|


By Chris
English Courier Times Sports Writer
With
Central Bucks West High School in Doylestown
establishing a football dynasty with 42 straight
wins, long-time area gridiron followers are reminded
of another streak. Neshaminy has a long and
illustrious football tradition, but never were the
Redskins more dominant than for five seasons in the
early 1960's. From the fourth game of the 1961
campaign all the way through 1965, Coach John
Petercuskie's teams did not taste defeat on the
field. Neshaminy was 47-0-4 during that period.
After Harry Franks established Neshaminy as a
power-house, Petercuskie took over the reins by
himself as head coach in 1960. In his second season,
the Redskins took off on their unbeaten streak under
the guidance of Petercuskie and assistant coaches
Jack Swartz and Pete Cordelli.
-1961-
Game
One Sept. 29, 1961 -
Neshaminy 28, Allentown William Allen 14
The
streak started with a 28-14 win over Allentown
William Allen in Allentown. Coming off a tough 13-7
loss to nemesis Easton in their third game of the
season (after shutout wins over Bishop Egan and
Chester), the Redskins took out their frustrations
on the Canaries. Chief weapon in the Neshaminy
arsenal was senior halfback Ed Kaminski. He scored
on runs of four yards in the first quarter and six
in the second to stake the Redskins to a 14-0 lead.
Not satisfied to just show his running skills,
Kaminski also passed for a nine-yard touchdown to Al
Rell in the second quarter. The lead reached 28-0 in
the third period when fullback Bob Baxter bolted 45
yards for a score. Bill Schemberg added all four
extra points. Allentown got on the board with two
touchdowns in the final quarter.
Game
Two Oct. 6, 1961 -
Neshaminy 59, Bristol 0
Playing
before 3,000 at Neshaminy, the Redskins took no
prisoners in steamrolling over Bristol. Neshaminy
scored every time it handled the ball as nine
different players scored touchdowns. They were
Kaminski, Bob Barr, Tom Preno, Rell, Jim Ball, Bruce
Evans, Tom Dee, Bob Baxter and Maury Tome. The
longest plays came when Kaminski ran 65 yards for a
score in the first quarter and threw 64 yards to
Rell in the second. Mike Wingfield made sure the
defense got into the act when he intercepted a Bob
Pascale pass to set up the third touchdown. The 59
points equaled the team scoring record set in 1959
against Woodrow Wilson.
Game
Three Oct. 13, 1961 -
Neshaminy 54, Woodrow Wilson 0
For the
second straight week, the Redskins coasted through
a laugher. Playing before 4,000 on their home turf,
Petercuskie's team rolled up a 40-0 lead at halftime
and never looked back. Kaminski again was a big gun
offensively. He scored on runs of 10 and four yards
and also ran back a punt 59 yards for a score. The
punt return came when Jim Ball caught the kick and
then handed off to Kaminski who took it in behind
fine blocking. The Rams of Coach Lou Sorrentino
could not penetrate into Neshaminy territory in the
first half. Wilson's best run in that half was an
eight-yarder by Johnny Keener on a keeper. Other
Neshaminy touchdowns were by Evans (one-yard run),
Baxter (one-yard run), Bill Brundzo (three-yard
run), Preno (one-yard run) and Barr (four-yard run).
Bill Schemberg added five extra points and Baxter
one.
Game
Four Oct. 20, 1961 -
Neshaminy 34, Pennsbury 14
Before a
throng of 7,000 at Playwicki Field, the Redskins
continued their scoring binge at the expense of
their arch-rivals. Neshaminy opened the scoring in
the first quarter when Baxter, a sophomore, dashed
11 yards to climax an 86-yard march following the
opening kickoff. Kaminski followed with a 27-yard
pass to junior halfback Barr in the second quarter.
Baxter then caught a 25-yard scoring pass from
Brundzo to give the Redskins a 21-0 lead. The score
reached 34-0 in the third quarter on a 25-yard Barr
run and a 10-yard run by junior halfback John
Rothrock (extra-point kick failed). Pennsbury scored
all its points in the final quarter. First, end Bill
Junk recovered a Neshaminy fumble in the end zone.
Then, senior fullback Bill Sanders finished a
54-yard drive with a two-yard run. One of the few
sour notes for Neshaminy was an injury to Kaminski.
He fractured his ankle in the game and missed the
rest of the season.
Game
Five Oct. 28, 1961 -
Neshaminy 45, Delhaas 0
Another
easy shutout for the Redskins, this one on the
Delhaas field as 1,000 fans looked on. Brundzo
passed for four touchdowns. They were 22 yards to
Ball, 27 to Ralph Basch, 20 to Preno and four to
Mike Wunsch. Probably the most exciting play was a
60-yard touchdown dash by Barr in the second
quarter. The defense also got into the act when Mike
Wingfield returned an interception 22 yards for a
score. Evans scored the other touchdown on a
seven-yard run.
Game
Six Nov. 3, 1961 -
Neshaminy 22, William Tennent 0
The
Redskins clinched the Lower Bucks County League
Section One title with their sixth and final shutout
of the year. Around 4,500 at Playwicki field saw
Tennent give John Petercuskie's crew a surprisingly
tough test. Barr opened the scoring with a one-yard
run in the third quarter following a 64-yard march
set up when Rell intercepted a pass from Tennent's
Frank Bachich. Baxter continued his scoring binge
when he caught a 31-yard pass from Brundzo, also in
the second stanza. Bachich was tackled in the end
zone for a safety in the third stanza. Baxter
finished the scoring with a one-yard run in the
fourth. Schemberg kicked two of three extra points.
Game
Seven Nov. 11, 1961 -
Neshaminy 55, Delaware Township (N.J.) 13
Some
3,000 fans at Playwicki field saw the Redskins
explode for 28 points in a four-minute span of the
third quarter to put the game away. Neshaminy
overcame a 13-6 deficit to win going away. Barr ran
for three touchdowns to lead the scoring parade (29,
23 and one yard). Evans returned a punt 76 yards for
one touchdown and threw 35 yards to Rell for
another. Other touchdowns were by Brundzo
(three-yard run), Bruce Galvin (five-yard run with
fumble recovery) and Mark Ciccone (three-yard run).
Brundzo was injured and lost for the remainder of
the season in this game.
Game
Eight Nov. 17, 1961 -
Neshaminy 21, La Salle 7
In a
special game added to the schedule, over 8,000 fans
at Neshaminy's Playwicki field watched the. Redskins
top the cream of the Philadelphia Catholic League
crop. La Salle was the fending City champions.
Senior halfback Bruce Evans stole the show, scoring
all three Neshaminy touchdowns on runs of two, two
and three yards. Quarterback Frank Daniel scored the
only La Salle touchdown on a five-yard run after
Neshaminy had already scored twice. Defensive stand
John Carber, who went on to All State honors as a
lineman, prevented another La Salle touchdown in the
second quarter by recovering a fumble at the
Neshaminy 10.
Game
Nine Nov. 23, 1961 -
Neshaminy 40, Bensalem 14
Petercuskie's team closed out the year with the
annual Thanksgiving Day clash with Bensalem. Around
2,000 at the Owls' field watched the Redskins forge
a devastating 376-39 advantage in total yardage. The
game featured the usual number of explosive plays
from Neshaminy's single-wing offense. Bob Barr
scored on runs of 62 and 83 yards. Other scores were
by Baxter (runs of 19 and one yard), Evans
(four-yard run) and Dick Bonsall (one-yard run).
Neshaminy was up by a 40-0 count before Bensalem
scored in the final quarter , a 65-yard kickoff
return by Henry George and an eight-yard pass from
quarterback Glen Ray to Danny Staats. Carber and the
defense again did their part, registering another
safety in the first quarter. Neshaminy finished
11-1-0 on the season, scoring 418 total points to
its opponents' 75.
-1962-
Coming
off a relentless 1961 campaign in which the
Neshaminy High School football team rolled over
almost every opponent, Coach John Petercuskie and
his squad were primed for another fine season in
1962. Of course, Neshaminy's success was due in
large part to the tireless work of its assistant
coaches Jack Swartz and Pete Cordelli put in
countless hours helping out Petercuskie before
becoming Neshaminy head coaches themselves in later
years.
Game
10 Sept. 7, 1962 -
Neshaminy 40, Bishop Egan 12
Petercuskie and his crew opened the season with a
demolition of Egan before close to 8,000 at
Playwicki Field. Halfback Bill Brundzo and fullback
Bob Baxter accounted for 33 of the points. Baxter
scored four touchdowns, two on passes from Brundzo
and two on short runs. Baxter also booted three
extra points. Brundzo added a two-yard run along
with his passes to Brundzo. The Redskins' longest
play of the day came from the defense, as Tom Preno
returned an interception 75 yards in the second
quarter. Egan, already behind by a 27-0 score, broke
the ice in the third quarter with a 63-yard drive.
The touchdown came on a 35-yard pass from Bill
Creeden to Al Pezzola. Egan added another score in
the fourth when John Kerr climaxed a 64-yard drive
with a one-yard run.
Game 11 Sept. 14, 1962
-
Neshaminy 54, Chester 0
Eight different players
scored for Petercuskie as his squad completely
overwhelmed the outmanned Clippers. A crowd of 5,200
at Playwicki Field witnessed the rout. Neshaminy
rolled up a 40-0 lead by halftime, piling up 313
yards rushing in the first two quarters. For the
game, the Redskins finished with 418 rushing yards
and almost 500 (497) in total yards. Chester managed
only 167. Baxter, Bob Barr, Brundzo, Maury Tome,
Milt Rassier, Mark Ciccone, Tom Preno and Ray
Jenkins all scored touchdowns.
Game
12 Sept. 21, 1962 -
Neshaminy 13, Easton 6
Neshaminy traveled up to Cottingham Stadium and
dealt the always tough Red Rovers a hard-fought
loss. Neshaminy took the opening kickoff 61 yards
for its first touchdown. A 27-yard pass from Brundzo
to Rassier ended the march. The Redskins took a 13-0
lead when Tome plunged over from the three. Baxter's
second extra-point kick (after penalty nullified the
first) was wide. Easton made it 13-6 in the third
quarter when Jim Patterson scampered 64 yards for a
score. Neshaminy's seven-man defensive front held
Coach Charlie Rute's Easton squad the rest of the
way. John Wichelman, Bob Cummings, Rich Lauther,
Bruce Galvin, Phil Lange, Rudy Kalan and Ray Jenkins
made up the line. They were backed up by Barr, Preno
and safties Ciccone and Brundzo. A key run by Preno
with 5:20 left in the game got Neshaminy a crucial
first down and enabled the Redskins to run the clock
down. Over 8,500 were in attendance at Easton. The
Red Rovers had been the only squad to top Neshaminy
in the last 44 games.
Game
13 Sept. 28, 1962 -
Neshaminy 14, Allentown Allen 14
In what
was to be one of the four ties it would endure
during the 51-game streak, Neshaminy gave 6,500 fans
at Playwicki Field a game to remember. The Redskins
scored early in the first quarter. Phil Lange (Lower
Bucks 220-yard dash champ in track), taking a
handoff from Baxter, returned the opening kickoff
all the way to the Allen 26. Baxter finished the
short drive with a 13-yard run. Allentown's defense
got it on the scoreboard later in the first quarter.
Co-captain John Henricks blasted in to block a punt
by Neshaminy's John Vosburgh and returned it 30
yards for a touchdown. Preno set up Neshaminy's
second touchdown in the third quarter, intercepting
a pass by Bob Brobst and returning it 40 yards to
Allen's 25. Shortly afterward, Brundzo scored on a
five-yard run. Allentown tied things up again in the
final quarter on a 70-yard drive. Gary Newhard
finished it with a one yard run. Neshaminy had one
last chance in the final minute. Bob Cummings' field
goal attempt from the 19 was on line but short.
Baxter's 13-yard score was Neshaminy's longest run
of the night.
Game
14 Oct. 5, 1962 -
Neshaminy 34, Bethlehem 14
Neshaminy scored three touchdowns in the final
quarter to run away from the Hurricanes before 5,000
at Bethlehem. Baxter scored on runs of one and 10
yards while Preno added a 62-yard jaunt in the
fourth stanza to put the game away. Neshaminy
vaulted to a 14-0 lead on runs of 13 (first quarter)
and 40 yards (second quarter) by halfback Brundzo.
Bethlehem tied things up on a 75-yard run by Les
"Tank" Amison and a 65-yard pass from Frank Matla to
Frank Mohap. End Milt Rassier set up one of
Neshaminy's fourth-quarter touchdowns when he tore
in to deck Dwayne Wartman on a punt attempt. The
Redskins operated from the T-formation in this game,
varying slightly from their usual single-wing
lineup.
Game
15 Oct. 12, 1962 -
Neshaminy 53, Woodrow Wilson 6
Neshaminy again proved that teams from Lower Bucks
weren't much of a match for its overall power. Barr
led the attack with three touchdowns (runs of 21 and
31 yards and 65-yard pass from Brundzo). Fullback
Baxter continued his scoring rampage with two TD s
(runs of 10 and 96 yards). Preno (27-yard pass
interception return), Maury Tome (two-yard run) and
Brundzo (21-yard pass reception) also scored.
Wilson's lone touchdown came on a nine-yard pass
from Tom Walsh to Frank Davis in the second quarter.
Neshaminy rolled up a 430-171 edge in total yardage
as 6,500 at the Bristol Township field looked on.
Game
16 Oct. 20, 1962 -
Neshaminy 51, Pennsbury 26
Around
6,000 at Pennsbury watched Neshaminy score an,
incredible 33 points in the second quarter to blitz
Erie Baugher's Falcons. The points came in the span
of six and a half minutes. Baxter netted four more
touchdowns (runs of 56, three and one and a 57-yard
pass from Brundzo). The Redskins also scored on a
one yard run by Brundzo, one-yard run by Barr,
23-yard pass from Preno to Barr and a three-yard run
by Tome. Pennsbury scored on a 32-yard pass from
Vince Tanzola to Dave Yates, 38-yard run by Tanzola
and runs of 51 and three yards by Bob Burkhart. The
26 points was the most against Neshaminy since a
26-13 loss to Pennridge in 1958.
Game
17 Oct. 26, 1962 -
Neshaminy 26, Delhaas 6
Baxter
scored all four Redskins' touchdowns, and his three
scores in the second half broke a 6-6 halftime
deadlock. Baxter opened the scoring with a one-yard
plunge in the first quarter Delhaas tied it in the
second on a 10-yard pass from Vern Pastirchak to Ed
Hoffman. Baxter took over in the second half,
however, scoring on runs of 51, 28 and 53 yards.
Game
18 Nov. 3, 1962 -
Neshaminy 55, William Tennent 0
The big
story was Baxter, as he scored 19 points (two
touchdowns and seven extra-point kicks) to break the
old Lower Bucks County scoring mark. His 152 points
broke the old mark of 150, set by Neshaminy's Jack
Stricker in 1960. Barr also scored two more
touchdowns, on runs of 71 and 15 yards in the second
quarter. Neshaminy's reserves piled on two more
scores in the final quarter, the highlight of which
was a 49-yard touchdown pass from Bill Kaminski to
Mark Ciccone. Brundzo (two-yard run), Tome (two-yard
run) and Rassier (12-yard pass from Preno) also
scored. Neshaminy topped the 50-point mark for the
fourth time in the 1962 season.
Game
19 Nov. 9, 1962 -
Neshaminy 20, Bishop Kenrick 6
The
Golden Knights of Kenrick didn't manage a TD until
the fourth quarter when they already were on the
short end of a 20-0 score. Barr got Neshaminy on the
scoreboard in the first quarter when he ran 42 yards
for a touchdown. Baxter then scored on runs of 27
yards and one yard in the final quarter to put
Kenrick away. The Golden Knights one TD came on a
25-yard pass from Pete G Achille to Mike Vernacchio.
Game
20 Nov. 16, 1962 -
Neshaminy 37, Bensalem 0
A robust
crowd of 7,500 at Playwicki Field saw the Redskins
make rather short work of the Lower Bucks County
League Section Two champs. Neshaminy was the Section
One king. Baxter scored four more touchdowns. He
raced 71 yards on each of two kickoff returns and
also returned a punt 71 yards for a score. Baxter
also notched a three-yard run in the third quarter.
The other Neshaminy touchdowns were on a one-yard
run by Preno and a 38-yard pass from Brundzo to
Lange. Mark Ciccone recovered three fumbles in the
game for Neshaminy, sharing one recovery with John
Wichelman. Jim Dettmer turned in a fine defensive
game for Bensalem. Baxter notched an incredible 191
points (26 touchdowns, 35 extra points) for the
season, an area scoring mark that still stands. He
was named Courier Times Player of the Year while
center Cummings was honored with Lineman of the
Year. After the 1962 campaign, it was discovered
that Neshaminy had inadvertently used an ineligible
player (a little-used substitute). The Redskins were
forced to forfeit all 11 games during the '62 season
but its dominance on the field was clearly
unchallenged.
-1963-
Neshaminy High
School entered the 1963 season having not been
topped on the football field in 20 games. The
streak would continue unabated as Coach John
Petercuskie led a talented stable of standouts
into battle.
Game
21 Sept. 6, 1963 -
Neshaminy 7, Central Dauphin 0
A crowd
of 9,000 at Playwicki Field watched the Redskins
edge this Central Pennsylvania power. It was only
the second loss in 21 games for Central Dauphin. The
only score came in the second quarter on a one-yard
run by Bill Brundzo. It climaxed a 16-play, 79-yard
drive. The key play on the march was a 35-yard run
by junior Eric Hutchison, who helped make
Neshaminy's season opener a successful one. Jack
Dunn also did a fine job carrying the ball for the
Redskins. Linemen Bill Schwartz, Steve Weinstein,
Keenan Mucklow, Ray Jenkins and Steve Pyle did a
fine defensive job
Game
22 Sept. 13, 1963 -
Neshaminy 14, Bishop Egan 13
Playwicki Field overflowed with 11,000 spectators
for this classic battle among area rivals. Under
Coach Dick Bedesem, Egan was fired up and Neshaminy
had to rally from a 13-0 deficit to get the win.
Egan scored first in the first quarter when Joe
Rorick plunged over from the two. In the second
quarter, Bedesem's crew made it 13-0 when Tom
Colella ran one yard for a score. However, a run by
Rorick for the extra point was stopped cold and that
proved to be critical. Neshaminy came to life in the
second half. A 15-yard Egan punt from deep in its
own territory put the Redskins in business at the
Egan 36. Bob Baxter completed the short drive with a
three-yard run. An interception by Bill Brundzo set
up the winning score. After his return to the Egan
45, the Redskins marched in. Brundzo finished the
drive with a one-yard run and Baxter provided the
extra-point kick for the winning margin.
Game
23 Sept. 20, 1963 -
Neshaminy 0, La Salle 0
A field
made messy by rain resulted in a scoreless deadlock.
Bob Baxter scored a touchdown on a 75-yard punt
return in the third quarter, but it was nullified
when Neshaminy was penalized for having 12 players
on the field. About 6,000 fans showed up at
Playwicki Field, with around half leaving when the
rain started coming down heavily. The outweighed
Redskins had trouble opening any holes for Baxter
and Brundzo.
Game
24 Sept. 27, 1963 -
Neshaminy 14, Easton 9
Baxter
scored both Neshaminy touchdowns as 9,000 looked on
at Playwicki Field. The scores came on a 25-yard
pass from Brundzo in the first quarter and a 51-yard
run in the second. Neshaminy also scored on a safety
in the second quarter when an Easton snap sailed
over its punter's head and out of its own end zone.
Junior lineman John Troyano was Neshaminy's unsung
hero. Neshaminy, ahead 14-7 in the third quarter,
fumbled the ball into its own end zone. Alertly,
Troyano recovered the fumble as Neshaminy was
charged with a safety but prevented an Easton
touchdown. Tackles Bill Schwartz and sophomore Bill
Elswick played well defensively for Neshaminy,
holding Easton at bay in many crucial situations.
Easton had taken a 7-0 lead in the first quarter on
a three-yard run by Chuck Amato. The Redskins
answered before the quarter ended with the
Brundzo-to-Baxter aerial. Neshaminy then scored the
safety and another touchdown in the second quarter.
Game
25 Oct. 4, 1963 -
Neshaminy 21, Allentown Allen 20
Before
7,000 at Allentown, the Redskins pulled out a
squeaker thanks to three touchdowns from the
irrepressible Baxter. The 6-1, 195-pound senior
scored on a 61-yard punt return, 78-yard kickoff
return and 32-yard run. The run gave Neshaminy a
21-13 lead in the final quarter, enough to withstand
a final touchdown by Allentown. The Canaries had
taken a 13-0 lead on a one-yard run by Jim Rau
(extra-point kick failed) and a five-yard dash by
Greg Newhard. Baxter got Neshaminy on the board in
the third quarter with his kickoff return, In the
fourth, his punt return and extra point kick pushed
Neshaminy into the lead, 14-13. Neshaminy recovered
three fumbles in the first half to keep itself in
the game
Game
26 Oct. 11, 1963 -
Neshaminy 13, Allentown Dieruff 7
Another
good crowd of 8,000 at Playwicki Field watched the
Redskins take a 13-0 lead and then hold on.
Neshaminy got on the scoreboard in the first
quarter when Bill Schwartz picked up a fumble and
ran 29 yards for a touchdown. Baxter added another
in the second with a 70-yard run (kick failed).
Allentown Dieruff got back into the game in the
third stanza on an eight-yard touchdown run by Ken
Reichard. Allentown had driven to Neshaminy's
24-yard line with 1:22 remaining in the game.
However, a jarring hit by Neshaminy tackle and
Co-captain Ray Jenkins forced a wobbly pass from Ed
Roche. Jack Dunn intercepted and the Redskins were
able to kill the remaining time. Jenkins had 1 3
tackles on the day and Ted Boerckel also turned in a
fine defensive game for Neshaminy.
Game
27 Oct. 18, 1963 -
Neshaminy 13, Bethlehem 0
Baxter
and Brundzo scored on runs of two yards each and the
defense did the rest as 8,500 at Playwicki Field
watched. Neshaminy was stymied in the first half.
Baxter scored early in the third quarter after a
31-yard kickoff return by Tom Dee gave the Redskins
good field position. Brundzo's TD early in the
fourth was set up when defensive halfback Ted
Boerckel intercepted a pass and returned it 41 yards
to Bethlehem's 17. With the win, Neshaminy captured
the first championship of the newly-formed East Penn
League. The Redskins would later win another title
in the Lower Bucks County League (Section One).
Game
28 Nov. 1, 1963 -
Neshaminy 20, Woodrow Wilson 6
The
Golden Rams, 2-0 in LBCL Section One play and 6-0
overall heading into the game, could not withstand
the onslaught of Baxter. Baxter scored on runs of
five yards in the first quarter, one yard in the
second and 50 yards in the third to stake the
Redskins to a 20-0 advantage. Coach Lou Sorrentino
got a three-yard run from Paul Horwatt in the final
period to avoid the shutout. Around 7,500 at
Playwicki Field witnessed the contest. Baxter and
Bill Kaminski had interceptions for Neshaminy while
Don Robertson intercepted a pass for Wilson.
Baxter's three TDs gave him 341 points for his
three-year varsity career, breaking the old Lower
Bucks scoring record held by Neshaminy's Harry Schuh,
who totaled 337 in three years.
Game
29 Nov. 9, 1963 -
Neshaminy 27, William Tennent 7
The
Redskins ran up their highest point total in what
was proving be a tougher season than 1962, when 50
points was not all that uncommon. Baxter got
Neshaminy off to a quick start with a two-yard
touchdown run in the opening quarter. Halfback
Brundzo added a four-yard scamper later in the
period. Tennent scored its only TD in the second
quarter on a one-yard plunge by John Sokolis.
Neshaminy added two more touchdowns in the third
period. The first was a 1 6-yard Brundzo pass to
Bill McIntyre and the second a 16-yard run by
Baxter. Bill Kaminski added another interception for
the Redskins in the game. The Panthers got most of
their offense on the passing of quarterback John
Samsel.
Game
30 Nov. 15, 1963 -
Neshaminy 21, Pennsbury 20
The
Redskins copped the Section One crown with a
thrilling win before over 9,000 at Playwicki Field.
It also concluded Neshaminy's season. Petercuskie's
crew started fast, taking a 14-0 advantage in the
first quarter. Brundzo opened the scoring with a
57-yard run and Baxter followed with a two-yard
plunge. The Falcons roared back in the second
stanza. Quarterback Vince Tanzola finished a 75-yard
drive with a one-yard touchdown run Shortly
afterward, Bob Burkhart scored on a seven-yard dash
to climax another 75-yard march and tie the score
after Burkhart's extra point run (all extra points -
kicked or otherwise - were worth only one point) at
14. In the final quarter, Pennsbury took a 20-14
lead on a one-yard Tanzola run. His 30-yard pass to
Bill Houser was the key play on the drive.
Burkhart's PAT run fell short, however, and that was
to prove critical. Neshaminy came right back with
its own drive. Tom Dee tied the score when he caught
a 27-yard touchdown pass from Brundzo. Baxter's
patented left-footed kick for the extra point
provided the margin of victory. Pennsbury drove down
to the Neshaminy seven, but time ran out for the
Falcons. Pennsbury actually out gained the Redskins
by a hefty 337-132 margin in total yardage. A
Pennsbury defense led by Doug Guertin, Les Hoffman,
Ken Medlin, At Dunning, Bob Peresta, Joe Fioravanti,
Steve Battershell and Mike Homa held Baxter to only
23 yard on 15 carries; the lowest output, of his
career.
-1964-
Already blessed with a state-wide and national
reputation, the Neshaminy High School football
team picked right up on its gridiron dominance
in 1964. The 51-game unbeaten streak would
continue throughout 1964 and 1965. The players
may have changed, but the winning formula
started by Harry Franks and continued by John
Petercuskie was a constant.
Game
31 Sept. 11, 1964 -
Neshaminy 21, Bishop Egan 0
Switching to a Wing-T offense for this season to
replace the traditional single-wing, the Redskins
got off to a fast start against Dick Bedesem's
defending Philadelphia Catholic League champions.
Petercuskie cited the absence of a big bruising
fullback in the Bob Baxter mold and general lack of
dominating size as the reason for changing offenses.
Before 10,000 fans at Playwicki Field, Neshaminy was
led by junior quarterback Jim Colbert. He passed 45
yards to Denny Auckland for the Redskins' first
touchdown. Neshaminy's second touchdown came in the
third quarter when Colbert fumbled two yards from
pay dirt after a 10-yard run. Alert teammate Andy
Irons fell on the ball in the end zone for a TD,
however. The Redskins finished the scoring in the
fourth quarter. Fred Tragemann, who earlier had
intercepted a pass, recovered an Egan fumble on the
Eagles' 46. Colbert directed his squad in from there
with Ted Kaminski finishing the march with a 10-yard
run. Gerry Barr's interception had set up the second
Neshaminy touchdown drive.
Game
32 Sept. 18, 1964 -
Neshaminy 13, La Salle 0
Striking
twice in the second quarter, once on the ground and
once through the air, the Redskins emerged
victorious before nearly 10,000 fans at Playwicki
Field. Neshaminy's first score was set up when La
Salle fumbled a punt and Neshaminy recovered on the
La Salle 15. Three plays later, Colbert went over
from the two. Shortly afterward, Colbert found Irons
for a 12-yard touchdown pass. Standing out on
defense for the Redskins were linebacker Jack
(Dynamite) Dunn and end Steve Pyle. Also having good
games defensively were Rich McHale, Harold Odell,
Bill Elswick and Fred Conger.
Game
33 Sept. 25, 1964 -
Neshaminy 19, Easton 0
Colbert
continued with his hot hand, throwing for three
touchdowns as the Redskins notched their third
consecutive shutout before 9,500 at Easton's
Cottingham Stadium. Colbert's scoring passes were 10
yards to Denny Auckland in the second quarter, 49
yards to Ted Kaminski in the third and again to
Kaminski for eight yards in the fourth. Neshaminy's
defense held Easton to 105 total yards and the Red
Rovers did not complete a pass. Colbert hit on
eight-of-12 passes on the night for 111 yards.
Game
34 Oct. 3, 1964 -
Neshaminy 40, Allentown Allen 6
The
Redskins bolted to a 34-0 lead after three quarters
and coasted in for the victory. Around .6,500 saw
the game at Playwicki Field. Neshaminy scored three
touchdowns in the first quarter (three-yard run by
Ted Boerckel, 54-yard run by Barr and three-yard run
by Colbert). Ted Kaminski bolted one yard for a TD
in the second. Colbert got into the act again with a
23-yard scoring run in the third. Allentown Allen
scored its only touchdown in the fourth quarter on a
two-yard run by Tony Perilla. The score was set up
on a fumble recovery by Bob McFarland. Kaminski
finished the scoring shortly afterward with a
twisting 90-yard kickoff return. Dunn was again all
over the field defensively for the Redskins while
middle guard Harold O'Dell also stood out.
Game
35 Oct. 10, 1964 -
Neshaminy 6, Allentown Dieruff 6
A
relatively sparse crowd of 2,800 fans at Allentown
watched the Huskies force the third tie of
Neshaminy's 51-game streak. Quarterback Colbert
suffered head injuries on the first play of the game
and had to be replaced by junior Bob Rotollo, who
managed to hit on only one of 10 passes. Bill
Kaminski's one-yard plunge in the first quarter put
the Redskins up by a 6-0 count (George Nolte's extra
point kick was wide). Dieruff managed to tie the
score in the third quarter on a one-yard run by Mike
Lopsonzski, Dieruff's quarterback. Ken Reichard's
kick for the extra point sailed wide, preserving the
deadlock. Dieruff would drive to the Neshaminy 25
late in the final quarter, but fumbled the ball away
as Dunn recovered. Neshaminy's only other chance for
a score was a drive to the Dieruff 17 in the third
quarter. Dieruff out rushed the Redskins by a 274-153
margin and held a 301-173 advantage in total
yardage.
Game
36 Oct. 16, 1964 -
Neshaminy 40, Bethlehem Liberty 19
Bill
Kaminski turned in a fine performance, scoring three
touchdowns (all on short runs) to lead Neshaminy
before 11,500 at Bethlehem. Quarterback Bob Rotollo
and Jerry Barr also notched touchdowns. Rotollo also
threw 33 yards to junior end Rich McHale for another
score. The longest Neshaminy score was a 59-yard
scamper by Barr for the game's final touchdown in
the fourth quarter.
Game
37 Oct. 30, 1964 -
Neshaminy 9, Woodrow Wilson 2
Colbert,
returning to action from an injury, plunged one yard
for a touchdown in the first quarter for the
winning points. Around 4,500 at the Bristol
Township Field saw the action. Neshaminy took a 9-0
lead in the second quarter when Wilson fumbled on
its own six-yard line and the ball rolled backwards
across the goal line for a Neshaminy safety. Wilson
got its only points in the third stanza when Jack
Wertheim brought down Barr in the end zone for a
safety. The Redskins were without the services of
guard John Troyano (out for season with
mononucleosis and hepatitis) and tackle Harry O'Dell
(out for season with fractured ankle).
Game
38 Nov. 6, 1964 -
Neshaminy 35, William Tennent 6
Petercuskie's team rolled over the visiting Panthers
before 5,500. Ted Boerckel opened the scoring with a
48-yard run in the first quarter. Tennent drew to
within 7-6 (the. Panthers' extra-point conversion
pass failed) on a one-yard Mike Reilly run in the
second quarter. It was set up when Larry Krause
blocked a Redskin punt. Neshaminy then scored four
straight TDs to turn the game into a rout. The
touchdowns came on a one-yard Colbert run, 61-yard
pass from Colbert to Billy Kaminski, 75-yard run by
Kaminski and a one-yard run by Eric Hutchinson.
Jimmy Walker, Neshaminy's middle guard on defense,
hauled down a score of Tennent runners during the
contest. He was just returning to the squad after
eight weeks out with a knee injury
Game
39 Nov.
14, 1964 -
Neshaminy 14, Pennsbury 13
This
game was for the Section One title of the Lower
Bucks County Football League. Neshaminy was 7-0-1
heading into the contest and Pennsbury, under Coach
Erle Baugher, was 8-0-0. Before more than 10,000 at
Pennsbury, the Redskins emerged a one-point victor
for the second straight year against Pennsbury.
Neshaminy got out to a quick 14-0 lead in the first
quarter. Billy Kaminski bolted 39 yards for the
first TD. Then, with six seconds remaining in the
opening stanza, Colbert ran two yards for another
score. His 38-yard pass to end Andy Irons was a key
play on the drive. Nolte kicked both extra point for
the Redskins. In the second quarter, Pennsbury
closed the gar Tackle Dave Pursell intercepted
Colbert pass to put the Falcons it business at their
own 48. Fifteen plays later, Joe Hodgson scored the
TD on a three-yard run. Bob Burkhart cracked into
the end zone for the conversion (counting only one
point during that time). Pennsbury blew a chance in
the third quarter when it tumbled the ball away one
inch from a touchdown. However, early in the fourth
quarter Burkhart bolted over from the two. He tried
another run for the conversion, but was halted by
Neshaminy's line Baugher was not able to find anyone
on the Pennsbury team to boot extra points before
school started.
Game
40 Nov. 20, 1964 -
Neshaminy 53, Delhaas 0
The
Redskins closed out a 9-0-1 campaign with a flurry.
Perhaps the most exciting play was a 103-yard
interception return for a touchdown by Gerry Barr.
Bill Kaminski scored three touchdowns (runs of 62
and six yards and a 52-yard punt return). Other
touchdowns were by Colbert (runs of 12 and 27
yards), Jim Walker (39-yard run) and George
Kissinger (43-yard run). Tackle Art O'Connell along
with Dunn and Larry Finney turned in fine games
defensively for Neshaminy.
-1965-
The
1965 football season marked the final year for
both Head Coach John Petercuskie and Neshaminy
High School's remarkable 51-game unbeaten
streak. Neshaminy would fall on some rare hard
times following the '65 campaign, but the
players would make Petercuskie's final year a
memorable one.
Game
41 Sept. 10, 1965 -
Neshaminy 41, Bishop Egan 0
Petercuskie couldn't have asked for a much better
season opener. It was a long night for the Eagles of
Dick Bedesem. Senior quarterback Jim Colbert opened
the scoring in the first quarter with a three-yard
run. The Redskins added two more touchdowns in the
second quarter on long runs. The first was a 50-yard
jaunt by Tom Thompson on a reverse. Colbert added a
58-yard burst. Colbert added his third touchdown in
the third quarter on a two-yard run. He got one on a
pass in the fourth period, a 23-yard strike to Rich
McHale. Rich Settles finished the scoring with a
four-yard run. George Nolte, back for another season
of reliable placekicking, was good on five of six
extra-point kicks. Dave Rakita intercepted a pass
for Neshaminy while Bill Bartholomew, a junior
tackle, was outstanding on defense for Egan.
Game
42 Sept. 17, 1965 -
Neshaminy 7, La Salle 0
The
Redskins came up with a sterling defensive effort
before 8,000 fans at their home field. Neshaminy
held the Explorers to 11 total yards but managed
only one touchdown of its own. Colbert continued his
outstanding play when he scored the game's only
touchdown on a 53-yard run in the third quarter.
Neshaminy marched up and down the field all night
only to be halted at critical times by La Salle's
defense or its own mistakes. Gerry Barr intercepted
a pass for the Redskins. Among those turning in
solid efforts on defense for Petercuskie were Harry
Hoffman, Pete Vosburgh, Fred Conger, Steve
Whithurst. Bill Walker, Bruce Sauerbry and Sam
Spadaccino.
Game
43 Sept. 24, 1965 -
Neshaminy 33, Easton 27
In a
game not lacking in excitement, the Red Rovers
rolled up the most points against Neshaminy since
Allentown's 32-7 win in 1957. Easton led the entire
game until 2:34 remaining. It was then that Colbert
faked a pass and, with three blockers ahead of him,
raced 61 yards down the right sideline for the
winning touchdown. After George Nolte's extra point
kick, Neshaminy's defense held Easton on four downs
to salt away one of the most exciting wins in recent
years. John Cappellano, who would score three of the
four Easton touchdowns on the night, notched the
games first TD on a seven-yard run in the first
quarter. Colbert answered with a two-yard run. He
added a 29-yard touchdown pass to McHale later in
the quarter. In fact, Colbert also figured in the
other two Redskins TDs. He had a points against
Neshaminy since Allentown's 32-7 win in 1957. Easton
led the entire game until 2:34 remaining. It was
then that Colbert faked a pass and, with three
blockers ahead of him, raced 61 yards down the right
sideline for the winning touchdown. After George
Nolte's extra point kick, Neshaminy's defense held
Easton on four downs to salt away one of the most
exciting wins in recent years. John Cappellano, who
would score three of the four Easton touchdowns on
the night, notched the games first TD on a
seven-yard run in the first quarter. Colbert
answered with a two-yard run. He added a 29-yard
touchdown pass to McHale later in the quarter. In
fact, Colbert also figured in the other two Redskins
TDs. He had a seven-yard run in the third quarter
and passed 20 yards to Barr in the fourth to get
Neshaminy within 27-19 and set up its climactic
drive. Easton's other touchdowns came on a one-yard
run by Frank Freidl, a 49-yard Cappellano run and a
61-yard pass to Cappellano from George Meyers.
Game
44 Oct, 2, 1965 -
Neshaminy 19, Allentown Allen 7
A crowd
of 14,000 in football crazy Allentown watched the
Redskins continue their mastery over the Canaries.
Barr opened the scoring for Neshaminy with a
one-yard run in the opening quarter. Allentown
scored its only touchdown in the second quarter on a
45-yard pass from Joe Tomcho to Pete Moggio. Ken
Cressman's placement made it 7-7. Neshaminy scored
two TDs in the final quarter to wrap things up.
Colbert, the Skins' most explosive threat, notched a
two-yard touchdown run to finish a 79-yard drive.
Garry Pasquine ran 14 yards for the game's final
scoring.
Game
45 Oct. 8, 1965 -
Neshaminy 7, Allentown Dieruff 7
Neshaminy suffered a tie for the -fourth and final
time in the 51-game ,unbeaten streak. The Redskins
thus had one tie in each of the four full seasons of
the streak (1962, '63, '64 and '65). About 5,500 at
the Neshaminy Athletic Field witnessed the contest
as Coach Ernie Wescoe and his Dieruff Huskies forced
the deadlock. Neshaminy jumped out to a lead in the
first quarter when, you guessed it, Colbert scored
on a twisting 55-yard run. It took Dieruff until the
third quarter to tie the score. It came with only 35
seconds left in the stanza on an eight-yard pass
from Rich Studenich to Milton Carl. Neshaminy's
defense, led by Harry Hoffman, Steve Madden, Alan
Jay, Fred Conger, Rich Settles and Steve Whitehurst,
held Deiruff to 28 yards rushing and 84 total yards.
Neshaminy managed only 28 yards of its own, however.
After this game, and just before the next Friday's
game with Bethlehem, Petercuskie announced his
resignation effective at the end of the season. The
official pronouncement came from Neshaminy High
School principal Dr. Kenneth King the day before the
game with Bethlehem. Petercuskie had actually told
his coaches in August that the 1965 campaign would
be his last and on three other occasions told the
team of his plans. He cited demands on time as the
main reason for his decision to step down. "My
family is an important part of my life," said
Petercuskie at the time. He was then 40 years old.
"I've had just one vacation with my family (in 15
years in coaching, including his time as assistant).
When you coach, you have to be around during the
summer. This is the best thing for my family."
Game
46 Oct. 15, 1965 -
Neshaminy 34, Bethlehem Liberty 0
Petercuskie's resignation announcement did not have
an adverse effect as the Redskins rolled over the
Hurricanes before 6,000 at Playwicki Field. Colbert,
becoming a touchdown producer in the Bob Baxter
mold, rushed for one touchdown and threw for two
more. The senior quarterback notched a seven-yard
run in the second quarter. Later in the quarter, he
passed 31 yards for a score to Bob Rotolo and 60
yards for another to Barr. Other Neshaminy
touchdowns came on a 20-yard Rotolo run and a
15-yard run by Tom Munski. Standing out defensively
for the Skins were Dave Ivins, Ray Chychota, Fred
Conger and Tommy Thompson. The win gave Neshaminy
another championship in the Big Six Conference. In
the three-year existence of the league to that
point, the Redskins won two titles outright and tied
in the other year.
Game
47 Oct. 23, 1965 -
Neshaminy 35, Johnson City (N.Y.) 6
On its
home turf before 7,500 on-lookers, the Redskins
dismantled the visitors from the Empire state.
Colbert again figured heavily in the offense,
throwing for two touchdowns and rushing for another.
His passes covered 61 yards to McHale (first
quarter) and 35 yards to Thompson (fourth quarter).
Early in the fourth quarter, Colbert had run two
yards for a TD. Barr, another consistent weapon in
the Neshaminy arsenal, accounted for the other two
touchdowns with runs of one and 40 yards.
Game
48 Oct. 30, 1965 -
Neshaminy 30, William Tennent 0
Strictly
routine for Petercuskie and his crew. Barr continued
his hot scoring binge with an 89-yard run to get
things started. Colbert ran two yards for a TD in
the second quarter and added another TD later in the
stanza on a 38-yard pass to Frank DeMezza. Garry
Pasquine returned a punt 62 yards for a score in the
third. Second-team quarterback Ernie Forchetti, a
junior, ran for two touchdowns in the final quarter
(four and 55 yards) to cap the scoring. Forchetti is
the older brother of Dale Forchetti, a big star for
the Redskins in later years. Bill Elswick recovered
a fumble to set up Colbert's two yard score in the
second quarter.
Game
49 Nov. 6, 1965 -
Neshaminy 27, Altoona 6
The
Redskins did not have a great deal of trouble with
the Mountain Lions of Coach Earl Strohm, a
traditional power in western Pennsylvania and a
28-26 winner over Pennsbury earlier in the season.
Altoona was 6-2 overall coming in and left with its
third straight setback. Colbert got the ball rolling
with a two-yard touchdown run in the opening
quarter. Altoona drew to within 7-6 later in the
stanza with its only score, a 37-yard pass from Walt
Beatty to Dick Frasca. Colbert's touchdown had been
set up when Harry Hoffman recovered a fumble on the
opening kickoff. Colbert added two more rushing
touchdowns, seven yards in the second quarter and
one in the third. Barr finished the scoring by
stepping one off 35 yards in the final period. The
game unfolded before 10,000 on Neshaminy's field.
Game
50 Nov. 12, 1965 -
Neshaminy 7, Pennsbury 0
Pennsbury had dealt the Redskins its last loss in
the Lower Bucks County League back in 1957.
Pennsbury's hopes for dealing Neshaminy another
league loss went by the board when Barr raced 48
yards for the game's only touchdown in the fourth
quarter. A crowd of 11,000 witnessed another epic
battle at Playwicki Field. Pennsbury took the
opening kickoff and marched all the way to the
Neshaminy seven-yard line. From there, Jim
Broadwater and Ed McManus took two cracks apiece at
the Neshaminy defense but couldn't crack it.
Game
51 Nov. 19, 1965 -
Neshaminy 26, Woodrow Wilson 7
The
Petercuskie era came to an end in fine fashion as
the Skins rolled before 9,000 fans at the Wilson
field. Wilson actually took a lead, something few
Neshaminy opponents managed to due in the
Petercuskie years, when Rollie Clark ran seven yards
for a touchdown in the second quarter. The touchdown
was set up when Jack Jakobik recovered a fumble for
Wilson on the Neshaminy 20. Star quarterback Colbert
was injured in the second quarter and missed the
remainder of the game. Backup. Ernie Forchetti took
over and led the Skins to victory. He got Neshaminy
on the scoreboard in the third quarter on an 11-yard
pass to McHale. Neshaminy exploded for three
touchdowns in the final quarter to put the game
away. They came on a one-yard run by Forchetti, a
four-yard run Gerry Barr and a 31-yard interception
return by Tommy Thompson.
The
Redskins finished a 10-0-1 campaign and outscored
its opponents by a cumulative, score of 274 to 60.
Petercuskie stepped down with a final head coaching
record since 1960 (he was co-head coach in 1958 and
1959 with Harry Franks) of 59-1-5. This was his
record on the field, and did not count the 11 games
Neshaminy was forced to forfeit by using an
ineligible player in 1962. Neshaminy's 51-game
unbeaten streak would come to a halt with the first
game of the 1966 season. Under new head coach Tom
McHugh, former head coach at Palmyra (N.J.), the
Redskins suffered a 41-0 setback at the hands of
Dick Bedesem's Bishop Egan team.
|