEAR: 
Andrew Erby, Steelton-Highspire

Making the Grade: A position-by-position breakdown of Steel-High’s 32-20 victory against Jeannette in the PIAA Class 1A championship

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When Steel-High gets to a PIAA championship game in Hershey, the Rollers have enjoyed recent success with titles in 2007, 2008 and now 2020.

This game was in the balance in the fourth quarter and turnovers played a huge role, two pick-sixes covering 151 total yards five minutes apart, but so did running the ball to wind the clock and a run defense that was solid all game.

Jeannette was forced to be one dimensional by a Steel-High defensive front and linebackers that surrendered very little in the running game.

And the 195 yards rushing from Odell Greene on 35 carries can’t be overlooked in terms of its value. With athletes and playmakers all over the field, it was the Rollers’ defense that sealed a perfect season and the state title. 

Time to hand out some grades.

JEANNETTE JAYHAWKS

Quarterback: I’m grading this with a curve because the injury to sensational freshman quarterback Brad Birch, who was on crutches, robbed this game of a great freshman QB matchup. Roberto Smith Sr. is a huge weapon, but was forced to play quarterback. He threw for nearly 400 yards, but couldn’t get anything in the running game. He threw four interceptions including a pair of fourth-quarter pick-sixes. I didn’t think either throw was bad. The second one went off the hands of his receiver. For a back-up forced to play he was well above average. Grade: B

Running Back: Smith was the best option running the ball. He had 19 of the Jayhawks’ 25 total carries for only 32 yards. They wanted to run but couldn’t. I can just imagine what he could do without having to be the QB at his normal RB positoin. Grade: C

Wide Receivers: The Jayhawks had three hammers at wideout and pushed the Rollers like nobody this season. Senior Toby Cline is fast, tough and not easy to bring down at 5-9. He had seven grabs for 149 yards. Brett Birch and James Sanders each had a touchdown and combined for 11 grabs, 210 yards. This group was the best trio I’ve seen all season. Grade: A+

Offensive Line: I was surprised a little how much they struggled to create any space or clean holes in the run game and it became a problem as the game wore on. Their pass protection was spectacular and their interior blocking on those bubble screens was on point, too. Grade: B-

Defensive Line: It was tough sledding for this group against an offense that is balanced and stretches this group. Posted three sacks and didn’t make it easy to run the ball. Rollers had 200-plus yards rushing, but that wasn’t the DL falling apart. Grade: B-

Linebackers: Sophomore Elijah Binakonsky and classmate Jaishaun Jamison each had eight tackles to lead the Jayhawks. Biggest problem was in the fourth quarter they were getting gashed on the second level in the run game. Grade: C+

Secondary: It’s the same dudes who play wide receiver, Sanders, Cline and Birch, and they were fabulous. Sanders is only 5-9 and covered Flowers like a glove despite giving away four inches. The Rollers’ deep passing game didn’t hit once. Grade: A

Special Teams: Cline also punted and he flipped the field two or three times that made a huge difference. He finished the day averaging 48 yards on five punts. Those are college numbers. And the roll counts in high school, right? Smith missed a short field and extra point and that came into play. Coverage unit on kickoffs was very good. Grade: B+

STEEL-HIGH ROLLERS

Quarterback: The Rollers took their shots early and they didn’t hit. Late in the first half, they changed up and took what the defense was giving them in the shorter passing game and Alex Erby was extremely effective and efficient. He finished with 183 yards, completed 16 of 23 passes with two interceptions and a touchdown. Solid numbers. Grade: B

Running Back: For the second week in a row, Odell Greene was a beast inside but never shook loose for a big one. The offense settled down and was more efficient once Greene became the focal point. He rumbled and battled for 195 yards on 35 carries with a touchdown. Steel-High doesn’t win a state title without him. Grade: A+

Wide Receivers: On the first play of the game Mehki Flowers re-injured his aggravated ankle and had to hobble his way through this one. That 50-yard catch-and-run was all he could do but it was still a great play. Hammonds caught everything thrown his way to finish with 11 grabs for 75 yards. Grade: A

Offensive Line: Early on it was a struggle for this group, but once they found their footing late in the first quarter they became a huge key. Thryi Duncan and Tydre Holland-Ali were the best of the group. More than 200 yards on the ground is always means the OL did its job. Grade: A-

Defensive Line: For the second straight week the quartet of — Tydree Holland-Ali, Andrew Erby Jr., Eugene Green and Kyler Raye-Williams — played a monster role in the Rollers celebrating after the final whistle. Green had 5.5 tackles, 3.5 tackles for a loss, one sack and forced a fumble. He’s a freshman and couldn’t be blocked. Grade: A+

Linebackers: Jaeion Perry and Amari Williams are only freshmen and finished first and third in tackles for the Rollers. Perry led the Rollers with 9.5 tackles, including eight solo stops and Williams had six solo tackles. They were a forced inside and outside all game. Grade: A+

Secondary: So you give up nearly 400 yards passing, but at the same time you come up with four interceptions including a pair of pick-sixes in the fourth quarter. Junior Daivin Pryor was the target of the Jayhawks and he gave up some big play. But he also had a pick-six and made nine tackles. He was the unsung hero of this group. Grade: A-

Special Teams: Once again Bryan Hernandez played a big role with a field goal to give the Rollers a 17-14 lead heading into the fourth quarter. Punt return coverage was excellent and the kickoff coverage was above board. All punts were allowed to hit the ground and was a mystery why. Gave up a lot of yards. Grade: B

The Champs!: Steel-High’s defense shuts down Jeannette to claim the PIAA Class 1A title, 32-20 at Hersheypark Stadium

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By Andy Shay: 

An old-school formula of running the ball and defense carried Steel-High to its first PIAA championship since 2008.

The Rollers used big plays on defense and a stingy run defense to make WPIAL champion Jeannette one-dimensional Friday at Hersheypark Stadium.

A pair of pick-6 touchdowns in the fourth quarter by Rollers defensive backs Daivin Pryor and Damein Hammonds proved the difference on the scoreboard as Steel-High pulled away from the Jayhawks to post a 32-20 PIAA Class 1A title-game victory.

“This is the best feeling ever, the best feeling,” said Steel-High star wideout Mehki Flowers. “To come off seasons where we had a lot of losses to get here and win is really special.”

In a game with nine total turnovers — five for the Rollers and four for the Jayhawks — it was the two interceptions in the fourth quarter that proved to be the difference between these two high-powered offenses.

With Steel-High nursing a 17-14 lead in the fourth quarter, Jeannette was on the move. Facing a fourth-and-3 at the Rollers’ 28, Jayhawks QB Roberto Smith Sr. threw a rifle into the flat that Pryor, who finished with 10 tackles, snared and went 79 yards the other way to make it 24-14.

Jeannette (10-2) came right back, and Smith hit James Sanders for a 47-yard catch-and-run to make it 24-20.

The Rollers were seemingly putting the game on ice before running back Odell Greene, who finished with a game-high 195 yards on 35 carries, fumbled at the Jayhawks 25 with 3:04 to play.

“Both teams took shots and hit some, and both turned the ball over,” Steel-High coach Alex Erby said. “At the end of the day, the last few weeks we have found ways to win and that’s made it a real special run.”

Jeannette moved from its own 25 to the Steel-High 26-yard line with less than 90 seconds to play.

Smith threw another out pass that went through receiver Brett Birch’s  hands, and Hammonds made a one-handed grab of the deflection in tight space and raced 72 yards to the end zone for the clinching score.

“I saw green. To be honest, we had to make a business decision and get up on our man and give them as little breathing room as possible,” said Hammonds, who also had 11 receptions for 75 yards on offense. “We stepped up and made big-time plays in a big-time game.”

The pick-6 touchdowns stole the show, but the grind by the Rollers’ defensive front and linebackers was a difference maker in this game. Jeannette had only 21 yards rushing and was forced to throw to move the ball — finishing with 382 yards passing.

“Our offense has been one of our best assets all season,” Flowers said. “For our defense to come out here and get a couple pick-sixes and four interceptions says a lot.”

Balance by the Rollers offensively also played a huge part in a game that was tied 14-all at halftime and was 17-14 heading into the fourth quarter. Steel-High had 209 yards on the ground, and freshman QB Alex Erby threw for 183 yards.

“The recipe I learned from coach Rob Deibler, you have to run the ball and stop the run late to win championships,” coach Erby said. “I was around those teams he coached. You can’t throw it around all the time, and Odell running the ball behind our line has been a difference the last couple of weeks.”

ROLLERS 32, JAYHAWKS 20

Steel-High  7-7-3-15 — 32

Jeannette     7-7-0-6 — 20

First quarter

J-Brett Birch 34 pass from Roberto Smith (Smith kick), 6:15

SH-Mehki Flowers 50 pass from Alex Erby (Bryan Hernandez kick), 3:10

Second quarter

J-Smith 4 run (Smith kick), 6:17

SH-Odell Greene 1 run (Hernandez kick), :18

Third quarter

SH-FG Hernandez 22, 3:58

Fourth quarter

SH-Daivin Pryor 79 interception return (Hernandez kick), 6:28

J-James Sanders 47 pass from Smith (kick failed), 5:57

SH-Damein Hammonds 72 interception return (Pryor run), 1:27

Team stats                  J                       SH

First downs                 18                    22

Rush-yards                  25-21               48-209

Passing                        382                  183

Comp-Att-Int               22-46-4           16-23-2

Fumbles-lost               1-0                   4-3

Punts-Avg.                   5-48                 3-37.7

Penalties-yards           10-82               6-50

Individual statistics

RUSHING: Jeannette, Roberto Smith 19-12, J. Canady 3-10, Toby Cline 2-6, Brett Birch 1-(minus-7); Steel-High, Odell Green 35-195, Mehki Flowers 5-34, Damein Hammonds 3-15, Jaeion Perry 1-(minus-1), Alex Erby 4-(minus-34).

PASSING: Jeannette, Roberto Smith 22-45-4—382, James Sanders 0-1-0—0; Steel-High, Alex Erby 16-23-2—183.

RECEIVING: Jeannette, Toby Cline 7-149, James Sanders 5-112, Brett Birch 6-98, Kaelen Puscar 3-22, J. Canady 1-1; Steel-High, Damein Hammonds 11-75, Mehki Flowers 3-56, Daivon Pryor 1-29, Tyrone Moore 1-23.

News and Notes: Schuylkill League

By Michael Bullock: 

Williams Valley, Tri-Valley share District 11-A crown

A COVID -19 flare-up caused the District 11 Class 1A championship game between Williams Valley and Tri-Valley to be put on hold and not played on Nov. 13. But now the continuation of that outbreak caused that title contest to be scrapped entirely. As a result, Williams Valley (8-1) and Tri-Valley (5-1) will share the 11-A crown. For Williams Valley, it’s the third 11-A championship in four seasons. And in Tri-Valley’s case, it’s the second title in three seasons. These backyard rivals actually were to meet for the fourth consecutive year with an 11-A title going to the victor. Since District 11 had decided earlier this season not to send its champions to the PIAA playoffs, D-11’s choice to scrap a fiercely contested clash had no bearing on that tournament. For those who may have forgotten, Williams Valley rallied from a 21-7 halftime deficit to defeat Tri-Valley 35-28 in the regular-season engagement.

4th Down Magazine’s Picks and Predictions for the Week of November 27-28

Andy Shay: Last week 5-1; Overall 128-36

Jake Adams: Last week 6-0; Overall 123-41

Geoff Morrow: Last week 5-1; Overall 120-44

Andy Sandrik: Last week 6-0; Overall 120-44

FRIDAY’S GAMES

PIAA Playoffs at Hersheypark Stadium

Class 1A Championship: 3-1 Steel-High vs. 7-1 Jeannette, 11 a.m.

Andy Shay: Steel-High 24, Jeannette 21: In a season where the kicker wins a state semifinal game and the Rollers extend back-to-back games on late defensive holding calls, kinda feels like the old legends of Steelton are having a say in the destiny of this Rollers team. Jeannette has just as many athletes as the Rollers, and the potential exists for a couple of freshmen to be the starting quarterbacks. Being forced to play a more physical style the last two games has the Rollers better prepared. This is razor-thin for me, though. 

Jake Adams: Jeannette 35, Steel-High 28: Despite rising cases, stricter capacity limits and a “COVID-19 concern,” per TribLive, involving Jeannette in recent weeks, here we stand. State championship weekend. I hope everyone stays safe. Rollers have been a team of destiny the last few weeks, but I’m not sure that extends into Championship Friday. 

Andy Sandrik: Jeannette 30, Steel-High 27: I’m not doubting the Rollers’ ability to compete here, but after scrapping to wins in three straight 50-50 postseason games, the odds are against Steel-High running that streak to four.

Geoff Morrow: Steel-High 33, Jeannette 28: Thinking about Jeannette always brings back fond memories of ol’ Patriot-News pal Rod Frisco sitting in on a PIAA preview show in 2007 and fielding quite an interesting phone call (live) while discussing the Jayhawks, Frisky trying his damndest to maintain composure in the hilarious moment. That Terrelle Pryor-led team won the Class AA title that year, while Steel-High claimed the Class A crown. As for this year’s matchup, the Jayhawks are favorites, but I’m riding with the local team of destiny.

Class 3A Championship: 3-1 Wyomissing vs. 7-1 Central Valley, 3:30

Andy Shay: Central Valley 34, Wyomissing 31: For all the talk about offense – and there should be plenty of chat about each offense – this game to me is ALL about defense. Ameer Dudley is going to test a Wyomissing secondary I think is pretty darn good but hasn’t faced this. Can a CV defense that has been lights out all season knock the Spartans off their Wing-T rocker? Man, this is the most intriguing game on the slate, in my opinion.

Jake Adams: Central Valley 42, Wyomissing 28: A bunch of Division I talent in this game, but the advantage tilts to CV’s lights-out defense. 

Andy Sandrik: Wyomissing 35, Central Valley 34: It’s weird not picking games to protect my first-place lead (congrats to Andy Shay), so I have no problem picking the Wyomissing machine to pull off the upset.

Geoff Morrow: Central Valley 34, Wyomissing 24: The Warriors have scored at least 35 points each game, while the Spartans have yet to allow anything more than 16 points in a game. So, naturally, I’m picking something in between. Watched former CV standout Jordan Whitehead pick off a Jared Goff pass for the Bucs on Monday Night Football. His Warriors team reached the Class AAA finals in 2014 but lost. This visit, though, I’m expecting a victory – especially if Whitehead sneaks into uniform.

Class 5A Championship: 10-1 Cathedral Prep vs. 7-1 Pine-Richland, 8

Andy Shay: Pine-Richland 49, Cathedral Prep 20: I’m not sure I see an avenue for Cathedral Prep to keep it close. And the Ramblers are a high-level PIAA pedigree program. Rams came storming back last week to overtake Governor Mifflin after falling behind 21-0 and 41-19. Pine-Richland is a machine and has so many options in that offense, it just seems destined to overpower Prep.

Jake Adams: Pine-Richland 48, Cathedral Prep 24: Oh look, Prep hasn’t played in three weeks. Coronavirus! Let’s give this to the Rams. Not long ago, their basketball team upset Carlisle in the state semifinals. That was an adventurous night, a story for another day. 

Andy Sandrik: Pine-Richland 45, Cathedral Prep 35: Once while playing tennis, I tore out my knee and foolishly continued to play. My mobility was gone, of course, but I turned up the intensity on my serves and returns and went on to win. What’s my point? Cathedral Prep is being painted as this vulnerable, wounded animal, and while the Ramblers are underdogs, don’t underestimate the power of a wounded animal backed into a corner.

Geoff Morrow: Pine-Richland 55, Cathedral Prep 20: This is no offense to the Ramblers, who I’m sure will remember how to play football after receiving back-to-back COVID forfeits to get here. But the Rams are an absolute machine, one that I highly doubt will be slowed down in this late-evening slugfest. Governor Mifflin is the second-best team in Class 5A.

SATURDAY’S GAMES

PIAA Playoffs at Hersheypark Stadium

Class 2A Championship: 4-1 Southern Columbia vs. 10-1 Wilmington, 11 a.m.

Andy Shay: Southern Columbia 54, Wilmington 14: It’s hard to see anybody giving the Tigers a game into the fourth quarter in Class 2A, including Wilmington. It’s just a Susquehanna River between Southern and everybody else in this classification. Wilmington earned its shot the hard way, and you have to respect the grind to get to this game. Talent-wise, though, it’s a stacked deck for the Tigers.

Jake Adams: Southern Columbia 52, Wilmington 10: I know the rules. The Tigers win this one. Only research I did was to check SC’s margin of victory in recent games. The technical term is “a lot to a little.”

Andy Sandrik: Southern Columbia 45, Wilmington 21: I’ve seen at least one dissenting view on Twitter claiming that Wilmington can win this game. Not sure if I agree with that, but we’d all love to at least see a competitive game here. 

Geoff Morrow: Southern Columbia 58, Wilmington 14: The Tigers are annoyingly good. Their dominance sucks the fun out of it for all but the SC community. And, because of what they’ve done to Wilmington in previous state title matchups, I don’t mind admitting I’m rooting for something closer and more exciting, at least for the Greyhounds. However, how the heck do you argue with pure dominance (46 ppg) and a 58-game winning streak? Short answer: You don’t.

Class 4A Championship: 4-1 Jersey Shore vs. 7-1 Thomas Jefferson, 3:30

Andy Shay: Thomas Jefferson 42, Jersey Shore 20: This is a monumental accomplishment for the Bulldogs and District 4. I just see Thomas Jefferson as a football bully, and with the schedule the Jaguars have played, they have every right to believe they can push you around. Because they’ve already done that. Tackling is a difference-maker for me in this game, and TJ tackles very, very well.

Jake Adams: Jersey Shore 37, Thomas Jefferson 34: I will never understand a school named Jersey Shore located in the space between Lock Haven and Williamsport, some 200 miles away from the actual Jersey Shore. Pennsylvania, man.

Andy Sandrik: Jersey Shore 35, Thomas Jefferson 28: I’m kind of stuck on this one, so instead of flipping a coin, I’m going to go with the school that shares the name of the show that was playing in the delivery room when my daughter was born. #Analysis

Geoff Morrow: Thomas Jefferson 28, Jersey Shore 21: The No. 1 Bulldogs are unbeaten and a bit of a feel-good story, the program being less than a decade removed from an 0-10 season (2012). But the Jaguars are defending champs and, though ranked No. 2 by recent birthday boy Eric Epler, still feel to me like favorites. TJ’s big-game experience could be a factor, especially if Jersey Shore starts a tad slowly.

Class 6A Championship: 12-1 St. Joseph’s Prep vs. 3-1 Central York, 8

Andy Shay: St. Joseph’s Prep 49, Central York 20: Until you step on the field and get a real-snap look at what SJP brings to the table, it’s hard to comprehend. Key for Central York is to navigate the first 8-10 minutes with minimal damage. QB Beau Pribula will play a HUGE role in keeping the Panthers hunting after 12 minutes. SJP has all the god-given talent you need; are the Hawks hungry, though? The Panthers are ferociously hungry but have to find a way to get past that first 12 minutes without having to chase the tail of the dog. Go down 14-0 in this one, and it looks a LOT different than it did against McDowell a week ago.

Jake Adams: Central York 52, St. Joseph’s Prep 49: Yeah, I know the odds on this. But a week or two ago, I said I was riding with the Panthers because this was fun as heck, and I’m gonna stick with it. I don’t care if half of Prep’s roster is made up of the sons of former NFLers I watched with a bowl of Spaghettios in my hands at 10 years old.

Andy Sandrik: St. Joseph’s Prep 43, Central York 27: If the Hawks can get past Central York, that should be enough to move them up in the state rankings ahead of Penn State and just behind the Philadelphia Eagles.

Geoff Morrow: St. Joseph’s Prep 57, Central York 34: Look, I’ll be honest, having the sons of Jeremiah “The Axe Man” Trotter in the Hawks’ lineup is kind of a big deal to this lifelong Eagles fan, though the elder brother (Jeremiah Jr.) is questionable with an injury. I love the Panthers’ rise from York County rubbish to state finalists, and I wouldn’t be the least bit disappointed if they finished this storybook season with a W, especially against a program as annually stacked as St. Joe’s. But there’s a TON of talent for Central to overcome here. The Hawks are championship regulars for a reason.

4th Down Magazine’s Player of the Week presented by Crown Trophy

By 4th Down Staff: 

Steel-High has not had to call on its kicker much of this season, not with an offense that has the capacity of scoring 75 points in a game.

But Bryan Hernandez was needed in Saturday’s PIAA Class 1A semifinal victory, 16-14 over Bishop Guilfoyle, and he delivered. 

Hernandez’s 34-yard boot with 42 seconds left gave the Rollers the victory, booked a trip to the state championship this weekend and won him our 4th Down Magazine Player of the Week honor.

Fans voted for Hernandez in earnest, as he earned 873 votes, 45% of the 1,939 votes cast this week for the last remaining teams in action. 

He beat out Mechanicsburg WR-DB by a slim 68 votes to win POTW. 

The Rollers face District 7 champ Jeannette in Friday’s title game at 11 a.m. at Hersheypark Stadium. 

Eric F. Epler’s State High School Football Rankings (Edition 10)

By Eric F. Epler:

CLASS 6A                                  Rec.      Previous
1. St. Joseph’s Prep (12)             5-0       1
2. Central York (3)                      10-0     3
3. McDowell (10)                        7-1       2
4. La Salle College HS (6-1)      6-1       4
5. Souderton (1)                         7-1       7
6. Pittsburgh C.C. (7)                  6-3       5
7. North Allegheny (7)                6-1       6
8. Nazareth (11)                         8-0       8
9. Harrisburg (3)                         4-1       9
10. Pennridge (1)                       6-1       10
Honorable mention: Central Dauphin (3) 5-1, Delaware Valley (2) 5-2, Spring-Ford (1) 6-1, Wilson (3) 6-1, York High (3) 7-1.

CLASS 5A                                  Rec.      Previous 

1. Pine-Richland (7)                    10-0     1
2. Governor Mifflin (3)                8-1       2
3. Cathedral Prep (10)                7-2       3
4. Warwick (3)                           8-1       4
5. Upper Dublin (1)                    6-2       5
6. Peters Township (7)                8-1       6
7. Gateway (7)                           5-1       7
8. Mechanicsburg (3)                  7-1       9
9. Penn-Trafford (7)                   6-2       NR
10. East Stroudsburg South (11)  4-1       9
Honorable mention: New Oxford (3) 6-1, Southern Lehigh (11) 5-2, Unionville (1) 3-1, West Chester Rustin (1) 4-2.

CLASS 4A                                  Rec.      Previous 

1. Jersey Shore (4)                      11-0     1
2. Thomas Jefferson (7)              9-1       3
3. Lampeter-Strasburg (3)           9-1       2
4. Aliquippa (7)                          9-1       4
5. Bishop McDevitt (3)                6-0       6
6. Oil City (10)                            10-1     5
7. Crestwood (2)                        8-1       7
8. ELCO (3)                                 7-1       8
9. Plum (7)                                 8-1       9
10. Allentown C.C. (11)               7-2       NR
Honorable mention: Belle Vernon (7) 6-2, Conrad Weiser (3) 6-1, Harbor Creek (10) 7-1, Juniata (3) 5-2, McKeesport (7) 6-2, 10 Northwestern Lehigh (11) 7-2, Upper Moreland (1) 5-1. 

CLASS 3A                                  Rec.      Previous  

1. Central Valley (7)                    11-0     1
2. Wyomissing (3)                      9-0       2
3. Bedford (5)                            10-1     3
4. Danville (4)                            9-2       4
5. Notre Dame-Green Pond (11) 8-0       5
6. Hickory (10)                           8-1       6
7. Montoursville (4)                    8-1       7
8. North Schuylkill (11)               7-0       8
9. Elizabeth-Forward (7)             7-1       9
10. Lakeland (2)                         5-1       10
Honorable mention: Central Martinsburg (6) 8-1, Lake-Lehman (2) 7-2, Middletown (3) 4-2, North Catholic (7) 8-1, Tyrone (6) 6-2.

CLASS 2A                                  Rec.      Result 

1. Southern Columbia (4)            11-0     1
2. Wilmington (10)                     10-0     2
3. Beaver Falls (7)                       10-1     3
4. Bishop McDevitt (12)              5-2       4
5. Sto-Rox (7)                             8-2       5
6. Richland (6)                            8-2       6
7. Berlin-Brothersvalley (5)         8-1       7
8. Apollo-Ridge (7)                     6-1       8
9. Farrell (10)                             5-3       9
10. Chestnut Ridge (5)                7-3       10
Honorable mention: Bellwood-Antis (6) 7-1, Brookville (9) 7-1, Camp Hill (3) 3-3, South Williamsport (4) 5-2, York Catholic (3) 6-2.

CLASS 1A                                  Rec.      Previous

1. Jeannette (7)                          10-1     1
2. Steel-High (3)                         9-0       2
3. Old Forge (2)                          5-1       3
4. Clairton (7)                             7-1       6
5. Bishop Guilfoyle (6)                7-3       5
6. Reynolds (10)                         9-1       4
7. Williams Valley (11)                8-1       7
8. Muncy (4)                              7-2       8
9. Tri-Valley (11)                        5-1       9
10. Redbank Valley (9)                7-1       10
Honorable mention: Canton (4) 4-1, Delone Catholic (3) 6-1, Homer-Center (6) 6-2, Juniata Valley (6) 6-3, Northwestern (10) 7-1, Rochester (7) 7-2.

4th Down Magazine Player of the Week presented by Crown Trophy

By 4th Down staff:

Welcome to 4th Down Magazine’s vote for Player of the Week presented by Crown Trophy of Harrisburg (in Lemoyne).

The nominees for the week are listed below. Vote for the player with the most impressive performance.

The poll will remain open until Tuesday evening at 11 p.m. and voting is allowed once per hour. The winner will be announced Wednesday evening.

CrownTrophy HorizontalLogo Color HbgLemoyne 11 19

Micah Brubaker, QB, Mechanicsburg: Brubaker capped off his career in style, chucking the ball for a career-high 302 yards on 20-of-32 passing. He hit James Anderson for a 38-yard TD to ice a 21-7 win over Northern, which also happened to clinch the Wildcats the Mid-Penn Colonial title, their first division crown since 2008. Brubaker added 77 rushing yards and TDs of 16 and 2 yards.

James Anderson, WR-DB, Mechanicsburg: The only TD pass of the entire game went to Anderson who posted his second straight 100-yard game after hauling in five passes for 112 yards and a 38-yard score in the Wildcats’ division-clinching 21-7 victory over Northern. 

Mehki Flowers, WR-DB-KR, Steel-High: If not for Flowers’s two fourth-quarter touchdowns, the Rollers’ kicker never would’ve had a chance at his late-game heroics in a 16-14 PIAA semifinal victory over Bishop Guilfoyle. Flowers hauled in six passes for 132 yards, including an 87-yard TD that got it to 14-13. His 4-yard run five minutes prior got S-H on the board. He added six rushes for 29 yards.

Bryan Hernandez, K, Steel-High: Give it to him. The part-time soccer player, part time football player drilled the biggest kick of his life, a 34-yarder with 42 ticks left to give the Rollers a 16-14 victory over Bishop Guilfoyle in the PIAA Class 2A semifinals. He also nailed his only PAT attempt.

Odell Greene, RB, Steel-High: Greene redeemed himself after a first-play fumble, finishing with a game-high 131 yards on 25 carries (which was the second most in the contest). Greene averaged 5.2 yards a pop and added a 4-yard reception in the Rollers’ PIAA Class 1A semifinal victory over Bishop Guilfoyle, 16-14.

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Making the Grade: A breakdown of Steel-High’s 16-14 victory against Bishop Guilfoyle

By Andy Shay: 

Defense dominated the PIAA Class 1A semifinal at Cottage Hill between Steel-High and Bishop Guilfoyle. The Rollers earned their first berth in a state final in a dozen years on the strength of a field goal. Steel-High and field goal to win it. Welcome to COVID-19 football in 2020.

You have to give the District 6 champion Marauders credit. They did everything right to win this game. Their pass defense was outstanding, they moved the chains and kept the ball away from Steel-High by converting on third down.

This game went sideways for the Rollers in a hurry with a fumble returned for a touchdown on the opening play. They trailed 7-0 until the fourth quarter on the strength of a defense that was outstanding on first and second down but struggled to get off the field. It was a classic bend but don’t break.

In the end the best player on the field, Mehki Flowers for the Rollers, was the difference maker in a 16-14 victory.

And for the second week in a row a defensive holding call gave the Rollers a second chance when it looked like their season was over. That’s a tightrope act right there for you.

Time to hand out some grades.

BISHOP GUILFOYLE MARAUDERS

Quarterback: Senior Konner Kiesewetter isn’t a pure throwing quarterback by any stretch of the imagination. He attempted only 11 passes, but he hung in the pocket and delivered the goods by catching his receivers in stride. And the arching deep ball hit the mark almost every time. He completed only six passes but averaged nearly 31 yards per completion to finish with 185 passing yards. He gave his team a shot. Grade: A

Running Back: The best player on the field for the Marauders was senior RB-DB Keegan Myrick. And he showed up. He was sharp on the outside and pushed the pile when he ran inside. He carried 28 times for 117 yards. And the Rollers defense did a good job against him. He’s a kid any coach would love to have. Grade: A

Wide Receivers: Haiden Garner is only a junior and lined up at QB and RB. He’s a weapon as a receiver. That 58-yard catch-and-run was impressive in the dying seconds. He pulled away from a couple Rollers to get extra yards. His other grab went for 39 yards. I didn’t see one catchable ball dropped.   Grade: A

Offensive Line: So, the two tackles on the outside and the tight ends were fabulous. For the inside trio it was a struggle as there was nothing available between the tackles. But outside there were clean holes and those seal blocks were executed well all game. Grade: B

Defensive Line: There was room to roam up the middle most of the game, and that was a problem. Those jet sweeps were handled well in terms of sealing the edge. I think at the point of attack they were getting pushed around more than they are used to. Grade: C+

Linebackers: There was a lot of run blitzing by the Marauders, and it was coming from everywhere. They closed down a lot of big gainers in a hurry by making sure tackles in space. Physical and quick. Grade: B+

Secondary: One play was a huge difference. If you give up one big play to the Rollers, you’ve had a good day. But in a tight, low-scoring game it was that one 87-yard play where they missed four tackles that stands out. Otherwise, they kept everything in front of them and provided good run support on the edge. Grade: B

Special Teams: I loved the plan for kickoffs and punts to keep the ball away from the speedy Rollers return guys. The execution was flawless, and the coverage was outstanding. I don’t get the fake punt in the fourth quarter on fourth-and-1 around midfield. That was a mistake. And two missed field goals was a difference maker on the scoreboard. Grade: C

STEEL-HIGH ROLLERS

Quarterback: Alex Erby struggled all game. The freshman struggled to make the short passes look easy, and his two interceptions in the first half were huge mistakes in a 7-0 game. One came in the red zone. His best throw of the day was a 15-yard dart over the middle on the eventual winning drive on fourth-and-12. He’s young, and this was a high-stakes game. He had plenty of help on a day when he struggled. Grade: C+

Running Back: Odell Greene was a beast inside but never shook loose for a big one. That’s a credit to the other team. He navigates in tight spaces inside the tackles so well. Finished with a game-high 131 yards despite going out twice with injuries. He gets my game ball. Grade: A

Wide Receivers: There is a reason Mehki Flowers is an FBS recruit. With the game on the line he took the ball on a short pass, broke four tackles and turned it into an 87-yard touchdown. He was fantastic despite double coverage all game. The other receivers struggled to get open and finished with only one catch. That’s a concern. Grade: A-

Offensive Line: Run blocking was simply outstanding. Against a big, physical defensive front, they won way more battles than they lost. It was flat-out impressive. Pass blocking was a struggle at times picking up the blitz combinations, but it didn’t hurt them.  Grade: A

Defensive Line: I think this group — Tydree Holland-Ali, Andrew Erby Jr., Eugene Green and Kyler Raye-Williams — was the biggest single reason the Rollers are still alive. They limited BG to 122 rushing yards on 44 carries. That’s a stellar 2.8 yards per carry. They owned first and second down. Grade: A+

Linebackers: Inside ‘backers Jaeion Perry and Amari Williams are only freshmen. Whoof. Those two are going to be very, very good. They didn’t let anything inside get past them. Outside guys struggled at times to get off blocks and close down the edge on those sweeps. Inside, though, was outstanding. Grade: A-

Secondary: I’m not going to lie, this group struggled and it was kind of surprising. It was big play after big play, and on third down they struggled to make an impact. BG picked on junior Daivin Pryor, and he struggled to cover that over-the-top pass that nearly was the difference maker. Grade: C

Special Teams: All I have to say is Bryan Hernandez kicked a 34-yard field goal to win a PIAA semifinal and punch the Rollers’ ticket to Hershey. A KICKER wins it for Steel-High. His kick would have been good from beyond 40 yards. It was pure. And the game was on the line. Grade: A+