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Preseason Top 10 High School Football Rankings
Southeastern Pennsylvania Football
Featuring District 1, 12 and the Inter Ac
Preseason Top 10
State Rankings
August 23, 2008
Ed Thomas
Hello everyone and welcome to
this year’s Preseason Rankings of Southeastern
Pennsylvania’s Top 10 teams along with a listing of
the State’s Top 10 teams. Right up front I’d like to
thank Bob Willits and Bruce Traney of this website
for having me with them this year. I got to know the
two of them in the off season where we decided it
would be informative and fun for fans of the site
and newcomers to see an unbiased view of our local
teams and also get a broader perspective and opinion
of the big picture through the weekly State Top 10
listings. So here we go, off on another “quest to
find the best” and uncover as much information as is
possible for all of you over the course of what
promises to be another wild and exciting season of
Pennsylvania High School Football.
Review and Preview:
AAAA In what has become a negative trend for
Eastern teams, Western representative Pittsburgh
Central Catholic (16-0) stunned a good Parkland team
(15-1) 21-0 in the AAAA final. This marks the fourth
consecutive year the West dominated or routed the
East and first occasion where a team was shutout in
an AAAA final. In 2006, Upper St. Clair beat Liberty
47-13 following McKeesport’s 49-10 win over Liberty
the year before. In 2004, Pittsburgh Central
Catholic beat Neshaminy 49-14 so it has become
something of a drought lately in terms of getting a
win over these West teams. In last year’s game,
Central Catholic controlled the line of scrimmage,
holding the Trojans to 101 yards rushing. Meanwhile,
they cranked out 220 yards on the ground (6.1ypc)
and completed 11 of 15 passes for another 128 yards.
The win is Central’s second championship in four
years! Clearly, the Vikings have become a
juggernaut, going 90-14 over the last eight years
for an 87 % win percentage. It’s early but here’s a
look at the teams that should make the most impact
this year across the state beginning with the AAAA
teams.
THE WEST, AAAA
(Districts, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10; Districts 4 and 5
have no AAAA teams)
District-7
Pittsburgh Central Catholic (16-0) Powerful
Central Catholic had their ranks thinned with the
graduation of all of last year’s key contributors
including QB Tino Sunseri (1964py, 24-4
Td-Interception ratio), RB/DE Dan Vaughn (760ry,
191py, 99 tackles, 28 TFL, 13 sacks), leading
receiver TE/DE Quentin Williams (443py, 89 tackles,
23 TFL, 9 sacks), RB Andrew Taglianetti (1164ry,
420py) and last year’s sophomore sensation, 6-2 195
pound running back Jeff Knox who scooted for 1243
yards then transferred to national power DeMatha in
Hyattsville, MD. They return a few starters to the
line including Stephon Mitchell, 6-1, 240 pounds and
one of the best junior backs in Dom Timbers (injured
last yr, 5-10 180). He’ll improve any line.
Linebackers Mike Felker, 6-1, 193 and David Myers,
6-0, 185, their number four and five tacklers
respectively return. Central is going to be good
again but not as spectacular as last year where they
scored 612 points. That’s 38 points a game. 2004’s
title team got 574 or 36 points a game. The thing
is, these people know how to put a team together as
witnessed by their 52-4 won-loss over the last four
years, three district titles the last five years,
or, a deeper look going back to 2000 showing a 90-14
won-loss. Last year’s bunch was a senior laden team
with all their skill back and 15 returning starters.
They’ve lost a lot but this is Central Catholic with
two gold medals in their trophy case since 2004 so
the feeling here is they’ll put a representative
team on the field
.
Gateway (11-2) Here is the favorite out of
the district to represent the West in Hershey.
Despite heavy graduation losses, they return a
strong nucleus of QB Robby Kalkstein, RB/LB Dorian
Bell (130 tackles, 25 TFL, 11 sacks), WR/DB Corey
Brown (20/470py, 34 tackles, 4 interceptions), OL/DL
Mitchel Devall, a 6-2 290 pound junior, Colin Rodkey,
a 6-4, 270 pound senior and Jack Charles, their 6-1,
300 pound senior DT. Gateway will have a huge line
in 2008. Linebacking is their strength with the
return of their leading tackler, LB/RB Dorian Bell
(AP All State 1st Team LB, 131, 12 sacks), a 6-1 215
senior; Delbert Tyler, last year’s sophomore
surprise and # 4 tackler at 5-11, 195 and Brenden
Stevens (53 tackles,12 sacks), a 6-2 235 pound
senior. The secondary is loaded with Brian Williams,
5-6, 141, a senior with 59 tackles; Corey Brown (34
tackles, 4 picks) and Jeff Parrish, a 5-11 190
senior also with 34 tackles. Place kicker Ryan
Lichtenstein returns. Remember (from last year’s
write ups), Gateway lost in the WPIAL final to the
state champ in a nail biting 35-34 overtime loss. It
was a game that must go down as the definitive
“Classic” playoff game in WPIAL history. Gateway
rallied from a 15 point deficit, 28-13, with 1:05
left to play in the fourth quarter by scoring a
touchdown and conversion, recovering an onside kick
then scoring again on a hook-and-ladder play with
one second left in regulation. There, the Gators
converted a pass for the 2-point conversion to send
the game into overtime. Talk about momentum! The
Gators got the ball first in OT, scored, but
ominously missed the extra point. Central got their
turn, promptly scored and made the extra point,
sending the Gators home to recover emotionally from
a game lost, won, and then lost again, all in 65
seconds. They may go home a little happier this
year.
North Allegheny (11-1) Here’s another
powerful entry this year with quarterback Mike Locke
back for his senior year. Running back Mike Austin,
a 5-9, 155 senior and both OT/DL Ryan Schlieper 6-6
280 and Mike Vuono, 6-3, 275 are back for their
senior season. Josh Patten, a 6-3 220 senior, got
good playing time and Ben Balzer, 6-3, 265 stood out
as a sophomore. Last year’s freshman RB/DB Alex
Papson (5-8, 165) rushed for 133yds on 9 carries
against Upper St. Clair 5-8 165 and could be a
surprise this year. As the second largest school in
the district at 991 (Butler is first at 1022), North
Allegheny typically has little difficulty filling
voids in the lineup.
Woodland Hills (3-7) Woody returns many from
a team that was so down last year they went 0-5 at
home. But they only returned one starter, Jim Jessel,
6-2, 295, the fewest in school history so look for a
big rebound by the Wolverines this year. Division
one recruit Cam Contreras, 6-3, 205 senior wide
receiver and kick returned (36/610py) is back.
They’ll have a line (graduated 3 OL/DL total). AP
All State 2nd Team DL Rich Gray, 6-2, 245, was a
stand out as a sophomore last year at DL/FB.
Graduated QB Joe Shaffo (85/131/1296py) is a big
loss after coming out of nowhere to complete 65 % of
his passes. They have a hot shot in sophomore Ronrei
Lloyd, 6-3, 175 or John Yezovich but Shaffo’s
production will be hard to replace. Running back’s
Edgar Folks, Josh Powell and Charles Williams are
back.
Penn Hills (6-5) did not extend Coach Neil
Gordon’s contract despite a 156-72-2 record over 21
years. New Head Coach Ron Graham inherits a loaded
team with many returning starters backed by
experienced players in support so keep your eye on
the Indians. They look strong with QB Tom Fulton 6-0
190 back for his third year as a starter. Dante
Brown is a top recruit at wide receiver. At 6-5, 205
pounds, you’re not going to miss him in a crowd. The
veteran linebacking corps headed by highly regarded
AP All State 2nd Team Don Mason, 6-2, 225 and
supported by Ted Blakeman, 6-0, 200 and, Stephon
Thompson, 6-1, 200 is strong. Nothing like senior
backers. We’ll know about them early as they open at
Gateway.
Bethel Park (7-4) With QB/DB Erik Olson, 6-3,
200 back for his senior year, Bethel Park should be
strong again. He completed 88 of 147 passes last
yards for 1438 yards. Joining him in the backfield
is 215 pounds of pain in the form of running back
Lyle Marsh, their 6-1 bruiser who ran for 980 yards
despite missing considerable time with injuries. If
he can stay healthy the Blackhawks will be a factor
in the district.
Norwin (7-4) The Knights were a nice surprise
last year putting up 313 points but allowing 176.
They had close call losses to Bethel Park, Gateway
and Central Catholic and now find themselves with
wholesale losses of six wide receivers, two tight
ends, their fullback and two other running backs.
One was Tyler Urban, a 6-5, 245 pound fullback and
defensive lineman. He was also AP 2nd team defense
and rushed for 510yds. He had 79 tackles as a DL.
They graduated their top receiver/DB Mike Shanahan,
6-5, 200, (37/731py) and a pile of linemen. The big
thing is they return QB Alex Dennison. He took
control of the Gateway game completing 10 of 24
passes for 234 yards and is a big one at 6-3, 210 so
if he gets any talent around him, the Knights will
again be a difficult team to beat. Norwin moves to
the Foothills Conference from the Great Southern
Conference this year in the WPIAL’s biennial
realignment. The good news, arch rival McKeesport
moves with them.
Upper St. Clair (7-4) Looks interesting with
Coach Render rebuilding to 7-4 after graduating 19
starters from the 2006 title team. They had a big
playoff win against Shaler last year before losing
by twelve to Gateway to enter this season with high
hopes. Coach plugged in mostly seniors to the skill
positions and almost all of them have graduated
including QB Shane Brennan (96/166/1569, 58%), wide
receivers Adam Chrissis (29/275ry, 34/626py), Dan
Miller (20/460) and Rob Colditz (12/134). Running
backs Oliver Hawk (93/105), Grant Serdy 6-1 215
(540ry) and Chris Engel (26/112) also graduated so
they’re thin. TE/DE Steve Lias, 6-2, 205 pound
senior returns (12/174) with 6-1,180 junior TE/LB
Reed Affelbaum. They are high on last year’s number
two QB Alex Park, a 6-0 185 pound junior who saw
limited playing time. Because they are coached by
Jim Render, you have to keep your eyes on these
guys.
McKeesport (10-2) They graduate considerable
talent from last year’s team but return another
quick and athletic group that should make noise.
That’s saying something knowing they are the
smallest AAAA in the district at 545. They also have
a great one at the head coaching position in Coach
George Smith. Key to the Flexbone is the fullback
position where they return Nico Price, a 5-10, 235
pound senior. Wingback Gabe Patterson, a 5-6, 160
pound senior (fast!) is also back along with the
typical Tiger high octane blend of speed and power
along both the defensive and offensive lines. Some
of the returning and projected starters are Pat
Ashcroft 6-0, 270; Carlos Brown 6-0, 230; Dana
Brown, 6-0, 260; Ed Gooden, 5-9 235 and Bernard
Emery, 6-5 294. Speed burner Parris Perdue is in the
running for the quarterback spot at 5-11, 155
pounds. If they can fill that position well,
especially with Nico back at fullback, lookout.
Pine Richland (10-2) Things are looking
interesting for this former AAA stalwart with the
return of 16 starters including two standout seniors
in QB Vinny Nittoli, 6-0, 180 (78/148, 1478, 17tds)
and RB Ian Hennessy 6-0, 180 (190/1574, 20tds) to a
team that scored 430 points last year while allowing
130. Nittoli is a tough one, making AP All State 1st
Team as a linebacker! Their losses were to Knoch
25-20 and ultimate state champ Thomas Jefferson,
27-14. The biggest loss to graduation was along the
lines where OL/DL Anthony DiPasquale, 6-2, 265,
Center Mike Winsko, 6-3, 250 and OT Eric Schaude,
6-2, 290, graduate. Mike Felker 6-3, 220 and Brad
Lalli, 6-3, 210, return with Adam Benson, a 6-2, 270
pounder and DT Alex Burton, 6-0, 305 pounds. With a
63-10 won-loss since 2002, the Rams are used to
winning. In fact, they just missed gold in 2003 when
they lost to Manheim Central (15-0) in the AAA final
39-38 in two overtime periods. The Barons were the
bomb that year, beating Mid Penn AAAA Central
Dauphin (6-4) 30-3 and AAAA Hempfield (7-3) 55-6
from the Lancaster-Lebanon League. If PR can manage
line losses they’ll be a player. With the exception
of a difficult opener at AAA power Montour, their
most difficult opponents come to them, including
Upper St. Clair in game two, North Hills in game
five and North Allegheny in game seven.
Other teams to keep your eye on
Seneca Valley (6-4) Returns QB C.J. Brown, a
6-3, 190 pound senior who will be one of the top
quarterbacks in the WPIAL this season. He threw for
2567 yards last year and returns his top receiver in
WR/LB Matt Plautz. He is quite a target at 6-4, 220,
catching 51 passes for 659 yards last year. Seneca’s
six win mark last year exceeded their total number
of wins from the previous four seasons, 2002 to
2006, where they went 5-32.
Shaler (6-4) The Titans benefited when Penn
Hills released head coach Neil Gordon by hiring him
initially as an assistant before elevating him to
head coach. Eight return to the D which will have to
hold the line as the offense rebuilds some key
positions. Quarterback Rich Palso is back after
completing 52 of 96 for 765 yards.
Mount Lebanon (4-5) is looking to rebound
from last year while North Hills (4-6), Plum (2-8),
Canon McMillan (4-6) and Kiski (5-5) look for a
quarterback, particularly Kiski, who graduated one
of the WPIAL’s top passers in Joshua Vick who
completed 143 of 248 attempted passes for 2110
yards.
District-10
McDowell (6-5) is the only AAAA team remaining
in the district with Cathedral Prep dropping to AAA
this year. Running back A.J. Fenton will carry the
load for the Trojans after gaining 1073 yards last
year. Defensively they return three linebackers and
three in the secondary.
District-5
Altoona (7-3) The Lions must rebuild after
graduating their backfield and quarterback Jarred
Burkett (1335ry, 175py). A.J. Alexander (1011ry,
267py), AL Lewis (313ry, 190py) and Joe Mummert
(201ry, 145py) all graduated. They also lost their
number one receiver Tyler Futrell who totaled 608
yards passing. The backfield accounted for 2860
yards rushing and another 1385 passing. That
suggests a rebuild but the Lions should never be
taken lightly, especially at home. They’ll rebuild
around their top defensive linemen Nick Soto, 6-4,
290.
State College (6-5) This could have a special
season with Jamar Smack moving to the quarterback
position and the Lions looking stacked at the skill
spots. He rushed for 1212 yards last year. He’ll be
joined in the backfield with last year’s impressive
sophomore Alex Kenney who gained 521 yards on the
ground and 288 on top. He’s a load of quickness and
power at 5-11, 185 pounds. Their 6-0, 225 pound
fullback Rob Stupar is back after rushing for 406
yards on 66 carries. Jake Reeder is back at tight
end. He’s a 6-5, 232 pound force at DE as well.
Emmitt Terrell (6-2, 232 pound) is back at DT along
with LB Chance Gaines (5-10, 215), their number one
tackler last year. Most of the secondary return.
Last year’s roster showed a total of 132 bodies
counting sophomores and up. Because of the talent
and speed of this offense and good returns on the D
side, they look ready for a run at it this year.
This is going to be a hard team to defend.
District-3
Bishop McDevitt (9-3) The downtown Market Street
gang leads a pack of powerful Mid Penn Conference
teams looking to make some noise in the district
(State College in D-5 as well) and beyond. McDevitt
will move two year starting QB Kyle Koncar to wide
out. They’re doing this because of a major talent
that can’t be held down any longer in Matt Johnson,
their 6-1, 190 pound promising sophomore
quarterback. If that doesn’t work out, they’re stuck
with a third year starting quarterback who threw for
1459 yards last year. If it does work, a strong
receiver corps gets even stronger. Another talented
super sophomore, Jameel Poteat, should step into the
vacancy left by Mike Jones (1390ry, AP second team)
but is getting competition from Central Dauphin East
transfer Aaron Marks. FB Derrell Holland (51/524ry)
also graduating. The O-Line graduated three but 6-1,
245, Vince Sullivan is back at OG with Ed Mera, a
6-5, 252 tackle. Terahje Gratkowski, 6-5, 255 is the
returning tight end. Although McDevitt is a true AA
playing up, they rarely have trouble along the
lines. This year they have great talent on defense,
having started four sophomores last year on the DL
and at LB. 6-0, 230 Stephen Bell and Steve Mosey at
6-0 236 are quick and strong at DT. Division one
prospect TE/DE Terahje Gratkowski, 6-5, 255 returns
for his senior season. All their linebackers return
from last year in juniors Jonathan Duckett, 6-0,
197, Fred Dietz, 6-0, 190, along with senior Dante
Ushery at 6-1, 215. Three are gone from the
secondary but this front should put good pressure on
most opponents. They are young but extremely
talented. This could be a special team if the
sophomores aren’t their Achilles Heel.
Central Dauphin (8-4) Senior quarterback
Justin Shirk (6-2, 215) can take comfort knowing
what’s returning up front for the Rams this year.
Check out these guys. Senior TE/DE Jack Lippert 6-4
220, OL’ers Sean Gordon, 6-1, 245, Tyler Dickerson,
6-3, 270, T.J. Englebright, 6-0, 262 and junior
Artie Rowell, 6-3, 265 who was getting D1 looks as a
sophomore. DE Jack Lippert is a division one
prospect as well. CD played some talented sophomores
last year, namely, running backs Colton Charles,
5-10, 175, Tyler Lee, 5-8, 170, FB/LBs Kyle Wolfe,
6-1, 190 and Jarrett Brooks 5-8 190. The receiver
corps is deep with seniors Reese Judge, 5-11, 155;
Matt Snell, 6-0, 170 and Kyle Jackson, 6-0, 180.
Senior Ian Isaac is a 6-1, 240 DT will help
stabilize a defense that must tighten up from last
year’s yield of 249 points. There is so much talent
on this team. Let’s see if the Rams can get it
together.
Harrisburg (12-2) After going toe to toe with
Central Catholic in last year’s west final and
coming up short in a 14-6 loss despite holding them
to ninety total yards of offense, the reigning
district champ will have to rebuild after graduating
their senior dominated team. Gone is the monster
offensive line of Tyrell Stanbeck 6-4 340, Rodney
Baltimore 6-2 300, Brandon Ware 6-5 340, Shane Ross
5-10 320 and Todd George 6-2 320. And they took huge
hits in the line-backing corps. All eyes are fixed
on Coach Chaump to see what he can do with this
year’s group. You can be certain they’ll be large,
aggressive and fast with an emphasis on swarming
defense. Coach will field a competitive team.
William Penn (York High, 10-2) The Bearcats
of York High return quarterback Jordan Davis who
completed 78 of 138 for 1767 yards. His
Touchdown-Interception ratio was a gaudy 18-3! FB
Brandon Walker (Class President!) is a threat at
5-11, 205 pounds and 609 yards rushing last year.
But the show stopper is division one recruit Malik
Generett, their 6-4, 210 pound wide receiver. So
they have veterans on offense, a un-Bearcat like
smaller, quick OL and a good looking linebacker
group with the number one and two tacklers back in
the form of FB/LB Brandon Walker (88Ts, 7 Sacks) and
Wilfredo Martinez (57Ts, 2 sacks). This group is
loaded with senior leadership and experienced
players. Looks like York has the potential to equal
or improve on last year’s season.
Central York (7-4) York, also known as the
White Rose City has another feline that could be on
the prowl this year, the Central York Panthers. They
also hail from the York-Adams League. If this bunch
can shore up the D (allowed 197 points last year),
they can be a force because the offense is veteran
and talented. QB Brandon Workinger comes back off a
solid junior season where he completed 98 of 185
passes for 1176 yards. That’s enough to be a threat
knowing four of their five leading rushers return.
Running back Parrish Fells, a 5-5, 135 pound water
bug is back. He got 534 yards rushing on 91 carries
and 8 receptions for 96 yards last year. Leading
receiver Blaine Liggins, a 5-9, 155 pound blur is
also back after catching 35 passes for 291 yards.
Last year’s super sophomore, Kyle Baublitz, all 6-5,
248 pounds of him, returns to his tight end position
and DL spot where he was the team’s top tackler with
123 stops. Three of the top five tacklers were from
the secondary as a clue to those 197 points allowed
last year. They open at home against a strong 10-2,
AAA West York team. Central was the only team to
beat their brethren from the West side in the
regular season (23-19, opener) until Gettysburg beat
them in the playoff’s second round 33-28. If they
can again get past the super quick Bulldogs from
West York in the opener, then Lower Dauphin the
following week, they can put it on cruise control
until the closer against York High, for all the
roses.
Manheim Township (11-2) The Blue Streaks are
from Lancaster, not the town of Manheim as many
think and are a member of the Lancaster-Lebanon
League. Wow, what a great team they had last year.
They were doing serious damage on a nine game
winning streak, coming off a 33-0 rout of Central
Dauphin in the postseason when they fell to Governor
Mifflin (12-2) in a rematch, 31-28, after beating
the Mustangs in the regular season 34-31. Township
scored 361 points while yielding a miserly 125
points last year, but graduated most of the OL and
DL, notably, OG/DT Robert DeLaRosa, 6-3, 255; OT/DT
Tim Farley 6-3, 285; OG/DT Frank Ranalli, 6-0, 275
and OT/DT 6-4, 270, Ben Stabler. They also lose 6-0,
230, NG Mike Gillespie. Two linebackers graduated,
Doug Minnick, a 5-11, 230, ILB and Justin McCarthy,
a 6-0, 190, OLB. Despite those losses, there is hope
with the entire backfield returning. Lead back Dan
Wertz rushed for 1419 yards while fullback Nick
Sizemore got 406 yards. Number two receiver Matt
Curcio returns after snagging 21 tosses for 192
yards. TE/DE Adam Bostick (6-1, 230) also returns.
It’s doubtful they can replace last year’s stellar
line. Those guys were good. But if they can rebuild
to something respectable, not necessarily great,
they’ve got enough offense and talent to put
opposing defenses back on their heels. The number
one tackler is ILB Nick Sizemore, a true headhunter.
He returns along with DE Adam Bostic and most of the
secondary. How about last year’s sophomore
quarterback Jonathon Yuko (5-11, 180, 29/56/281)
stepping up big in leadership to usher the Streaks
to a fine campaign when senior Mark Mellinger
(49/87/705) went down early in the year.
Wilson (9-4) Very often you’ll see this
school listed as Wilson West Lawn or Wilson WL. The
reason some do that is to distinguish them from the
other Wilson of district eleven in Easton. Wilson
had one of those teams last year that just didn’t
quite get there. It was close but no cigar with
losses to Warwick (9-2), Governor Mifflin (12-2),
Manheim Twp (11-2) and Harrisburg (12-2). But they
“turned on” the end of the year getting playoff road
wins at Altoona 7-6 (no small feat) and York High
38-16 before losing narrowly at Harrisburg 17-14.
That was no fluke; they could have beaten the
Cougars. A lot of that team graduated with the loss
of their top three backs, their leading receiver and
a number of quality linemen. They’ll be thin on the
line but have Rodney Hill to build around, a 6-1 260
pound senior tackle. And they have two hard hitting
senior linebackers in Pat Zerbe (6-2, 225) and
Colton Weaver (6-0, 220). The D returns eight. On
the other side they return Steve Huber under center,
coming off a strong junior season that saw him
complete 138 of 263 passes for 1653 yards. The 18-7
Td to Interception numbers aren’t too bad either.
His number two target is back in Alex Fegley who can
motor. Alex caught 38 passes for 388 yards last year
as a 6-0, 150 pound junior. Dylan Stopper will be
the featured back this year after carrying it 38
times last year for 153 yards. He goes 6-1, 215
pounds. Looks like the Bulldogs have enough to
challenge the pack for Lebanon-Lancaster League
honors.
Muhlenberg (9-3) Reading’s pride and joy are
these blue and gold clad Muhls from the vastly
improved Berks Inter County Conference. Other
members include Governor Mifflin, AAA powers
Pottsville (05, 06 state finalist) and Blue Mountain
(D-11 champ 07), along with Conrad Weiser and
another AAA on the rise, Daniel Boone. Things are
looking up in Berks County. They’re looking up at
Muhlenberg too where the Muhls have had some kick
lately going 76-25 the last nine seasons. Although
they graduate their top two backs and number one
receiver, many experienced players return. The
number three, five and six rushers are back with WR
Brett Fox and Zak Kramer. Fox has good size at 6-2,
190 pounds and good hands after nabbing 38 throws
last year for 495 yards. The big event is the return
of last year’s surprise at quarterback, Nathan
Daniels. Now a senior, Nathan (6-2, 180) completed
146 of 289 passes for 2285 yards. His Touchdown to
Interception ratio was an impressive 22-6. The Muhls
will again challenge in the Berks and make the
playoffs.
Other teams to keep your eye on
Carlisle (2-8) Almost everyone is back from last
year’s team to put the Thundering Herd in position
for a real turnaround. With the tremendous history
of football in Carlisle, losing is not an accepted
option. Still, they’ve gone 3-17 the last two years.
Hempfield (4-6) Quirky team these Black
Knights, hanging with Wilson (9-4) in defeat 21-14
and Manheim Township (11-2), losing 9-7, then
getting dusted by Warwick (9-2) 35-7 and McDevitt
(9-3) 40-0. For this year, quarterback Jarvis
Cummings is back behind a veteran line anchored by
Aidan Cadzow, 6-3, 290. Who knows, it may be “Knight
Time” in Landisville with 22 letterman returning.
Governor Mifflin (12-2) This was a big,
strong team (39PF, 18PA) last year that went on a
eleven game tear after losing to rival Manheim
Township the second game of the year. In an
emotional, physical rematch in the playoffs, they
edged Township 28-21, leaving them on “E” for
Harrisburg who took them serious following the
Wilson scare the week before (17-14) and routed the
Mustangs 49-19. For this year, the loss of
quarterback Sam Eagleson, running backs George
Schmidt (1095ry, 93py) and Casey Casantini (483ry,
449py) totals out to 308 points scored and 4089
total yards of offense. Eagleson was a load at
quarterback, running for 956 yards and throwing for
1013 yards. Following back to back 12-2 campaigns it
appears the Mustangs of Shillington are in for a
rebuilding season.
THE EAST, AAAA
(Districts 1, 2, 4, 11, 12)
District-1
North Penn (9-3) The Knights ended last season
losing 3 of 5 after a 7-0 start but are still the
early favorite out of the district with most of last
year’s team back. Quarterback Justin Davey returns
with almost all of last year’s skill players,
especially running back Tyler Smith and wide
receiver Ronnie Akins. If needed, they have a strong
place kicker in Brandon McManus. Considering the
youth on last year’s team, they had a heck of a year
going 9-3, scoring 25 points per game on average and
allowing 16. Not bad for a young team. Take away the
31-7 and 35-0 losses to Neshaminy and 41-27 loss to
Central Bucks South and you’re looking at a team
that scores 30 ppg and allows 10. The Suburban One
League’s realignment has them in the Continental
Conference this year so there is no Neshaminy or
Pennsbury. Neither do they face what should be an
improved Cardinal O’Hara team. CB South lost a lot
so the Knights should show statistical and real
improvement. Last season was the first year in the
past six years they did not have a double digit win
season. To do that this year they’ll have to be
perfect, with ten regular season games scheduled.
One thing for certain, you’ll know how good they are
early with the opener in Bethlehem against Liberty,
followed by a homer verses Lansdale Catholic then
the big one against St. Joseph’s Prep.
Neshaminy (11-2) This is Neshaminy, where
they usually reload with wonderfully talented
players. How else can you explain a 80-26 won loss
the last nine year, a gold medal in 2001 and a
silver medal in 2004. While they almost always have
the bodies, they did graduate a lot including
quarterback Justin Kenney, running backs Jason Ulmer
and Joe Stemme, wide receivers Ian Capanna and Kevin
Steinberg, linemen Blair Gower 6-2 278, Adrian
Kiwewski 6-1 250, Dylan Waterbury 6-3 270 and Kyle
Dunleavy 6-4 241. They also lost a decent
linebacking corps of Ulmer, Stemme and Greg Martell.
The OL returns Dan Shirley 6-3 257, TE Paul
Carrezola 6-4 240 and at least two other experienced
senior linemen. Dependable Quinlan Arnold returns to
running back. If Coach Schmidt can patch together a
defense and fill the quarterback position they’ll be
a factor in the district. It’s Neshaminy, but this
is a pretty good sized rebuild where they’ll need to
take care early as they open on the road at
Souderton and Hatboro.
Pennsbury (4-6) At the end of the day you’ve
got to say that Pennsbury held up well last season
after graduating forty seniors from the roster.
Forty! To go 4-6 with one point losses to Glen Mills
and Abington after losing that kind of leadership
and talent from 2006’s 13-2 squad was an
accomplishment. They played well in all of their
losses except the Neshaminy game where they were
routed 48-21. We could see quite a turnaround here
with so many returning starters looking for payback.
They do have some holes to fill, mainly along the
lines where three OL and two DL are gone. Running
backs Shakir Green and Matt Santicerma are gone but
good looking junior Malcolme Perry returns (5-7 167,
451ry), TE/DL Steve Marck 6-4 240 who will be a
force this year and two more linemen. QB Jack
Westberg returns for his senior year. They return
eight to the defense so both sides show a good core
to provide the Falcons with every chance of success.
Garnet Valley (13-2) Garnet Valley joins the
Central League this season after spending time in
the Del-Val and SCCL before serving a year as an
independent last year. They have a history of good
football recently (two straight district titles) but
especially the last two years where they’ve gone
deep in the AAA playoffs at 11-2 in 2006 then 13-2
last year. In 06, they fell in the East semi to
Pottsville. Last year they lost the state final to
Thomas Jefferson so they are battle hardened. The
question mark this year is at quarterback where they
lost a great one in Eric Van Wyk. Eric completed 96
of 152 passes (63 %) for 1563 yards. He also rushed
for 892 yards on 126 carries, a 7.1 yards per carry
average so that’s a hole. Into it will go well
regarded 6-0, 175 pound junior quarterback Mark
McHugh. One of the best kept secrets in the district
is running back Tim Keyser (5-11, 170, AP All State
1st Team) who pounded out 1275 yards last year on
116 carries, an 11.0 ypc average. He also caught 42
passes for 801 yards. Running mate Jared Bonacquisti
(6-0, 190) rushed for 891 yards on 157 attempts and
caught 13 passes for 277 yards. 5-9, 160 pound Chris
Palaio is back after gaining 277 yards on 55
attempts so they’re set at running back. Good luck
defending Keyser and Bonacquisti. G-Val has a roster
of over 80 and they played a lot of people giving
them good depth. Marcellus Irving (5-9, 170), Pat
Booth (6-0, 185) and John Skinner (5-0, 175) had a
lot of carries. Number two receiver Paul Dunn is
back after catching 18 passes last year for 282
yards. At 5-11, 155 pounds, he has breakaway speed.
Three graduated from the offensive line, 6-3, 250
pound Sean Deardorf; 6-2, 220 Alex Portale and 5-11,
250 Jordan Annunziato. Connor Price at 6-2, 200 and
Tim Putnam, 6-1, 235 return. They rotated so many
linemen last year creating a plethora of experience
to fill the voids, guys like Sean Breen, 5-8, 240
and Joe Avellino, 5-8 220. At least seven juniors
top 200 so the numbers are there. Mike Fecile at
5-10, 205 will be the center. If that’s not enough,
they can move Nicholas Garcia, 6-3, 315 and Sean
Kershaw 6-0, 280 over from the DL. There is a
sophomore linemen to watch from last year, 6-6, 240
pound DL Joe Cenatiempo who should impact as a
junior this year. Two of four linebackers return,
Luciano Perotti, 6-1, 175 and Drew Kravitz, 6-1,
240. So the Jags have enough coming back to be a
serious contender for the Central League title and
the playoffs.
Ridley (13-1) 2007 was the 2nd year Ridley
went through the regular season undefeated and deep
into the playoffs. Back in 2006 the season ended
with a tough loss to a Pennsbury team many felt were
a shoe-in for Hershey. Then the 2007 Green Raider
team showed more balance than previous editions and
a defense that seemed just as fast and effective as
the previous year. All that came to a halt in
Allentown where Parkland beat the Raiders 35-21.
Ridley certainly had their moments and did rally
from a 21-7 half time deficit to knot it at 21 all
with 10 and ½ minutes to play in the 4th. Parkland
responded with big play scores of 50 and 56 yards
within 6 minutes of each other to salt it away. For
the coming season they’ll need to rebuild the lines
where Tony Agotsiotis, 5-9, 200, Mike King, 6-2,
240, Brian Traband, 5-11, 190, Dan DePrinzio 6-3
290, Ryan Eckenrode 6-2 275 and TE/LB Mike Gamble
6-2 195 graduate. Jim Kelly is back at 6-2, 220.
Other losses include Steven Egee, one of the more
athletic and strong armed quarterbacks they’ve had
in years and Andrew Hodges, their battering ram at
running back and linebacker. Those two will be
sorely missed. They also lose linebacker Grag
Marenic and a fine kicker in Ekrem Uysaler. The
district one champ graduates one of their finest
teams in years off back-to-back 13-1 seasons. Only
five starters return, three from the secondary, a
running back and offensive-defensive linemen. They
haven’t had a losing season since 1955 but will find
2008 to be a challenging year. Having said that,
there is this thing called the “Green Mystique” so
don’t expect the Raiders to disappear. This year’s
team will field another fast, swarming defense and
they’ll find another kid with a gun to get it
downfield.
Downingtown West (10-2) The Whippets may slow
down a notch or two with the loss of quarterback
Nolan Kearny, three linemen and most of their backs.
But this is Downingtown, where solid football is a
given. Senior linemen like Bobby Di Francesco, 6-0,
295; Andrew Gafney, 6-0, 235; Teddy Donnon, 6-3, 285
and Josh Delio 6-1, 225 will give Dtown a powerful
presence. Seniors Josh Coulter, 6-2, 190r (TE/DE),
Ryan Kendra, 6-4, 225 (TE/OLB) along with FB/OLB
Andrew McLaughlin, 6-0, 205 return. A key returnee
is Jared Heller, who gained 923 yards rushing, 228
yards in receptions and scored 21 touchdowns. Junior
quarterback Brett Gillespie has grown to 6-2, 195
from 6-1, 170 and looks to move into the starting
position after backing up Kearney last year. West
was smaller last year than other years but quick as
everyone knows who saw the CB South game. Their
offense was so large at 38ppg average the D couldn’t
catch their breath so they should improve from a 19
ppg yield with eight returning. With Heller as a
threat every time he touches the ball and
significant numbers back on both sides, Downingtown
will be a tough out. Last year’s blow outs of 20,
21, 24, 32, 35, 36 and 42 points provided a lot of
playing time to others. They’ll be a monster battle
in Downingtown October 24th when Coatesville comes
to town.
Downingtown East (8-3) Since the split-up of
Downingtown into East and West, East has had just
one losing season, the year of the split in 2003.
With the tremendous losses to graduation of last
year’s dangerous team including a ton of senior
leadership with thirty seniors graduating, it could
be a long season for the Panthers. Quarterback Pete
O’Connor is gone along with their top rusher and
receiver, two linemen and the tight end.
Coatesville (5-5) Coatesville looks ready to
return to the form of their 2004 and 2005 teams that
went 11-1 in 04 and 8-3 in 05. The 04 team was
strong and capable of going places when in the
second round of the playoffs they found themselves
with a surprising 20-3 3rd quarter lead over
Neshaminy. C.J. Gray made the Skins’ D look bad that
game, rushing for 183 yards. It seems all that could
stop Coatesville was Coatesville, and that’s what
happened as they collapsed under the weight of
defensive breakdowns and two key fumbles. Neshaminy
scored the last 15 points of the game to prevail
23-20. This season they return another exciting
weapon in junior quarterback Charles Green. As a
sophomore, he passed for 815py, and then ran for
another 720 for a final tally of 1535 total yards.
Another standout sophomore from last year is running
back Joe Thomas, 6-0, 205. He totaled 431 yards on
71 attempts for a 6.1 ypc average. Stephan Allen and
Deshaun London return as well. The Raiders return
their number one, three and four rushers. Last
year’s second leading rusher, Haneef Brake (697ry)
graduated. They graduated some linemen but return
6-2, 270 pound Will Henson and Evander Wilson,
another senior weighing in at 6-0, 270. Finding
linemen at Coatesville is rarely an issue. All the
linebackers return, Allen Erdman 6-0 210, Chris
Norton 5-10 195 and Claude Norris 5-9 190, their top
3 tacklers and part timer Joe Thomas mentioned
above. Another big sophomore (junior 08) got pt,
TE/LB Jody Dodds 6-2 210. After nailing three of
four field goals, the longest being 36 yards, Chris
Massero returns for his senior season. They seem
poised to make noise but face a tough opponent in
their home opener against North Catholic. Then the
Bears from Germantown are in. G-town looks
overmatched in this one. The final non-conference
game is against rival J.P. McCaskey (Lancaster),
then, it’s on to conference play in the Ches-Mont.
Unionville (11-1) The population explosion in
western Delaware County and Eastern Chester County
explains Garnet Valley’s and Unionville’s rise from
AAA to the AAAA ranks this year. Unionville has
really turned their program around. After winning
sixteen games from 1999 through 2004, they’ve gone
31-5 the last three years. It would be a mistake to
say “yeah, that was against weak AAA opposition”,
because if you see this team, they usually have good
skill players and rugged linemen. That’s the issue
this year having graduated quarterback Matt Carroll,
their 6-3 218 pound quarterback (fullback, in terms
of attitude) and a number of quality linemen,
especially 6-4, 315, Steve Caputo and Dave Delaney,
6-3, 235. But this is Unionville where they grow
them large. Senior linemen Greg Blue, 6-2, 270 and
Travis Williams, 6-3, 278 will anchor another
physical line. The new QB could be Matt Carroll’s
brother Greg, who tossed it just as effectively as
his brother in last year’s Interboro game.
Other teams to keep your eye on
West Chester East (0-11) East High paid heavy
dues last year playing a ton of young ones that are
likely to come into this season with a purpose after
a winless 07 campaign. Nearly everyone returns from
a team that scored but 87 points while allowing 355.
Haverford (8-4) It was a breakout year for the Fords
beating Strath Haven and winning eight games. With
an even roster distribution of sixteen graduating
seniors, they’ll be in good shape if they can find
someone to replace FB Jeff Matteis.
Hatboro Horsham (8-3) Senior running backs
Dan Schandein and Mike Borbrin return after strong
seasons to give the Hatter’s punch. They haven’t had
a losing season since 2001 so it’s a question of how
well they fill the quarterback position.
Central Bucks East (6-4) East got off to a fast
start last year, winning five of their first six
games, before fading to 6-4. They return a good core
including quarterback Cory Klein, running backs
Devon Passman , Adam Bitzer and fullback Cohen Long.
Senior wide receivers Brett Millar and Nick Miller
also return. There are a few holes to plug up front
but this is an area the Patriots typically have
little difficulty managing. East has a nice team.
Pennridge (3-9) The Rams young team graduated
just 12 seniors and look primed for big improvement
this year especially with senior quarterback Brad
Herrman back after throwing for over 1500 yards.
They ended on the upswing, winning their last two
games.
Glen Mills (9-3) With a running back like
Bernard Pierce at Glen Mills, they’ll be tough to
defend. He’s a 5-9, 200 pound muscle that gained
1342 yards rushing last year. A back like that
behind the Bulls typical line spells trouble for
most defenses. As always, if they can get a steady
turnover free quarterback they’ll be fine.
District-2
Hazelton (11-2) All that separated Hazelton from
a state finals appearance was a 16-14 loss to
Parkland in the semifinal. For the coming season,
key graduation losses could slow them from last
year’s pace with the loss of QB Joe Kost, RB Nate
Eachus (AP All State 1st Team, 5-11 195, 2196ry, 28
tds, 115 stops), RB/LB Rich Matz 6-0 215 (110
stops), kicker Drew Orth, OL/DL Kyle Medvitz 6-1,
220; F.Deandrea, 6-1, 225 and OL/DT Gregg Hunter,
5-11, 225. But if last year’s juniors come through,
they’ll field another strong line with Ryan Knight
6-1 271, Francisco Fabian 6-1 300, Rafael Marceese
5-10 220 joining starter Jon Koslop, 6-2, 245 for a
nice front. Some of last year’s sophomores could
impact as juniors as it’s a big class. The projected
starter under center is last year’s number two QB
Matt Drumheller 6-3, 190. Although conventional
wisdom calls last year’s team a senior oriented
team, thirteen sophomores and juniors played enough
for four of those sophomores to get 40+ tackles,
while six juniors got 28 to 48 stops. Other
sophomores were instrumental to Hazelton’s success,
players like WR/DB Chad Nicholas 6-2, 180
(15/235py), RB/LB A.J. Petrone 5-10, 175 (41/219ry,
41 tackles), OL/DL Matt Semanchik 5-11, 245 (42
tackles) and RB/LB Charlie Craig 6-0 180 (23
tackles). Last year’s juniors in the picture are OL/DE
Brian Pavelko, 6-0, 200 (48 tackles) OL/DL Jon
Koslop 6-2, 245 (43 tackles) and WR/DB Shane
McKernan 6-2, 170 (6/145py). It’s doubtful anyone
can replace the linebacking tandem of Eachus and
Matz, but the Cougars look to have great potential
with so much experience returning.
Wyoming Valley West (10-2) With a name like
Wyoming Valley West, it might be a good idea to tell
you where they are located. They are in Wyoming
County in Plymouth, Pennsylvania on the West bank of
the Delaware, across the river from Wilkes-Barre.
About these Spartans, they got to 10-2 last year
with a young team and have the numbers to improve on
that this year. They return most of their line
including AP All State 2nd Team Durrell Johnson,
6-4, 285; 6-0, 260, Matt Drevenak; 6-5, 270, Malcolm
Bates; Tyler Cowman, 6-0, 270 and 5-10, 220, Mike
Pretko. They looked off a step scrimmaging
Harrisburg last year but in their defense, the
Cougars were a quick bunch. They lose a good
tailback in Matt Kolojejchick, but return senior
quarterback Jack Crossin, 5-10, 170 and FB Dave
Ryncavage, 6-1, 220. Coach George Curry (Berwick)
has the makings of another good team. He’s done a
nice job the last two years, rescuing a proud but
floundering program and returning them to prominence
in the district going 9-2 and 10-2 his first two
years.
Scranton (6-4) The Knights return enough
bodies to make for an interesting season. The
quarterback, running backs and good size along the
lines should have them competitive. They were close
last year, losing 14-0 to Delaware Valley, 43-32 to
West Scranton and to Wyoming Valley West, 21-15.
They played serious D as well allowing 129 total
points. The only breakdown came against potent West
Scranton, where they allowed 43 points, or, 33.3 %
of all points allowed last year. There is no shame
in that knowing West Scranton (12-2) lost in the AAA
quarterfinals (east semi) to Garnet Valley 27-22. In
a district where Hazelton, Wyoming Valley West, and
Abington Heights (AAA this year) usually rule,
Scranton should make things interesting. Their last
district title was in 2003 when they went 10-0 in
the regular season before losing to Interboro (10-2)
in the playoff’s first round, 27-13.
Other teams to keep your eye on
Delaware Valley (9-2) The Warriors graduate the
QB but return their top back, two OL/DL in Chris
Conklin (6-5, 285) and Chris Horner (6-3, 240), LB
George Siracuse (6-0, 230) and five of their top six
run stoppers.
District-12. Instead of the talk, now we’ll see
who can walk it with Philly in the house. Welcome
Philadelphia Catholic League to the PIAA.
Frankford (4-6) Last year was a rough one for
the Pioneers who had to forfeit four games because
of an ineligible player. The forfeits were wins
against Dougherty, Dobbins, Germantown and
Northeast. So instead of an 8-2 mark, it goes into
the books as a 4-6 campaign, their first “losing”
season in thirty nine years! They went 4-5-1 in
1968. What a tough break for a team coming into the
season looking for a threepeat. For the coming
season, they return quarterback Kalif Walker who
completed 25 of 61 passes for 458 yards. Most of the
backs graduated, including lead back Ervin Goodson
(70/718ry), FB/LB Josh Burnett (32/179) and Chris
Spence. Wide receiver Malik Ballard also graduated.
Akeem Whipple got 390 yards on 65 carries and is
back. Frankford always has the bodies but in the
gray area known as senior leadership, things look
hazy with the loss of twenty seven seniors.
George Washington (11-3) Last year’s district
twelve champ has some holes to fill especially at
quarterback where the big man, Clinton Granger (6-3,
235) graduated. He completed 65 of 133 throws for
1129 yards. Aaron Wilmer backed him up and got good
playing time, completing 15 of 25 for 323 yards. The
top two receivers graduated but they are well
stocked at running back with the return of Kesson
Christopher (84/535), James Johnson (79/676) and
Omar Hunter (37/250). They’ll miss OL/DL Lawrence
Williams (6-1, 265) and Danren Jones (6-1, 270) and
a few other experienced linemen but will rebuild
around OL/DL Sharif Floyd (6-2, 280). GW ended last
year on a sour note, losing to Archbishop Ryan 26-14
in the regular season, then to Parkland in the
playoffs, 44-12 suggesting they should come into 08
with real focus.
St. Joseph’s Prep (10-3) St. Joe’s graduated
a pile of talent and as many of you know, that
doesn’t mean much when it comes to this program who
reloads as well as anyone. They’ll need to do it
quickly with an early and difficult slate of
opponents. But first, about those graduation losses.
They were significant, in that they essentially lost
all their skill players including quarterback Aaron
Hass (87/163/1430/21TDs/53%), running back Jamir
Livingston (1390ry, 5.9 ypc), fullback Mike McCarthy
(52/262ry), three leading wide outs and both tight
ends accounting for 1354 yards passing. Defensively
they lost two ends, one backer and three from the
secondary. Despite those losses, they return what
could be one of the better offensive lines in the
state in Mike Pinccotti, 6-4, 285; Shawn Davis, 6-1,
255; Mark Arcdiancono, 6-5, 272, Seth Brtancourt,
6-6, 265 and Matt Dykan, 5-11, 231. The projected
starter at QB is senior Mark Giubilato, 6-3, 225.
Defensively, they return two linemen, a strong MLB
in Mike Pereira (6-0, 230) and Mike Yeager to the
secondary so there are questions marks on both
sides. With their powerful and talented offensive
line, new running backs and a new quarterback, the
Hawks will likely start off conservatively. The
season opener at Parkland, a serious AAAA contender
from Allentown with more skill personnel returning,
looks challenging to problematic. Because the
Trojans also break in a new quarterback, this
promises to be a tight match between two tradition
rich schools. What an opener!
Cardinal O’Hara (6-6) Cardinal O’Hara will
try to rebound from a two year slide that’s seen
them fall from a combined 20-4 won-loss level of the
04 and 05 seasons, to a 3-8 outing in 2006, followed
by last year’s 6-6 campaign. They have the personnel
in place to resurrect the program if they can just
keep the quarterback healthy. QB Tom Savage got
everyone’s attention his sophomore season throwing
for 1472 yards. Injuries abbreviated last year where
he threw for 809 yards. He’s surrounded by a good
cast this year with four of his linemen back, along
with the versatile running back Corey Brown who
rushed for 1020 yards and caught 15 passes for 226
yards. Billy Morgan also returns at wide receiver.
Defensively they return two tackles, two linebackers
and three to the secondary. The schedule provides
for a good start with a home opener against
Archbishop Carroll followed by three consecutive
road games at Germantown, Haverford School and
Monsignor Bonner.
Father Judge (9-3) Judge will field a good
team this year but they’ll miss last year’s Red
Division MVP Andrew McHale, who rushed for 1380
yards. Also gone is quarterback Paul Volpe who
completed 56 % of his passes for 1266 yards. That’s
a lot of firepower to replace. Whoever lands at the
QB position will have plenty of sure handed targets
with wide receiver Tom Ryan (33/586), Adam Nowak
(26/421) and tight end Ryan Langdon returning.
Running back Rob Harris (77/356) returns with three
linemen. Last year’s defense was a good one,
allowing a superb 9.6 points per game. This year’s
should be stingy as well where eight veterans or
experienced players return.
Other teams to keep your eye on
Roman Catholic (12-2) It’s not the fall of the
Roman Empire but the walls were weakened with the
loss of defensive tackle Jewhan Edwards (Minnesota),
safety Nick Moody (FSU) and quarterback Chris
Johnson (Nova). The defending Red Division Champ
always have the athletes but should be diminished
with the loss of those three.
District-11
Parkland (15-1) Parkland looks very strong again
despite losing record setting QB John Laub, most of
their running backs and three linemen. They return a
lot of talent, especially along the lines and in the
receiver corps where division AP 1st Team Jaleel
Clark, 6-4, 205 is back at wide receiver. TE/DE Sam
Zaccaro is back at 6-5, 245 so they are set there.
Half back Daryl Herod 5-10, 205 returns to run
behind another typical Trojan line featuring OL/DE
Clint Miller, 6-3, 220 (AP 1st Team DL led team in
tackles), OL/DT Matt Frederick, 6-1, 250 and OL/DE
Ian Tomcho, 6-1, 245. Check out last year’s junior
class of linemen; Eric Troutman 6-0, 235; Connor
McKenna, 6-1, 250; Grant Mauger, 6-0, 250; Nathan
Warnke, 6-0, 235 and Len Teutonico, 5-10, 245. The
battle for the starting quarterback position is
between seniors Sean Keiper, 5-9, 175 and Allen Nist,
6-0, 175 with the big junior, Matt Smith, 6-3, 175,
in the wings. Pete Bross heads an experienced and
talented defense from his linebacking spot where he
got 98 stops last year. Parkland’s defense allowed
132 points all year so it’s a show stopper,
befitting a team that is capable of a return trip to
Hershey. They return eight. Last year’s team lost in
the final to Pittsburgh Central Catholic 21-0. This
year’s team opens at home to St. Joseph’s Prep,
then, it’s on to Liberty and Easton. It’s early but
this looks like the team to beat in the East.
Liberty (10-2) Liberty lost a lot of skill
players, notably RB/DB Ahkeem Smith, (901ry-192py),
WR/DB Joey Orlando (26/473) and Justin Rivera
(16/261) who represent their top three receivers.
They also graduated three starters from the line.
However, tight end Horvin Lattimer is back, 6-0, 230
along with linemen Levi Brown, 6-3, 315 and Al
Puhols, 6-1, 240. More good news sees the return of
junior QB Anthony Gonzalez, 6-2, 183. Anthony
started as a sophomore last year and performed well,
completing 61 of 110 passes for 1062 yards. His
touchdown to interception ratio was14 to 6, and he
rushed for another 465 yards. That was quite a year
for a sophomore at a big time school. Most of the
running backs return, although Ahkeem Smith is a
loss. RB Brandon Brader (5-7 150) ran for 523 yards
on 52 carries with Ryan Muhl (5-7, 165) getting 145
yards on 35 attempts. Junior Malik Smith had eight
attempts for 113 yards. The Canes have a lot of
speed in the backfield and seem to always fill skill
positions in need. Levi Braxton (6-4, 220) is back
to anchor one of the DE positions. Horvin Lattimer
has the other. Two defensive linemen return. If they
fill voids in the OL, they’ll challenge Parkland for
district honors.
Emmaus (7-4) The Hornets return a veteran
team of eight starters to both sides. These guys
were close last year, and with so few graduating
from a team that lost by one point to Easton, seven
and seventeen to Parkland and fourteen to Liberty,
they should be a threat this year in the district.
They graduated ten seniors so they are loaded. Last
year’s offense was low octane at twenty three points
a game. But that’s all it needed to be with a
defense allowing just nine points a game. This is
not a huge team but they have a lot of speed and all
kinds of skill returning to field one of the best
teams in the district. A win against a “name” team
would go a long way in elevating them to the next
level.
Freedom (9-3) Freedom came out of nowhere
last year to win nine games with an offense scoring
30 points per game and a D allowing 13 ppg. They
graduated the quarterback, a few running backs and
three linemen but will again be strong up front
where a number of good looking linemen from last
year’s junior class fill in. That’s good, because
they also got a solid transfer from Bethlehem
Catholic in Eddie Mateo (5-9, 185, senior) who
rushed for 1175 yards last season. If they can find
a quarterback, they have the backs and enough on the
lines to pull an upset or two and influence things
in the district.
Other teams to keep your eye on
Easton (8-4) Easton took some hits to
graduation, especially with all purpose RB/DB Jarred
Holley (389ry/217py), who split time with QB Zach
Somogyi under center. Other talented players like
running back Gary Fish (121/843), TE/DE Keenan
Walls, OL/DL Colin White and Nick Marzuoli
graduated. They had one of their larger lines last
year so they lose some bulk up front. This certainly
looks like a rebuilding year but isn’t Easton almost
always there with a representative team? So don’t
count them out.
Whitehall (8-4) QB Jim Lahue is back with
most of last year’s young team that started four
sophomores on defense. On the surface, 8-4 looks
good. A deeper look shows the Zephyr’s four losses
were routs to the most difficult teams on their
schedule; Liberty 41-9, Freedom 28-6, Emmaus 28-0
and Parkland 31-0 so there is a lot of work to do.
East Stroudsburg South (8-4) The Cavs
discovered a fine sophomore last year in LB Sam
Bergen (6-0, 205) who will lead another decent
defense that must hold things in place until a QB is
found to replace Zack Frederick (870py, 376ry) and
their tailback Anthony Davis who ran for 1505 yards.
AAA Here’s another powerhouse from the fabled
WPIAL or district seven to rival Pittsburgh Central
Catholic’s accomplishments mentioned earlier. Over
the last eight years, Thomas Jefferson’s won-loss is
a sterling 96-13, an 88 % win percentage. Like
Central Catholic, Thomas Jefferson (16-0) won their
second state title in four years by defeating a
“game” but overmatched Garnet Valley group 28-3. TJ
held Garnet Valley to 208 total yards of offense
while they generated 468. Garnet Valley ended last
season at 13-2. Both teams return key players but
they’ll be no rematch as G-Val has moved up to AAAA
for the next two years. With the population surge in
western Delaware County, they will not likely see
AAA again. Talk about domination, the win by TJ is
the fourth straight by the West and sixth title in
the last seven years! It’s all cyclical but it seems
the “Big School” (4A, 3A) Tide has turned in favor
of the West. Ok, let’s take a look at some of the
movers and shakers around the state in the AAA
classification starting out west.
THE WEST, AAA
(Districts 3, 7, 8, 9, 10; District 5 has no AAA
teams)
District-7
Thomas Jefferson (16-0) They are loaded again
with the return of running back Brian Baldridge who
went down in game one and quarterback Ty Wehner who
was out from the eighth week on. Three linemen,
division one talent AP All Star 2nd Team TE Brock
Decicco, three of five top tacklers and at least 8
starters or experienced players return to the D. TJ
has enough to make another run on Hershey.
Montour (12-1) Most of team returns (12
graduated) although they lost fullback Christian
Wilson (6-4, 235), the number two back in the WPIAL
who rushed for 2021 yards. One of the top
quarterbacks in the West is back in Edgar Banks
(6-0, 180, senior) who passed for 1235 yards and
rushed for 878. The athletic Banks made 1st Team AP
All State as a DB last year. His top receiver is
back. The Spartans will challenge again.
Chartiers Valley (8-3) Big graduation losses,
especially OL/DL Eric Kush (6-4, 245) but they
return first team All Big-7 Conference all purpose
player Santino Coury (5-8, 180), who ran for 409
yards caught 12 passes for 101 yards, returned punts
and took a few snaps under center. Don’t count the
Colts out. This is a nice program.
Knoch (9-3) They lose quarterback Zach Gross
(59%, 1211py, 14-4 TD-Int) and their top receiver
but return a good one in running back Tim McNerney
(AP 1st Team, 5-8, 180 senior) who rushed for 1750
yards and had 24 scores last year. The Knights of
Saxonburg look light along the lines but will still
be a dangerous team.
West Allegheny (6-5) Remember these guys?
They came up short against Strath Haven in the AAA
final two straight years, 1999 and 2000, losing 21-7
in 1999 and 31-28 in 2000 before beating Strath
Haven in the 2001 final 28-13. After last year’s
rocky 1-4 start, they finished up strong, going 5-1.
That’s good but they need to replace their
quarterback and top running back. Otherwise, they
have decent numbers returning.
Blackhawk (7-3) The Cougars will be strong
along the lines but have to learn how to win the
close ones with a one point loss to Trinity and a
two point loss to Highlands preventing a 9-1 outing.
Highlands (8-3) Struggled with the big boys
last year losing to Pine-Richland 35-0, Knoch 41-13
in the regular season and again in the postseason
28-7. QB Jeff Sinclair (6-2, 185) is back for his
senior year after throwing for 1314 yards last year.
New Castle (6-4) QB Michael Bongivengo is
back after rushing for 700 yards and passing for
526. You’ve got to love these double-threat
quarterbacks. Their top back and receiver return and
a bunch of juniors who got playing time as
sophomores. They’ll miss NG Anthony D’Ambrosia (5-9,
260) and DT David Dovidio (6-1, 250) but had good
size in last year’s sophomore and junior classes.
Uniontown (2-7) Raiders look interesting with
their quarterback, number two running back and top
three receivers back. Doug Sanner (6-1, 170 senior)
completed 93 of 165 passes (56%) for 1633 yards and
rushed for another 230 yards. There are losses on
the lines but like New Castle above, they have big
ones coming up and good return talent at linebacker
and the secondary.
Franklin Regional (5-5) Really improved down
the stretch last year to enter the season with
momentum. They return their big quarterback Anthony
Vendemia (6-2, 205 senior) who threw for 1388 yards
last year, most of their running backs but graduated
all their receivers. Number one stopper LB Jesse
Samek (6-2, 205) is back with the number three
tackler DT Mario Lodovico (5-10, 225). The lines
look good and they are deep at linebacker. They
should be improved with the loss of only thirteen
graduates and could surprise this year.
District-9
Clearfield (7-4) The Bison have rebuilding to do
on the lines but return an exciting quarterback in
Jarrin Campman (6-0, 175, senior) who threw for 1382
yards and rushed for 532 more. Jarrin made the AP’s
2nd Team at DB last year so he’s quite an athlete.
Isiah Morgan is back at running back (6-0, 205) and
wide receiver Tre Campman who caught 22 passes for
254 yards last season.
Other teams to keep your eye on
Bradford (8-3) The defending district champ
returns QB Tyler Grandy but graduate 2476 yards of
rushing. Steve Reinhardt, a 6-3, 260 pound AP 2nd
Team tackle will be there to lead the way for the
new running backs.
St. Mary’s (8-4) Gave powerful Karns City a
fight before losing 23-13. Also lost to Clearfield
and Bradford but return their quarterback.
District-10
Grove City (9-2) The Eagles look stacked with
most of last year’s team returning. Quarterback Mike
Burk is back after throwing for 938 yards, 11 scores
and only three interceptions. Chris Clark’s 1425
rush yards will be missed but Dwayne Martin will
fill in after gaining 259 yards last year and
snagging 17 throws for 415 yards. Grove City is up
from AA this year but return a veteran team so look
for them to compete.
Strong Vincent (11-3) Vincent’s high octane
offense (37ppg last year) should be productive again
with the return of eight starters including their
athletic quarterback/D-back Deonte Flemming (5-10,
170, senior) and D.J. Barney (6-4, 180, senior).
Deonte made 1st Team AP selection last year in the
secondary. Most of the backs return plus their top
receiver. There are some holes on defense but this
offense should help cover early in the season.
Cathedral Prep (9-3) The Ramblers are down
from AAAA classification this year, where they won
three straight district crowns and should do well
with the return of both quarterbacks, their top
receiver and most of their backs. Lead back Akeem
Satterfield graduated after rushing for 1678 yards.
All that didn’t prevent opponents scoring 19 ppg
against Prep so that’s where the emphasis needs to
be for them to compete at any level.
District-3
District-3 moves to the West brackets this year.
Most of the established powers and those new to
stardom last year took big hits to graduation.
Lampeter-Strasburg (12-3) The district champ
graduated most of last year’s outstanding team with
only the FB/LB, RB/LB, OG and OT/DT returning.
Junior Christian Delrocini (6-0, 180) will step in
to the vacant quarterback position.
West York (10-2) Could be something special
here. West York’s only losses last year were to
Central York (7-4), 23-19 in the first game of the
season and Gettysburg (12-2), 33-28 in the AAA
playoff’s second round. Simply put, these guys are
loaded with nine back of D and eight returning to
the other side. Last year’s team was a productive
one offensively, cranking out 424 points. The D got
pushed around some allowing 213 points. Except for
the two losses, they made up for that with great
speed. They can fly. The starting quarterback
graduated, but his back up, junior Alex George (6-2,
175), got experience last year. Top back Brandon
Real, a 5-8, 157 pound rocket ran for 1374 yards
last year. Top receiver Nate Jacobs, another rocket
at 5-10, 170 caught 33 passes for 703 yards, a 21.3
yards per catch average. Returning to the DL is
Brant Sower, a 6-2, 230 senior; Junior Ramos, 5-10,
235, junior; Jordan Reinhart, their 6-3, 220 DE/TE
and Blake Campbell on the other end at 6-0, 180.
Some of the linebackers go 5-10, 180 and 5-8, 180.
This team is about speed and is good enough to make
a run for the district crown.
Manheim Central (6-5) Played a lot of youth
last year making the Barons a veteran bunch heading
into 2008. The quarterback along with most of the
running backs returns. Only fourteen seniors
graduated and with other teams having severe
graduation losses, this may be the year Central
returns to the top of the district.
Conrad Weiser (7-4) The Scouts need to
rebuild the lines but return their skill people
along with the quarterback, top receiver and top
rusher back. Last year’s sophomore Codie Butler
(5-9, 200) turned some heads gaining 1077 on 165
carries.
Daniel Boone (9-4) The Blazers return most of
last year’s team and seem to get better each year
under the guidance of Coach Dave Bodolus. After a
2-9 start in 2002, they’ve gone 6-5, 8-3, 8-3, 10-2
and 9-4 last year. They’re 35-12 the last four years
and 18-12 in the same period against teams ending
the season above .500.
Other teams to keep your eye on
Northern (11-1) The Polar Bears are always there
but graduated huge numbers throughout the roster
from another strong group. The biggest loss is Mike
Davis, their bulldozing 6-1, 228 pound fullback who
rushed for 1376 yards.
Elizabethtown (10-2) E-town surprised a lot
of people last year and return quarterback Kyle
McNeil (6-3, 185, senior) along with seven other
starters. Trouble is, that’s the returns for both
sides so they’re depleted. One of the key D
returnees is DT Alex Kirchner (6-0, 220), who
terrorized opposing offenses with 12 TFL’s, 2 sacks
and 71 tackles; good stuff for a DT. The Bears are
one of those in between teams that can effect the
overall meaning they should be exciting.
Gettysburg (12-2) Lost record setting
quarterback Evan Lewis and both lines. Justin Jones
returns to his LB spot as the number one tackler
with 123 stops. At tailback, he rushed for 1096
yards. Tyler White returns at linebacker as the
number two tackler with 94 stops so the Cupboard
isn’t bare but it is sparse.
Hershey (10-3) Chocolate Town had a sweet
team last year, upsetting Gettysburg in the regular
season with a no huddle, hurry-up offense, then
advancing to the second round where Lampeter
Strasburg beat them 17-7. They graduated their
quarterback, all the backs and receivers but bring
back last year’s sophomore quarterback Jake Campbell
(5-11, 180 as a soph) who got playing time.
Mechanicsburg (3-7) The Wildcats lost games
by 3 points to Middletown (4-6), 6 points to AAAA
Lower Dauphin (6-5), 7 points to Susquehanna Twp
(5-5), 7 points to Northern (11-1) and 13 points to
Hershey (10-3). Excepting the Middletown loss,
that’s a slate of strong teams. Middletown caught
them coming off a 28-21 effort against Northern.
Some of my insane relatives back that way tell me
the Wildcats are going to roar in 2008. They should
be improved. We’ll see if they roar.
Susquehanna Township (5-5) The Indians lost
running back Gabriel Oliver and DE/LB Ashton Bruno
(6-2, 240) to graduation. The return of junior
quarterback Ben Dupree will have a settling effect
on the team as this guy can break it from anywhere.
THE EAST, AAA
Upper Merion (1-9) With the loss of only eight
seniors in Coach Joe Powell’s second season after
building Archbishop Wood into a power, you’ve got to
think good things are going to happen in King of
Prussia. The losses were by an average score of
36-9, while their only win came against American
Conference champ Wissahickon, 22-21. Let’s see if
they can build on that with nearly the entire team
returning.
Upper Moreland (5-4) The Bears return
quarterback Mike Rosenbaum (60% completion rate), RB
Chris Smallwood, who got 700 yards rushing last year
and most of the line. Like the Vikings above, almost
everyone returns.
Interboro (8-3) Quarterback Jim McMenamin and
both running backs, Dave Gillen and Zach Bradford,
are back with division one talent at wide receiver
in Shawn Krautzel. But there are two big holes to
fill on the line with Brian Margetich (6-1, 290) and
Ian Hecksher (6-1, 275) moving on. The line looks to
be a problem this year.
Strath Haven (8-3) The Panther’s lost a
number of running backs and their quarterback but
return experienced backs and the starting FB/LB
David Alyanakian (5-11, 232), their top run stuffer
and number two stopper DE/OT Joe D’Aurizio (6-1,
240). Two others return to the lines, OT/DE Mike
Varga (5-11, 235) and C/NG Forrie Miller (5-11,
210). Running back should be no problem for the
Panthers this year with Lonnie Richardson, Shane
Kennedy and Dixon Speaker back and good looking
sophomores and juniors moving up. Like last year,
they’ll start a new quarterback.
Henderson (12-2) The Warriors drop to AAA
this year but have tremendous losses on the O side
with the quarterback, and two running backs
accounting for 4,126 yards of production. Most of
the line and seven of their top eleven tacklers
graduated. They return two two-way linemen, three
linebackers and a cornerback to give them a solid
look on defense until they find an offense.
Other teams to keep your eye on
Phoenixville (8-4) Lose the quarterback and top
receiver but return a line and many other starters.
Upper Perkiomen (8-4) Upper Perk graduates Cody
Flemming (1176ry) but return eight to the D.
Pottsgrove (11-3) Graduate 2763 yards of
offense (QB, RB) and four from the line but they’re
are high on incoming young talent including last
year’s freshmen running back Marka Polamalu (5-11,
175) and Terrell Chestnut (6-0, 170 ) who may be the
new quarterback after receiving honors as a AP All
State 1st Team selection at DB.
District-2
West Scranton (12-2) Defending district champ
West Scranton (two consecutive titles) lost their
quarterback Matt McGloin and tight end Hubie Graham
but return a good line, led by division one prospect
6-7, 280 Eric Shrive (AP 1st Team and top rated PA
prospect), Rob Eisenhart, 6-0, 255 and Zack Fox,
6-1, 295. Shawn Bodtman (6-0, 205) is back after
gaining 1452 yards rushing last year. Garnet Valley
stopped them in the semi final last year but they’ll
be strong again in 2008.
Berwick (9-3) Lose QB Gordon Law but have his
back up Nick Troxell (6-2, 185, senior) back with
the top three receivers. Both speed and power return
in the backfield where they’ll run behind a good
line.
Other teams to keep your eye on
Abington Heights (6-5) Quarterback Mike Dargatis
graduates along with the top two receivers but the
Comets seem to always be in the hunt.
Wyoming (10-2) Warriors lose their top four
backs and number one receiver but return quarterback
Pete Adonizio who split time last year.
District-4 (Moves to the East brackets this year)
Selinsgrove (11-3) The Seals return four
starters to the offense. But this is Selinsgrove
where winning is a given as evidenced by four
consecutive district titles. Last year’s 11-3 record
was their worst in five years! Their five year
won-loss is 56-10, meaning they expect to win and
likely will. They are counting on a big junior
quarterback, Corey Briggs (6-3, 205) to win the QB
spot. Whoever wins the running back spots will motor
behind a typical and large Selinsgrove line.
District-6
All four of last season’s most successful teams,
Bellefonte, Indian Valley, Johnstown and
Hollidaysburg lost their quarterback to graduation.
That’s not a death blow but it is compounded by all
four losing significant production from the running
back position.
Hollidaysburg (9-3) The Golden Tigers look to
be in the best shape of all with ten of their
leading fifteen tacklers returning along with number
two QB Brandyn Ott (6-2, 195, senior) and three of
the four leading receivers. Still, the loss of
quarterback Pat Smith (6-5, 210) who threw for 1544
yards is significant. The leading three running
backs graduate as well meaning it’s up to a defense
that allowed 18ppg last year to be a bulwark until
the offense develops.
Bellefonte (7-4) The Raiders are looking for
a new quarterback with Ryan Poorman gone. He passed
for 1147 yards. The leading running back graduated
as well along with 20 other seniors.
Indian Valley (11-3) It looks like a long
season in the valley for the district champ with QB
Jarrett Kratzer out of the picture. He threw for
1936 yards and had an 18-8 touchdown to interception
ratio. That will be missed! So will three backs that
ran for 2401 yards. Thad Rosenberry led the Warriors
with 1173 yards.
Johnstown (7-3) The Trojans lost their QB but
more importantly, one of the best backs seen in
years, Antwuan Reed, who rambled for 1955 yards last
year.
District-11
Blue Mountain (8-5) Defending district champ
Blue Mountain needs to replace at least two good
linemen in Matt Stankiewitch (6-4, 299) and Travis
Spotts (6-2, 266) as well as find a new quarterback
and running back with the departure of QB Pat
Killian and RB Dillon Englert. A repeat will be
difficult.
Wilson (7-4) Wilson is up from the AA ranks
the next two years but has to be one of the early
favorite with eighteen starters back. They’ve got a
keeper at quarterback in Tyler Smith (6-3, 198) who
threw for 1925 yards and 20 Td strikes. Last year’s
super young team graduated just 10 seniors so they
are loaded.
Pottsville (5-6) Following three consecutive
seasons that saw the Crimson Tide go 10-2, 13-2 and
13-3 from 2004 through 2006 and reach the final in
back to back appearances (2005, 2006), the bottom
feel out last year as the Tide had a losing season.
One of the bright spots was the performance of
sophomore Jeremy Hoke (5-11, 175) who rushed for
1107 yards on 175 carries. Another sophomore, Eric
Leymeister (6-1, 200) took care of short yardage
getting 359 yards on 86 carries. You know Pottsville
almost always has a line. This year is no different
so if they can find a replacement for graduated
quarterback Nick Schafer, they’ll be fine.
Bethlehem Catholic (4-6) This was a team that
was so close last year with a 16-13 loss to Freedom,
a 10-6 loss to Emmaus and a 21-20 loss to Whitehall.
Incredibly, they beat Liberty 28-14 to get bragging
rights in Bethlehem for the year. What a year. This
season has already started off poorly when running
back Eddie Mateo (1175ry) transferred to Freedom.
But they do have eight returning starters to the D
that will have to hold the line until the offense
gets onboard.
Northwestern Lehigh (7-5) Northwestern
started last year on a roll, going 5-1 before nose
diving in for a 2-4 finish. They’ll probably get off
to a slow start this year, finding someone to
replace running back Ben Clymer who rushed for 1162
yards and caught 20 passes for 295 yards. The other
back, Jake Bennett, gained 646 yards on 87 attempts
and also caught 16 tosses for 159 yards, so they
lose their top running backs and top receivers. QB
Kyle Stelmack (6-1, 170, senior) who passed for 1104
yards will be looking for some help in the backfield
with those two gone.
District -12
North Catholic (6-6) Right, it’s properly called
Northeast Catholic but no one calls it by that name,
not even the alumni. The Falcons will fly high in 08
if they can find someone to take over for running
back Terrell Oglesby. Terrell gained 1214 yards last
year on 207 carries. The good news is the return of
quarterback Dennis Logue who has started since his
freshman year. The 6-1, 205 pound senior completed
73 of 166 passes last season for 996 yards. His top
four receivers are back, notably Mike Scott who
caught 31 passes for 378 yards. They have good size
up front allowing them to slug it out with the likes
of Coatesville (et al) who they open with August
29th. But the critical date could be October 25th
for the PCL closer at Archbishop Wood.
Archbishop Wood (9-3) Wood has a team that
could go either way. Despite having a monster OT/DT
in Adam Citko, (6-5, 305) the rest of the line looks
extremely thin. And they lost their Blue Division
MVP FB/LB Bob DeLucas (142/1088). Add to that
quarterback Mike Cattolico graduating to see that
things are up in the air. If a line materializes,
they’ll have a running game with Sean Cunningham and
Nick Devine returning. Sean carried 75 times for 525
yards, a 7.0ypc average. Nick carried it 68 times
for 466 yards, a 6.9ypc average. There are a lot of
concerns with this group and a lot of tradition to
get them through it. Sean McCartney will start at
quarterback
Lansdale Catholic (12-2) Lansdale had a huge
attack last year, scoring 535 points while allowing
212. They have very few losses but did lose
quarterback Shane Pinzka and the top two receivers.
The new quarterback will be last year’s prized
running back John Howell. John ran for 2100 yards
last year on 211 carries or, 10 yards per carry!
With so many starters back, even in their first trip
through the Catholic League, the Crusaders should do
well. There are only two PCL road games, at Conwell
Egan and Archbishop Wood. So the schedule is
favorable with six home games. North Catholic and
non-conference opponents Downingtown East and Upper
Moreland all come to Lansdale.
AA Last year’s final provided our last high
school look at the marvelous Terrelle Pryor,
Jeannette’s 6-6, 225 pounds of incomparable
quarterback and prized recruit of the Ohio State
Buckeyes. In the state final against Dunmore (14-2),
he rushed for 209 yards and completed three of four
passes for 83 yards. In total, he accounted for five
touchdowns; three rushing, one passing and a scoring
reception for six more. The final score of 49-21
allowed Jeannette to finish the year at 16-0. No one
has ever scored 49 points in a Double-A final before
Jeannette. So after coming close in 2006 against
Wilson, the Jays returned to the final to win their
first PIAA title.
THE WEST, AA
(Districts 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10) District-8 has no team
that stand out at this early date.
District-5
North Star (9-3) Remember the 1987 movie Wall
Street, where, along with Bud Fox (Charlie Sheen)
and the unforgettable Gordon Gekko (Michael
Douglas), the small airline Blue Star took off to
become a hot stock and excellent buy? You might find
that analogous to small school North Star, an
unknown, just up from Single-A, who return almost
everyone from last year’s undervalued district
champ. Realistically, with Jeannette, Aliquippa,
Greensburg Central Catholic and Wilmington around,
who thinks about District-5, let alone North Star
when plotting this year’s power brokers out west?
Then again, how many teams return everyone from a
team that started four juniors and seven sophomores
on defense? The sophomores included NG Josh Zerfoss
(5-10, 350, whose getting around him?), DT Tyler
Ulery (5-11, 215) LB Tony Maust (5-7, 190), LB
Andrew Darr (5-8, 160,) DE Mike Knisley (6-0, 165)
and DE Richie Meechleib (5-10, 190). Another
impressive player is their future QB and current pt
DB Alijah Petrilla at 6-3, 190 as a sophomore.
Senior defensive tackles Ryan Mulcher (6-3, 210) and
Shad Nair (6-2, 225, AP 1st team defense) return
with Justin “Bringin the House” House at 6-2, 265
spelling them in a big way. They were young on the
other side as well with last year’s sophomore
starting quarterback Corey Kaltenbaugh (5-11, 160)
and three backs that generated 876, 745 and 614
yards returning. That’s spreading it out. Remember,
they went deep in the postseason last year with a
3-1 mark hiding a 34-28 loss to Serra Catholic in
the quarter final.
District-6
Tyrone (10-1) Tyrone won it all in 1999 going
15-0 and beating Mount Carmel in the final 13-6.
Next year’s team went 11-2 losing to Sharon in the
quarterfinals 21-14. 2004’s 12-2 team lost in the
West semi final to Grove City 21-17. They are 21-8
in playoff games over the period of review from 1999
through 2007. This year’s team must replace running
back Shayne Tate’s 197/1479ry production and some
lineman. But they return senior FB/LB Mark Mingle
(6-0 205 as a junior) with 346 yards on 63 carries.
Another senior, TE/DE, 6-3, 215 John Shaffer returns
after catching 13 for 157py last year. QB Levi
Reinhart started as a sophomore where he completed
57 of 106 for 629py. He’s 5-8, 158. The few senior
linemen graduating will be replaced by last year’s
sophs Mark Bryan 6-0, 225; Kegan Fink, 5-8, 205 and
Ridge Colyer, 5-9, 260. Returning seniors include
Dustin Weaver, 5-9, 236 and Jarrod Good, 6-1, 255 so
it looks like the Golden Eagles will again field
strength.
Central Cambria (9-4) If they can find a new
QB to replace Shane McGregor (6-2, 200) who threw
for 1722 yards, they’ll be fine with their top
ground gainer, most of the receivers and linemen
returning.
Forest Hills (4-6) Here’s an underrated
program winning 74% of all games from 1999-2007 and
13 of 20 playoff appearances. They had their first
losing season in nine years last year, suffering
through a rebuilding 4-6 campaign. A lot of youth
returns for this season including most of their
skill players like quarterback Zack Glessner, a 6-2,
180 sophomore last year who completed 77 of 166 for
1134py, top rusher Scott Mehall, 6-0, 185
(107/506ry) and top receiver Ty Rosenberger, a 5-10,
155 senior who caught 34 for 510 last year. Robert
Skiles 6-4, 295, Brandon Novak, 6-4, 240 and Jon
McCarty at 6-1 280 will be on the line in 08 with
juniors Colin Gdula 6-3 205 and Nathan Barkley, 6-4
280 getting time. They grow them big in Sidman don’t
they? It looks like the Rangers could reverse last
year’s fortunes and return to their winning ways.
PennsValley (8-3) The Rams return quarterback
Kyle Hockenberry but graduate almost the entire
defense where they lost some good stuff up front in
DT Drew Gensimore (6-3, 220), DT Ethan Hall (6-1,
290) and DE Matt Johnson (6-6, 235).
District-9
Karns City (12-1) Keep you eyes on these guys
with only five seniors graduating. The bad news is
that four of the five played important roles in the
Gremlin’s tremendous success last year. No one could
handle them (40 points a game, 6 mercy ruled games)
until they ran into Jeannette who beat them 35-6.
Three of KC’s top receivers graduate including # 1
Cameron Turner, their 6-2, 235 do everything TE
(22/241py) and bruiser DE where he was the #1
tackler at 75, along with 15 sacks. Running back
Brett Green at 76 carries for 611ry graduates. But
quarterback Anthony Stimac returns after a good
junior year where he completed 64 of 137 passes for
1303py and 17 Tds. He also ran for 476 yards. He’ll
operate behind a veteran line (5 of 6 return minus
Cam Turner above). Four of their top five running
backs return. The Gremlins run the Wing-T but it is
balanced with QB Stimac throwing for 1303 yards. KC
has some losses but return good speed and strong
special teams.
Others to keep your eye on
Kane (14-1) Kane was devastated by graduation
losses, but the district champ should get a few
words so here goes. They came out of nowhere with
little history of success to just dominate the
district last year (Single-A last year) with a huge
offense that was 9th in the state in point
differential at 490-142. They were burying people!
The D shut everyone down, holding them all to 9.5
point per game. But the schedule didn’t show what
they had until they beat Coudersport the last game
of the year in a rout, 39-7. That got your
attention. Then when they did Coudersport again in
the second round, 26-6, you knew they were real.
Kane’s fairytale season came to an end in the state
semifinal where they lost to Serra Catholic 48-21
but what a ride. Coming into this season, they’ll
miss graduated quarterback Zach Anderson’s 2413
yards passing, Dustin Moran’s 1252 yards rushing,
Matt Mix’s 572 rushing and 538 yards passing and
Mike Punk’s 356 rushing and 259 yards passing. All
that won’t make the transition any easier stepping
up a notch to Double-A ball. 1st Team AP All Stater
Ross Nicholson (6-3, 210) will help with the rebuild
from his linebacker position but it looks like a
lean winter for the Wolves.
District-10
General McLane (8-4) This has flat out been one
of the top AAA powers in the state, going 78-24 over
the last nine years with a West finals appearance in
2005 and a state title in 2006. They drop to AA this
year. Despite graduating great talent from the 13-2
title team, they salvaged an 8-4 campaign last year
to make their seventh district ten finals appearance
in the last ten years. The Scarlet and Silver run
the triple option that has been almost unstoppable
the last six years where they’ve carved out a 57-14
won-loss mark. Last year’s team graduated real
talent in their D1, 6-4, 220, tight end Shawn
Walker, along with a good portion of the defense
where eight of the top eleven tacklers graduated.
Quarterback Kellen O’Neill (Sr, 6-1, 170) is back
running the option where he completed 60 of 103
passes for 841 yards and led his team in rushing
with 945 yards in 139 carries. RB/LB Kyle Majewski (
Sr, 5-10, 190, 67/298ry, 68 tackles) is also back so
the offense returns key elements. Defensively, aside
from Kyle at the LB spot, other backers return
including 5-9, 180, LB Cory Lee and 6-3, 185, Mike
Brandt, both seniors, The big news is the return of
last year’s sophomore lineman Elliot La Placa, a
6-0, 270 OL/DL (57 tackles) and last year’s junior
OL/DL Garrett Sheely at 6-1, 295. Another junior,
Kevin Kulka, 6-1, 205 got a lot of time on the OL
and DL so they should be ok there. The Lancers
should have a good season and possible run in the
postseason with Jeannette out of the picture.
Wilmington (13-2) Wilmington had stellar
teams in back to back years going 14-1 in 2006 and
13-2 last year. The problem for the Greyhounds was
two awesome editions at Jeannette who turned them
away in ’06, 28-7 and last year 41-21. From 1999 to
the present, the Hounds have gone 17-7 in the
playoffs so this is quite a program. 2008’s team
must replace exceptional skill in the back field
with the graduation of running back Chris Burns and
his 1901 rush yards and quarterback Collin Fulkman
(56/104/864py, 40 207ry). Chris Burn’s brother
Derrick (5-10, 190 junior) is back after gaining 697
yards last year. Speedster Luke Yohman will be a
senior after gaining 287 yards on 32 carries his
junior year. TE/DE Dallas Hartman returns at 6-5,
230 (14/207py) and junior WR Matt Wagner, another
long one at 6-5, 175 catching 15 for 273py. Shane
Wagner could replace Fulkman at QB after completing
9 of 19 for 210. He also rushed for 80 yards on 27
carries and caught 9 passes for 171 yards. They’ll
miss the two monster defensive tackles Lou Campbell
(6-1, 305 # 1 tackler, 90) and Tom Rohan (6-5 280),
but 5 of the top 7 tacklers return. The standouts
there are DT Clint Derosa (5-11, 232, 72 stops), SS
Carson Sharbaugh (6-4 190, 87 stops). FB/LB Derrick
Burns (5-10, 190), got 62 tackles in his sophomore
season. Other returning senior lineman include
Stephen Woofter, 6-4, 280; Josh Marstella, 5-11,
344; Brad Bober, 5-11, 270 and a junior, Joe Bloise
at 5-8 230. One thing is certain; size will not be
an issue.
Sharon (7-4) Sharon used to be one of the
real movers and shakers in western Pennsylvania,
winning 181 games while losing 48 from 1980 through
1999. They’ve only had three losing seasons since
1980 and were the district champs from 1998 through
2001. For a part of their history they were an AAA,
losing to Berwick in the state finals in1994 and
1995. From 1998 through 2001 they were a prominent
fixture in the West, losing to Shady Side Academy in
the 1998 West final 21-14, to state champ Tyrone in
the quarterfinals 24-7 in 1999, to Aliquippa in the
2000 West final 20-7 and to Bishop McCort in the
2001 quarterfinals 13-10. In 2000 and 2001 they were
blowing away the likes of Cardinal Mooney
(Youngstown), 24-0 and 52-8. For the coming season,
if they can replace the loss of their skill players
excluding quarterback Jordan Rearick they could
surprise having graduated just 8 seniors. They
played a ton of youth including 3 sophomores and a
freshman last year. This is a team that began the
year 4-0 before tough losses to Greensville (7-4)
and Grove City (9-2). The Grove City loss was
followed by a loss to Western semifinalist
Wilmington who beat them 35-14. Watch these Tigers.
District-7
Jeannette (16-0) The Jayhawks are the second
most winning school at 85% in the West’s AA
classification with a 92-16 won-loss from 99-07.
Remember, they, like Aliquippa are a true A playing
“up.” Their playoff mark is 19-8 or 70%, with the
majority of those wins compiled the last two years
where they went 13-1. Jeannette has consecutive
finals appearances with a 29-28 loss to Wilson two
years ago followed by a resounding 49-21 gold medal
effort against a strong Dunmore team last season.
For the coming season, the Jays suffer the loss of
23 seniors and most notably, Ohio State signee
Quarterback Terrelle Pryor, the only player in
Pennsylvania high school history to run for over
4000 yards and pass for the same in a career. The
6-6, 225 phenom rushed for 4250 yards while passing
for 4249. Last year alone he rushed for 1899 yards,
scored 35 Tds and passed for 1889 yards with 23 Td
passes. Other graduation losses are DT Jason
Marquis, 5-11, 265; NT Montel Walker, 5-10, 210 and
FB/LB Mike Matt, 6-2 220. But they have talent
returning in the form of AP 1st Team RB Jordan Hall,
a 5-9, 185 senior along with 3 lineman, seniors C/DL
Chris Hall, 5-10, 240, Nick Campbell, 6-0 225 and
Sam Moore, a 6-1, 245 junior. At 872 rushing yards,
704 passing yards and 32 touchdowns playing in the
shadow of Terrelle Pryor, Jordan Hall should be one
of the best running backs in the West this year.
Receivers Moziah Harris and Toddy Harris return. So
many quality backs return including senior 5-9 185,
James Derry.
Aliquippa (9-3) The Quips graduate 16 seniors
including a number of lineman like Will Dawkins at
6-3, 260; Justin Lindsey, 6-2, 220; Courtney Alston
at 5-9, 280 and Ahman Milot, 6-1, 260. But they
return a good one in AP 2nd Team, 6-5, 270 junior
Juantez Hollins. Pitt signee 6-6, 225 receiver
Jonathan Baldwin graduates after catching 41 passes
for 618py and 10 Tds. Last year’s strong class of
sophomores saw Rashad Kenney, 5-7, 160, catch 14
passes for 304py. The other talent was at
quarterback where Rasheem Jones, a 6-1, 170
sophomore, completed 85 of 144 for 1244py with a
Touchdown-Interception ratio of 9 to 4. Feature back
Daron Cox graduates (171/1211, 13 TDs), but the
Quips always have a backlog of ball carriers waiting
their turn to step into starting roles, players like
Terry Patrick a 6-0, 180 senior and Donte Williams,
a 5-8, 195 pound bruiser as a junior last year who
also stars at LB. They had some big losses but could
see improvement with the younger players moving into
their junior year, especially the quarterback. This
is an explosive team that racked up 474 total yards
against Jeannette and was right there with the
Jayhawks at 43-40 in the third quarter. Sophomore QB
Rasheem Jones tore the Jays up, completing 13 of 22
passes for 315 yards and 4 touchdowns. Coach Mike
Zmijanac’s teams always play hard, make the big
plays and come at you with a lot of speed so as
always, keep your eyes on Aliquippa.
Beaver Falls (11-2) You’ve got to like
everything about 3rd year Tiger Coach Ryan Matsook,
from his willingness to take a hit playing youth to
getting everyone in the games, especially the
playoffs this year where they got wins against
Greensburg Central Catholic 35-14; Munhall’s Steel
Valley 30-3; Riverside High 21-14, even the 61-12
Jeannette loss, many sophomores played, running
backs like Admire Carter, 5-8 160; Christian Modro,
5-10, 170 and Cody Cook, their #2 back at 524ry.
They lost OL/DL Carl Thornton, 6-2, 295 and TE/LB
Ken Cottman (20/490py, 8Tds, 5 QB sacks) and linemen
Shawn Jackson and Robert Cleckley. Senior QB Tony
Carter returns from a 26/50/512 junior season at
6-0, 170 to stabilize the offense along with 6-4,
250 junior OL/DL Kevin Nesmith. But the biggest
return is highly regarded running back Todd Thomas,
6-3, 200 senior (AP 2nd Team) who rushed for 1261
yards (16Tds) and caught 11 passes for 172 yards.
Greensburg Central Catholic (7-3) Interesting
looking team here with only eleven seniors
graduating and all the skill players returning from
a 7-3 campaign. Quarterback Adam Palcic (6-0, 165)
returns after a strong junior year (46/63/825, 6-1
Td-Int) but will be moved to wide receiver to give
junior Trent Hurley (6-3, 200) a shot. Trent Hurley
completed 7 of 10 passes last year for 102 yards but
is highly regarded for his accuracy, strength and
maturity. Sounds a little like the quarterback
scenario at Harrisburg’s Bishop McDevitt doesn’t it.
Daunte Weaver-Johnson is back at tailback after
netting 628 yards on 63 carries. He’s a 5-9, 169
senior. David Miller and Mark Hornfeck are also
back. At 5-1, 180, Miller, a junior, is a load to
bring down at 41/331ry. Hornfeck got 294ry on 60
carries so all the backs are productive. All their
receivers return with Nate Antone (6-4, 190) leading
the way after catching 16 for 213py. Their top 5
receivers return. They’re set along the lines as
well. LB Nick Karabin, a 5-11 200 senior returns and
is a real anchor on the defense but they do lose
Chris Hayden-Martin, their 6-1, 195 corner heading
to Boston College. Coming off a 7-3 season where
they scored 251 points while yielding 170 has them
looking good entering 2008 if all goes well at the
quarterback spot.
Seton LaSalle (6-4) Last year’s team was
rebuilding after graduating quarterback Matt Rodgers
(Akron) and lineman Gino Gradowski (6-4, 285, West
VA). Coach Greg Perry (08 is 4th year) has honored
the seniority system, elevating seniors to a number
of starting positions including the quarterback
position since Rodgers’ graduation. If that holds,
Mitchell Cunningham (6-0, 185) will follow in Patric
Capatolla’s footsteps at quarterback. They do lose a
key OT/DG in Jordan Kelly, 6-3, 275 who was a terror
on both sides and OG 6-2, 225 Mike Duffy. 6-3, 275
senior guard Matt Fedor returns. I wouldn’t worry
too much about Seton. They’re a strong program going
74-27 the last nine years, with a finals appearance
in 2002 ending in a tight loss to Mount Carmel,
18-13. The 04 bunch beat Beaver Falls, then gave
Greensburg Central Catholic (11-1) and Aliquippa
(12-1) their first loss in the playoffs before
falling to Tyrone.
Ford City (10-1) Looks like the Sabers are
making a statement after a nine year run showing a
64-30 win mark hiding a 46-11 won-loss the last five
years including back to back 10 win seasons. They
looked special opening the season with a 24-0 win
against Wilmington (see district ten), who went on
to lose to Jeannette in the Western final. They
return their quarterback, 5-11, 175 senior Jordan
Eckman (47/98/800), senior FB/LB Sean Kriley at
5-11, 191 and Ryan Young, their 6-0, 175 senior wide
out who went 12/254 last year. OL/DL Eric
Cunningham, 6-2, 221 and Ryan Good, 6-2, 200
graduate. They suffered a mild upset to Riverside in
first round last year but graduate only 10 seniors
for 2008 meaning they are well stocked to compete
for districts.
Center (4-5) The Trojans are coming off a
rare losing season where they lost three games by a
total of eight points; 27-26 to Sto-Rox, 18-13 to
Beaver and 12-10 to Quaker Valley. In the last game
of the year, they lost to Aliquippa 36-26 before
bowing out of the playoff’s first round to Beaver
Falls 28-7. It was a young team with just 12 seniors
departing and they still hung in there pretty well.
No explaining the Quaker Valley loss but all in all
a decent year scoring 251 points while allowing 148.
RB Chris Kimbrough is back as a senior at 6-0 180
after gaining 417ry in 55 attempts. Top receiver
Damon Cotton is back, 18/287, 6-0, 195 and
quarterback Preson Dawson (31/67/636, 5-11, 160) who
started last season as a sophomore and kept them in
a number of big games. Four of their first five are
homers so don’t be surprised if the Trojans get off
to a great start.
East Allegheny (6-4) This could be a team to
watch with the closure of Duquesne last year and
resultant influx of quality players from that school
including the Dukes starting QB/DB Darale Dunn.
Sixteen others joined Dunn at East Allegheny with
many of the others transferring to West Mifflin.
Although Dunn graduates, former Duquesne teammate
Monte Ashby returns for his senior season after a
strong junior outing where he gained 2048 yards and
scored 23 Tds. He’s only 5-8, 170 but packs a 9.7
yards per carry wallop and is considered one of the
top running backs in the WPIAL. The Wild Cats
graduate 19 seniors. Three were linemen, 5-9, 296 OL/DL
Chris Coles, OL Dom Myers, 5-11, 250 and DL Ty
Butler, 6-2, 200. Other losses are in the
linebacking corps with 5-11, 225, A.J. Sales and
6-0, 205, Erick Barron graduating. But there is size
coming up in juniors listed as 5-8, 230; 6-1, 215
and 6-0 300, along with the sophomore class showing
5-11, 230; 6-2, 200; 6-1, 240 and 6-3 255. With a
back like Monte Ashby, East will be in most games.
No one blew them away except Jeannette (77-6) who
blew everyone away.
Sto-Rox (6-3) Rox loses wide receiver Isaiah
Scott (53/818py, 12 Tds) but return receivers Andrew
Carswell (22/355) and Nico Dimichele(16/235). But
the big story is the return of last year’s sophomore
many are calling the best quarterback in the WPIAL
in any class, Paul Jones. He’s 6-2, 200 and
completed 124 of 210 passes for 1885 yards. He threw
20 scores, had only 3 interceptions and rushed for
149 yards. They have a good line coming back and who
knows how much this quarterback will develop coming
off his sophomore campaign but it should be
substantial. If he shows the typical soph to junior
development, the Vikings will improve on last year’s
mark and be a serious factor in the playoffs.
Other teams to keep your eye on
Riverside (10-2) The Panthers had a strong
campaign last year that didn’t end until Beaver
Falls edged them in the playoffs 21-14. Few were
slowing down what appeared to be a juggernaut with
an offense scoring 37 points a game supported by a D
that allowed 10 a game. Somehow, Mars managed to
pull off a 21-0 upset. Key elements of last year’s
team graduated, particularly running back Jake
Wickline who ran for 1397 yards, a hefty 9.8 yards
per carry average. Quarterback Codi Jackson is also
gone along with fifteen other players. It looks like
a long season on the river especially with a tough
home opener against Beaver Falls.
THE EAST, AA
(Districts 1, 2, 3, 4, 11, 12) District-1 has no
teams that stand out at this early date.
District-2
Dunmore (13-2) Last year’s AA runner up lost to
Jeannette 49-21 but return more than enough to be a
threat again this year. They did graduate their
center and two guards, but the tackles return with
Ryan Eitutis (6-3, 281) and Justin Mitchell (6-3,
312) back to protect senior quarterback Miller
Holmes. Miller will be starting for the fourth
consecutive season after completed 102 of 171 passes
for 1655 yards last year. Last year’s hot shot
sophomore running back, Michael Perry, returns after
gaining 2769 yards. The year before as a freshman he
tallied 1224 so keep your eye on the Bucks to see
how far this combo can lead them.
Lakeland (8-4) The Chiefs were close last
year, losing to Dunmore in the regular season 14-7,
then in the playoffs 27-22. A team strength was
their lines where many graduated but this is still
one of the best programs in District-2, racking up a
95-19 won-loss since 1999. At the end of the year,
the Chiefs should be there with a competitive team.
First year Head Coach Jeff Wasilchak faces a
challenging year.
District-3
Lancaster Catholic (9-3) Lancaster Catholic
(9-3) has upgraded their program, going 43-7 the
last four years and could have a great team this
year with sophomore sensation QB Kyle Smith (6-3
190) back as a junior after completing 155 of 242
passes for 2595yds, 64%, 27-6 Td/Int. That earned
him a spot on the AP’s All State 2nd team. He is
already being mentioned in the same breath as Wilson
(West Lawn) graduates Chad Henne and Kerri Collins.
RB/LB Alan Berluchi 6-1 220, 6-0 200 NG Tony Anater,
C Ben Wachsman 5-10 240, Nick Schmalhofer 6-5 220,
WR/S Travis Jankowski 6-2 165 and a pile of other
starters return. Along the lines they graduated
Corey Porta (6-1 225), Brian Schager (5-10 250) and
Alex Stevens (6-1 270). Don’t worry about LC with
junior linemen Frank Marino 6-4 287, Julian Williams
6-2 245, Ken Knolton 6-0 275 and sophomores Alex
Giustini 6-1 295 and Andrew Heise 6-1 225 in
support. They are really high on this team back in
central PA. Interesting, three of the main players
in the district come together early in the year with
Trinity visiting Lancaster Catholic in the opener,
followed by Catholic visiting Manheim in the third
game of the year against Central. Except for the
surprises that occur every year, those games will
tell you much of what you need to know about the
power structure in district-3 for 2008.
Trinity (12-1) Trinity had a team for a run
last year but lost to Delone Catholic in the
playoffs 25-0 after popping them in regular season
34-13. Earlier in the year they routed Single-A
champ Steelton Highspire 31-7 so they were the real
deal before underestimating Delone in the rematch.
The Shamrocks return quarterback Ted Spinelli (6-1,
180, senior) who completed 36 of 76 for 667 yards.
His favorite receiver was running back Christian
Kontz who also returns. Christian caught 21 for 426
yards and rushed for another 813 yards. Little
Jordan Hoellman (5-8, 140, senior) is back after
gaining 121 yards on 28 carries last year. They
graduated division one OT D.J.Dill, 6-8, 290, but
are ok along the lines with the return of AP 1st
Team selection Nick Kindler, their 6-6, 265 pound
tackle. The defense allowed 84 points all season, 25
of them by Delone so look for the Rocks to roll
again this year.
Littlestown (6-5) The Thunderbolts did a
rebuild last year and return just about everyone
after limping through a 6-5 campaign. They have a
few holes to fill. Running back Corey Beaver
(1021ry) and their two leading receivers have
graduated. Almost everyone else is back including an
exciting quarterback in Jerrod Reynolds (6-1, 180
senior), who threw for 1692 yards last season. The
Bolts are usually a super quick, light weight attack
that can spin your head around. But fullback Tyler
Fedor (5-10, 200, junior) is back to keep the
opposition honest, powering for 256 yards on 47
carries last year as a sophomore. This should be a
fun and competitive team to watch with only seven
players graduating.
Delone (10-4) The Squires lose running back
Mike Kale and his 1754 yards and a few lineman but
return quarterback Noah Landi (6-3, 185, senior).
Noah threw 91 passes and completed 41 of them for
733 yards. They also return their second leading
rusher, Joshua McNutt (6-2, 170, senior) who scooted
for 492 yards on 72 carries. Delone is almost always
in the hunt but are thinned out this year in their
attempt to repeat as district champ.
Other teams to keep your eye on
Wyomissing (8-3) With an 85-23 won-loss over the
last nine years you can never forget the Spartans.
They graduate their quarterback, top four rushers
and three of four top receivers as well as big
numbers from the lines. To offer a single snapshot
of Wyomissing, they beat Philadelphia’s Neumann
Goretti 28-7 last year, holding them to 6 yards
rushing and 16 yards passing. No one came close to
doing that except for Father Judge’s exceptional
defense. This is a hard nosed program, just outside
Reading.
District-4
Mount Carmel (6-5) Last year’s team started two
seniors and still upset Bloomsburg 26-14, hung with
D-3 power Lancaster Catholic 31-20 and lost to
Montoursville (9-3) in the playoffs 3-0. That’s got
to bode well for 08. Bloomsburg (13-2) was a strong
Single-A, advancing to the East final and losing to
the ultimate state champ Steelton Highspire. And,
the young Tornadoes had a decent effort against what
will be a powerhouse this year out of Lancaster
Catholic. The 3 point loss to Montoursville was an
extra game and great lead into this season. They
started four sophomores on offense last year and
three on defense. Five juniors with only two seniors
started meaning this is essentially last year’s
team, a year more mature physically and emotionally.
Almost all their skill players are back including
quarterback Marcus Wasilewski (6-2, 200) who threw
for 1739 yards. Three of top four rushers are back
with the leading three receivers as well. A few
linemen returning are C/DT Chris Steck (6-1 260) and
DE Kevin Demko (6-5 190), coming off a strong
sophomore season. Also back are seniors OL/DE James
Goins (6-0 215) and OG/DL John Long (5-10, 210) and
more so 2008 could see the re-emergence of the
Tornadoes. Two sophomores had notable outings last
year, defensive end Demko mentioned above and a
backer they must be high on, Sean McCollum (6-0,
180), their second leading tackler at 77.
Sophomores! Fourteen of their top sixteen tacklers
return. The home opener is a tough one the 29th
against Selinsgrove, a team they lost to 34-19 last
year. Selinsgrove is an AAA power staple in
district-4, but they are rebuilding, and the
Tornadoes are more veteran, albeit young. This is a
great opportunity to get the Seals early and start
the season with a big bang.
Montoursville (9-3) The Warriors have gone a
sterling 33-7 the last three years, 72-32 the last
nine but graduate QB Jacobson (59/122/916py) and
their top back Mike Steel who rushed for 1146 yards.
Speedster Josh Cillo is back (6-0 160) after gaining
950 yards. They also return the top two receivers.
Senior linemen Tony Cascio (6-5, 270), their AP All
State 2nd Team selection, Mike Kane (6-1, 270) and
Jason Marshalek (6-4, 260) are back to front Josh
Cillo and put the Warriors into the District-4 title
picture.
Danville (4-6) The Ironmen suffered metal
fatigue last year after upsetting Selinsgrove 35-21
in the opener and just missing the upset of
Bloomsburg before closing on a 2-4 slide. Almost all
of that team is back. Quarterback Andrew Stoop (6-2,
190, senior) completed 60% of his passes for 2583
yards and had a 32-17 touchdown to interception log.
Nice. His lead back returns plus Mike Smith who
caught 59 passes last year for 798 yards and made
the AP 1st team. The lines look good and with the D
returning two linemen, two backers and two d-backs,
the Ironmen look like a legitimate team. Last year’s
schedule was brutal, facing Selinsgrove, Bloomsburg,
Montoursville, Southern Columbia, even Mifflinburg
and Jersey Shore had decent teams. Point being,
Danville scored 27 points a game against them and
return most of their offense.
Loyalsock (12-3) The Lancers had a potent,
physical team last year that had difficulty against
the muscle of Southern Columbia, Bloomsburg and
Dunmore where they lost 21-17, 33-8 and 28-7
respectively. The Dunmore loss was in the playoffs.
Top back Austin Knighton graduated, taking 2019
yards rushing with him. Fortunately, quarterback
Shane Carey (6-3, 190) returns after throwing for
2274 yards. His top receiver Rob Wright (6-0, 190)
who snagged 56 tosses for 1097 yards also returns.
If they can replace some horses up front, they’ll be
right back in it. 2008 looks to be an exciting
district race.
District-11
Jim Thorpe (9-3) On the surface things don’t
look good for the Olympians, losing a number of
linemen, their top back Phil Redline who rushed for
1275 yards and their top receiver Josh Hontz who
caught sixty passes for 1006 yards. The thing is, JT
got a taste of it last year. They lost to Lansdale
Catholic in the second round but that followed a
satisfying win over Colonial League power Northern
Lehigh, 42-14 in the first round. The reason there
is optimism is the return of last year’s sophomore
sensation Corey Cinicola who had a monster year
completing 121 of 214 for 1959 yards. He’s a big,
strong player at 6-3, 225 pounds, turning into a
fullback when all else fails.
Palisades (10-3) Palisades put together their
fourth consecutive winning season last year and
parlayed a Colonial League crown with a district
title to get their first ten win season in years.
The nice thing about it is they recovered from a 0-2
start, to win ten in a row including playoffs wins
over Wilson and Palmerton before succumbing to
Lansdale Catholic 46-14 in the playoffs. For 2008,
the Pirates are in search of a quarterback. But they
return their lines, three of the top four running
backs, the number two receiver and most of the
defense.
Others to keep your eye on
Pen Argyl (5-6) After winning 44 of 49 games
from 1999 through 2002, the Knights slumped off to a
30-25 won-loss the last five years, alternating
between winning and losing seasons every other year.
I think that means with most of last years team
returning, they’ll have a +.500 season following
last year’s 5-6 outing.
Northern Lehigh (7-4) Always in the hunt but
not the same team the last two years going 7-4 in
both compared to the team that went 44-6 the
preceding four years.
District-12
West Catholic (11-1) With the offensive talent
this group has, they appear ready to make a serious
run at the district title and more. To be sure,
there are questions, particularly along the OL and
at the receiver corps. But few teams anywhere in the
East, perhaps the state, have a backfield like West
does. Right off the top there is quarterback Curtis
Drake (6-0, 165) who is a one man show with 1325
passing yards accompanied by 597 (8.0ypc) rushing
yards making him the top double threat quarterback
in the area. With him in the backfield are Rob
Hollomon (5-8, 155) and Raymond Maples (5-11, 195),
who between them rushed for over 2000 yards. Rob is
also a duel threat after catching 17 passes for 364
yards. He rushed for 1048 yards on 122 carries, an
8.6ypc average! Raymond’s numbers were impressive as
well, running for 1040 yards on 150 carries, a 6.9
ypc average. Big Juan Rozier is back at fullback at
6-1, 210 pounds. The OL returns two and a part
timer. So the emphasis is likely on finding
receivers to replace the top two who graduated. TE
Pre’Andre Watson (6-4, 250) will be missed. There
are some holes on the defensive side but not up
front where the Burrs look solid with good
experience or starters along the DL and at
linebacker. Three return to the secondary giving
them seven return starters on that side. Being a
small school, West needs to stay healthy. If they
can do that, get to the state tournament with
health, the feeling here is they can go a long way
with the profound talent they have in the backfield.
Archbishop Carroll (10-3) If Coach Bielli can
patch together an offensive line with Jack Lowney
(6-4, 260) and TE Chris Kennedy (6-4, 285)
returning, he’ll have an offense that will put
points on the board. Probably the best kept secret
in the PCL is Patriot quarterback Luke Wischnowski
(6-2, 185), who ran for 729 yards last year while
completing 67 of 1221 passes for 1181 yards. Won’t
the game(s?) between Carroll and West be something
just watching the quarterbacks? For the Pats, two
underrated running backs return in Dillon McClernon
(6-1, 195) and Bryant Moritz (6-0, 180). Dillon
rumbled for 559 yards on 83 attempts while Bryant
got 380 yards after 84 carries. They need receivers
but are more than half way there with a quarterback
like Wischnowski. Their top receivers graduated.
Things should be ok on the other side with both
defensive ends returning (Lowney-Kennedy) and at
least two linebackers in Steve Farley and Dillon
McClernon.
A Steelton Highspire (13-3) rebounded from a
mid year slump (lost three straight) and a fourth
place finish in the Mid-Penn Capital Division to win
States by beating previously undefeated Serra
Catholic (15-1). Serra came in with a strong team.
They had decent size and three backs over 1000 yards
each. Nice. But the Rollers had more, a lot more,
namely running back Jeremiah Young, a powerful and
quick 5-9, 190 pound muscle who runs behind a line
that would make any AAAA proud. Against Serra, he
ran for 292 yards and four touchdowns, a state
Class-A rushing record that brought his season total
to 3446 yards rushing! Most backs would be happy
having those numbers as “career” stats. The
Streamrollers lived up to their name in this one by
rolling over the Eagles in total yardage 400 to 162
and on the scoreboard 34-15. This year they’ll
attempt to win their eighth district title in the
last twelve years and move on to States. Rollers!
THE WEST, A
(Districts, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10) There are no teams in
District-8 that stand out at this early date.
District-5 No teams are jumping out at this time
but keep your eye on Windber (7-3) who always comes
to play. North Star (9-3) has a good looking team
but moved to AA for the next two years. Northern
Bedford (9-3) had considerable losses to graduation
as did Tussey Mountain (7-4) and Conemaugh Township
(6-4) who lost their quarterback and lead back.
Tussey Mountain’s Titans lost a good one in Jordan
Donaldson who had an 8.7 ypc average after 207
carries and 1797 yards.
District-9
Coudersport (8-3) The Falcons are one of the
best teams in the district year in, year out and get
your attention in a big way in their purple and
white uniforms. For the coming season, they must
replace their quarterback Boomer Wetzel who threw
for 1520 yards. The good news is that almost
everyone else returns including the backs and
receivers so look for Coudy to be battling for the
top spot as always.
Curwensville (4-6) C-ville is looking good
with practically the entire team back from last
year’s rebuild. They broke in a sophomore under
center but got a good one with Dan Miller (6-2, 180)
completing 57% of his passes for 1513 yards. Because
these guys have a losing season about once every
decade, I’d look for a big return to form this year
with a roster full of starters and experienced
players.
District-10
Mercer (11-2) The Mustangs lose their leading
rusher Justin Angermeier who was a force gaining
1846 yards. The returning quarterback, Andrew Erdos
(6-2, 190) survived his sophomore season
impressively, completing 53 passes of 107 attempts
for 1066 yards. His touchdown to interception rate
was 11-7. They have a great line returning that
should ease the pain of replacing Angermeier. And
with wide receiver Weston Schaa back after gaining
659 yards on 26 receptions (25.3yards per
reception!) it appears that Mercer will make another
run in the playoffs. Last year’s team was eliminated
in the playoffs by Mercyhurst Prep 21-19.
Eisenhower (6-5) The Knights were close last
year losing to Mercer and Mercyhurst by identical
14-7 scores. Because they return most of last year’s
team, they should improve on their 6-5 mark. Like
Mercer, they broke in a sophomore quarterback in
Cody Crosby (6-3, 180) who threw for 1372 yards.
Their top rusher is back along with the two leading
receivers from last season. If they can replace some
talent that graduated from the line, they’ll compete
with Mercer and West Middlesex for the district
crown.
West Middlesex (4-6) Quarterback John Jancso
is back from his sophomore campaign where he threw
for 511 yards. The leading rusher and two leading
receivers also return giving the Big Reds every
chance of success, especially with only 10
graduating from the team.
Others to keep your eye on
Mercyhurst Prep (13-1) The defending district-10
champ Lakers graduated two 1000 yard rushers but
return their quarterback.
Saegertown (10-2) The Panthers graduate their
quarterback and leading rusher.
District-7
Serra Catholic (15-1) Defending district champ
Serra is not the easy call they were last year after
graduating Isaiah Jackson and Chris Loving, their
+1000 yard rushers. They lost some quality along the
lines as well but return quarterback T.J.
Heatherington to stabilize things. They’ll be a good
team but must come back to the pack with the
graduation of Loving and Jackson.
Springdale (10-2) The Orange and Black attack
is back with a good looking line and returning
quarterback in Brian Shemenski. This is a nice
looking team that beat good stuff last year in the
postseason, taking down Western Beaver (9-2) 13-6
and Clairton (10-2) 22-21. Then came the narrow 10-6
loss to Serra Catholic. They have a lot of people
coming back and should challenge for district
honors.
Monessen (11-1) The Greyhounds could be
special this year if last year’s freshman
quarterback, Terrance Stepoli (rumored to be the
starter) can step into the shoes of graduated
quarterback Adam Caputo. He’s a big one at 6-3, 180.
Monessen returns sixteen of twenty two starters with
two AP All State 2nd Team selections leading the
way. Cordero Jackson made the team as a sophomore
running back while two way linemen Kevin Parker,
6-0, 205 made it as a defensive linemen.
Monaca (7-3) Return their quarterback and
leading rusher to the team that made the playoffs
and lost to Monessen 30-14.
Clairton (10-1) Lost to Springdale in the
postseason 22-21 after beating them in the regular
season 26-0. Sounds something like Delone and
Trinity in District-3 last year. The big loss coming
into the season is running back Zaire Washington’s
1968 rushing yards. The Bears have some people
coming back but after the 14-1 campaign of 2006 and
last year’s 10-1 achievement, there is some
rebuilding to do.
Farrell (9-2) Lost some tough ones last year
to Sharon 10-7, Mercer 27-23 and Mercyhurst 21-20
but should settle some scores with the return of
their quarterback, leading rusher and some super
sized linemen.
Rochester (7-4) This is one of the top
programs in the state at any classification with a
98-22 won-loss over the last nine years. They are
always a factor in the post season, even during last
year’s rebuilding season where they replaced
essentially the entire team and were still a tough
out losing three games by one point. Their four
state finals appearances were untimely in that they
ran into Southern Columbia in 2000, 2001, 2002 and
2004, losing all four times by a combined score of
104-20. With almost all of last year’s team
returning, look for the Rams to greatly improve on
last year’s outing. We’ll know early with their
opener at Monessen. It doesn’t get any better than
that!
Western Beaver (9-3) Quarterback Morgan Rice
is back for his senior season, leading a team that
lost narrowly to Springdale 13-6 in the playoffs and
returns nearly every starter. Keep you eyes on these
guys!
Carmichaels (5-5) The Mighty Mikes could be a
player this season if they find someone to stand in
for graduated man-mover Cody Andrews, their 6-0, 240
pound fullback. There are a few holes up front but
very few graduating from this veteran team.
Others teams to keep your eye on
Fort Cherry (6-4) The Rangers were not ready
for prime time football last year with losses to
Serra (15-1) 48-6 and Rochester (7-4) 28-7 in the
regular season and a closing loss in the playoffs to
Rochester again, 35-6. They have a tough opener at
Carmichaels but will bring a veteran team.
Jefferson-Morgan (7-3) Like Fort Cherry, the
Rockets weren’t ready for the bright lights with
regular season losses to Clairton (10-1) 41-2 and
Monessen (11-1) 28-7. Then came the 38-14 loss to
quirky Apollo Ridge (6-5). They lost their top
rusher in Justin Falcon and that’s about it so
they’ll be a veteran group.
California (5-5) Graduated quarterback Donte
Valentino who ran for 1228 yards and passed for
another 551 yards. Scary they only got 5 wins out of
that but they’re one of those border line schools
(51-39 last 9 years) that return enough to be
dangerous.
THE EAST, A
(Districts 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 11, 12) There are no teams
in District-1 and 12 that stand out at this early
date.
District-3
Steelton Highspire (13-3) Defending Single-A
Steelton Highspire is looking to repeat as the state
champ with the return of all but two linemen and a
cornerback. Simply put, the Steamrollers are loaded.
Quarterback Andre Campbell returns with running back
Jeremiah Young and a monster line. Young rushed for
3344 yards and scored 41 touchdowns last year.
Again, that’s last year’s stats not career stats.
That’s saying something playing in the Mid Penn
Capital Division with Camp Hill (8-4), Milton
Hershey (8-4) and Trinity (12-1). In six playoff
games alone he rushed for 1555 yards and got 19
scores. Like Jeannette last year at the AA level,
here is a clear preseason favorite to return to
Hershey.
Reading Holy Name (7-5) The Blue Jays
typically field competitive teams and return almost
all of last year’s team. You’ll know in the third
game of the season when they play Conrad Weiser
(7-4) who beat them 42-14 last year. If they’re even
mildly competitive against a team that is way out of
their league, you’ll know they’re back to the 04
level where they went 10-2.
Other teams to keep your eye on
Halifax (11-4) The quarterback graduated along
with two outstanding linemen, Ryan Belack (6-3, 270)
and Nick Suhr (6-3, 311). Halifax is one of the
premier programs at the A classification with an
85-23 mark the last nine years. Don’t be surprises
if they turn out another fine edition.
Millersburg (11-2) Graduated their
quarterback and a bunch of linemen from the team
whose only losses were to Steelton Highspire, 35-28
in the regular season and 24-21 in the playoffs.
It’ll be tough duplicating the last two seasons
where they went 12-1 and 11-2.
Camp Hill (8-4) Big losses on the OL. But the Lions
are a strong, tradition rich school that reloads
well.
Columbia (8-3) Here is another outstanding
program with 70 wins in their last 99 games. They
had heavy losses to graduation entering 2008
including quarterback Mike Seibert who completed 102
of 177 tosses (58%) for 1599 yards, running back Ben
Guiles who rushed for 1358 yards after 168 carries
(8.1ypc!) and another 736 yards from their top
receiver Colby Tuell. It’s Columbia where the
Crimson Tide usually rebuild but that’s a lot of
production. Roll Tide!
District-2
Lackawanna Trail (9-4) This wasn’t the Lions
strongest edition with losses to Dunmore 20-10,
Riverside 21-7, Lakeland 28-19 and to Bloomsburg in
the playoffs, 49-27, but they were competitive in
all but the Bloomsburg game. And they were good
enough to win their seventh district title in the
last nine years. This year’s lines look real good so
if they find a quarterback they’ll compete for
another district crown.
Riverside (11-2) Get out the longboats
because these Vikings look like they are going
places! They return their quarterback and two AP All
State players along with almost all of last year’s
starters. Granted, they were not competitive against
the big alpha dogs Dunmore and West Scranton, losing
41-14 to Dunmore and 33-0 to West Scranton. But
Dunmore had a super team that got to the final while
the Scranton club was a Triple-A powerhouse whose
only losses came to Dunmore 19-13 and Garnet Valley
in the quarterfinals 27-22. Two of the better
players Riverside returns this year are running back
Jim Klebon (5-10, 190) and running back Matt
Talerico, who made 2nd Team AP All State as a
defensive back. Jim Klebon made the AP 1st team as a
running back, although he is one of their great
hitters returning at linebacker. They open with Old
Forge but look to the second game when they play
West Scranton for an indicator of progress over last
year’s results. They dropped to Class-A this year
where they’ll press Lackawanna Trail for district
honors.
District-4
Southern Columbia (9-2) It seems like Southern
went away last year but only because of a 19-0 loss
to Bloomsburg and 22-17 playoff loss to Line
Mountain. They almost came back in that one, scoring
14 in the fourth quarter. That was probably good
incentive for this season with most of the team
returning including running back Steve Roth (864ry).
The quarterback graduated but almost the entire
defense returns. They’re led by last year’s
outstanding sophomore linemen Brad Witcoskie (6-0,
240). The district has some decent teams to set the
stage for another exciting district battle.
Bloomsburg (13-2) Bloomsburg graduated their
quarterback who looked more like a fullback at 6-0,
235 pounds, but he could sling it and did so to the
tune of 2192 yards through the air last year. He’ll
be missed. Almost everyone else is back including
their top three backs led by Jordan Klinger (5-7,
180). Jordan rushed for 1248 yards last season. This
was quite a team last year, losing to Steelton
Highspire in the state semifinal 28-14. Only eleven
graduated so look for Bloomsburg to challenge again
this year if they can find a quarterback. Their
district championship broke Southern Columbia’s
sixteen year consecutive district title streak.
Muncy (8-4) Like Bloomsburg, almost all of
last year’s team returns. The Indians are led by
quarterback Daniel Murphy. Daniel completed 87 of
182 passes for 1444 yards. He doesn’t have a bad
touchdown to interception ratio either at 17-6. The
leading rusher Franklin Smith (112/675) and second
leading receiver, Tyler Barto (15/396) also returns.
Other teams to keep you eye on
Line Mountain (10-2) Last year’s team beat
Southern Columbia 22-17 then fell to Bloomsburg
14-12 but it was still one heck of a team. For the
coming season, quarterback Clark Morris and the top
three rushers have graduated. That could signal a
rebuild knowing they are coming off 9-3 and 10-2
seasons. AP 2nd Team linebacker Joe Fausey will
anchor what should be a good defense.
District-6
Bellwood Antis (9-5) The Blue Devils return
quarterback Nate Gray (68/168/1139py) along with
many of last year’s starters trying for a district
threepeat. They averaged 31 ppg last year and should
be even more threatening with a veteran team led by
a veteran quarterback. The defense was too porous
last year at 18ppg average but that didn’t stop them
from winning the district. What might unseat them
this year are improved teams at Portage and Purchase
Line.
Portage (10-1) Here is a team that looks
capable of repeating last year’s success with all
their major players returning. That includes
quarterback Taylor Swires (6-0, 150, junior), and
the top three backs. They played a large number of
sophomores last year that should benefit them this
year. Junior running back Mike Sinosky (5-11, 190)
rushed for 1320 yards and 16 scores last year.
Another sophomore of last season is Tom Burgan who
rushed for 497 yards on 89 carries. Senior back
Jarod Pisarchik rushed for 677 yards so they’re set
in the backfield and all other positions.
Purchase Line (10-3) The Red Dragons return
their quarterback and their second leading rusher in
fullback Joe Doland. Sounds like a fullback doesn’t
it. Joe is a bull at 5-8, 200 pounds. He carried it
71 times last year for 483 yards. Like Portage’s
Mustangs, the Devils return almost the entire team.
Last year’s team lost to Bellwood Antis 27-7 in the
district final after edging Portage 6-0.
Bishop McCort (12-2) The Crushers have some
serious graduation losses including TE/DE Mike Cruz,
6-5, 270 (Pitt as a DL, 11/242py, 5 Tds; 43 tackles,
3 sacks) and one of the best quarterbacks in their
history in Jordan Defrances. As a junior he
completed 113 of 209 for 1560 yards while throwing
11Tds and 10 interceptions. Last year he improved to
156 completions in 270 throws for a 58% completion
rate and 2628py. His Touchdown to Interception ratio
was 28 to 8 so that’s a big hole to fill. Matt Varga,
5-7, 155 at 63 receptions for 1321 yards graduates
but senior running back Eric Lowry 247/1332ry,
30/364py, 6-0, 180, returns. This is a great program
that hasn’t had a losing season was 1979 meaning
they’ll be diminished but will not go away.
District-11
Bangor Pius X (7-4) You’ve got to love these
guys, going all over the state for a game. Last
year’s schedule took them to district-3 for games
against Steelton Highspire, Shippensburg and
Fairfield. They also played The Haverford School and
Caravel Academy in Delaware. That’s got to be great
for the players! For the coming season almost all of
last year’s starters are back. Like so many teams
they broke in a sophomore quarterback, Anthony
Casciano (5-11, 190). What a year he had completing
59% of his passes for 2122 yards. They lost their
big back Adam Zara, who rumbled for 1362 yards but
return Mike Thomas, who got 290 yards on 64 carries
and Joe Mazze. Joe carried the ball 21 times for 91
yards. With their second leading receiver Brian
Smith (6-1, 215, senior) returning after catching 33
passes for 430 yards, the Royals look set.
Schuylkill Haven (7-5) We’ve got a new player
in town and they are looking good. The Hurricanes
drop to Class-A this year after a deceptive 7-5
campaign. That’s a lot of losses but they were in
every game against a quality schedule. Here are
those losses; Marian Catholic (11-3) 34-33,
Minersville (10-3) 24-14, Jim Thorpe (9-3) 10-0,
Blue Mountain (8-5) 17-7 and Saucon Valley (7-5)
18-14. Now, plug in the return of nearly every
player from last year to see they could be special
this year. The number two quarterback Brian Murphy
returns (Andy Fink graduated) with good experience.
He’s got a great target in returning tight end
Brandon Devlin (13/185) who is 6-6, 205. Further
good news is the return of their AP All State 1st
Team running back Zak Barket (5-10, 205), who gained
2518 yards on 306 carries last year. The lines look
strong ranging from 6-0 to 6-3 with weights of 220,
225, 240, 240 and 280. Looks like there is another
strong Hurricane in District-11 this year!
Other teams to keep you eye on
Shenandoah Valley (5-6) The Blue Devils suffered
their first losing season since 2000. Since then,
they’ve tuned it up a notch, winning 54 games while
losing just 17 before last year’s anomaly.
Graduation swept aside the quarterback, running back
and leading receiver but if tradition holds, the
Devils will put another good team out there.
Marian Catholic (11-3) Sever graduation
losses may slow the Colts down but it’s hard seeing
them not field another competitive team, a tradition
at Marian. Last year’s team was stopped in the
playoffs by Bloomsburg 21-7. Along the way they beat
Minersville twice (see below), lost a nail bitter to
Halifax 38-31 and were trounced by Jim Thorpe 28-0.
Time for another rebuild in Tamaqua.
Minersville (10-3) The Battling Miners will
have to battle hard this year with their backfield
and lines wiped out through graduation. Like Marian
Catholic, they lost key players but return AP 1st
Team DL Kevin Putalavage. Unlike Marian, they do not
have a huge roster. Marian has 54 on their roster,
Minersville has 33.
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