PA – Central Athletic League | Archive | November, 2018

Haverford defense finds a Weh to make final stand over Upper Darby

UPPER DARBY — Haverford’s C.J. Weh has one job on passing plays.

“It’s my job to go where the quarterback goes and try and get him to the ground,” the senior defensive lineman said.

But on the final play of his final game as a Ford Thursday, Weh decided to do something differently.

“He was rolling away from me toward the sideline and I knew I would never make it to him,” Weh said. “So in the moment I thought I would drop back into the end zone to help the guys who are out there.”

And then he did something he has never done before at any level of organized football. He intercepted a pass.

In this instance, it was the game-deciding play in a thrilling 14-13 win for the Fords at rival Upper Darby in their traditional Thanksgiving clash. It was the ninth consecutive victory for Haverford in the storied rivalry, which the Fords lead 48-43-6.

Upper Darby had just scored a touchdown with 12 seconds remaining on a one-yard plunge by quarterback Kevin Kerwood. Ever the gambler, coach Rich Gentile decided to go for two and the win rather than kick an extra point and head to overtime.

“I felt like it was the right decision,” said Gentile, who has been thinking about this for the past year. “In last year’s game we were down 14-7 and we were driving and I thought then, if we score we’ll go for two. We didn’t score in that one, but I was thinking the same thing this time. We were moving the ball pretty well and I thought we could make the three yards we needed to win the game.”

And he was right. His team had just completed a 16-play, 81-yard drive, that lasted 7:38. Kerwood and Kareem McAdams were chewing up the Haverford defense, and the play Gentile called was a good one. Kerwood rolled to his left and just before he reached the sideline threw back to the middle of the end zone where receiver Shawn McCullough was wide open.

Thing is, no one expected Weh to flash into that open area. Not even Weh’s coach.

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Haverford running back Chasen Wint splits the would-be defense of Upper Darby's Marson Weh, left, and Brylan Brown on the way to a second-quarter touchdown Thursday. The Fords topped the Royals, 14-13. (Eric Hartline/For Digital First

Haverford running back Chasen Wint splits the would-be defense of Upper Darby’s Marson Weh, left, and Brylan Brown on the way to a second-quarter touchdown Thursday. The Fords topped the Royals, 14-13. (Eric Hartline/For Digital First

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Ridley rebounds (again) to eke out wild contest with Interboro

GLENOLDEN — There was a feeling in the fourth quarter Thursday at South Avenue Athletic Complex that Interboro was destined to win.

The Bucs scored the go-ahead touchdown with 8:49 left in regulation.

Rather than play conservatively, kicker Jordan Howe executed a perfect squib kick. The ball bounced high in the air around the Ridley 35-yard line. Ridley’s special-teams players were looking directly into the glare of the November sun and lost track of the ball’s flight. Interboro pounced on the loose pigskin, and its offense went back to work inside Ridley territory.

Ridley’s defense, rattled after allowing Interboro to score seconds earlier, managed to make a big stop on fourth down with 6:50 left.

What transpired was a wild finish to an amazing Turkey Bowl, the 50th edition in Delco’s most heated rivalry.

Ridley’s offense, led by senior quarterback Jack Bakey, required only three plays to regain the lead. Hassan Chandler sprinted 35 yards to the end zone. Interboro answered, thanks a to a four-yard scoring run by Evan Sorrentino.

With one more shot to and extend its Thanksgiving winning streak to five, Ridley capitalized. Elijah Yakpasuo lowered his shoulders and ran two yards up the middle and across the goal line, the difference in a 27-26 victory for Ridley.

“We know that, on every drive, we’ve got to play hard,” said Yakpasuo, who amassed 138 yards on 16 carries. He finished his senior year with 1,271 rushing yards. “This was a hard-fought game, both teams played really hard. We had to motivate the guys and tell them to get after it.

“I love competition. I love this type of game, I don’t like blowouts. I like it when (the game is) close. So, I had to tell the guys, ‘We’ve been through this before, so come on and let’s get after it.’”

Yakpasuo’s game-winning score came with 1:28 to play, which was enough time for Interboro’s offense to make it interesting. Jared Dellipriscoli threw an 11-yard pass to Tim Convery on third down to keep the Bucs’ hopes alive. Two plays later, Dellipriscoli rolled to his right and looked to throw downfield. He eluded the rush, changed directions a few times before setting his feet. He saw Andrew Grieb all alone in the end zone. Dellipriscoli unleashed a throw, but defensive back Jack Liberio recovered in time to disrupt the pass. Grieb juggled the ball as he was crashing to the ground and nearly made a circus catch.

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Ridley quarterback Jack Bakey gets a lift from his linemen to celebrate a first-half touchdown in Ridley’s 27-26 win over Interboro Thursday. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media)

Ridley quarterback Jack Bakey gets a lift from his linemen to celebrate a first-half touchdown in Ridley’s 27-26 win over Interboro Thursday. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media)

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History underscores this year’s glory rides for Radnor, Strath Haven

When Sam Holt took over the Radnor soccer program in 1984 from his mentor Bob Siemons, among the things he was bequeathed was a pile of papers, the detritus of two decades running a team.

Mike Barr’s role as unofficial historian around that time was more unspoken. Chris Jones, the first coach of a unified Strath Haven, had written it all down in the early 1980s – goalscorers, all-state picks, schedules, records. So Barr decided to follow suit?

The pair didn’t set out to add “chronicler” to their resumes. It wasn’t even posterity that they had in mind, per se. Holt didn’t organize Radnor’s history so that four decades later, he’d be on email chains with members of the 1980 state runner-up team, in locations around the globe. Barr didn’t seek to become the keeper of knowledge for one of Pennsylvania’s greatest programs at Strath Haven.

The dual intent wasn’t necessarily to have their protégés use that info to build on their legacies. But that’s how it transpired at both Radnor and Strath Haven.

This weekend marks the first time that two Delaware County boys soccer teams have played for PIAA championships in the same season. Strath Haven will take on West Allegheny in Friday’s Class 3A final; Radnor will meet Wilson in the Class 4A championship Saturday, both at HersheyPark Stadium.

It’s no coincidence that those two are the only Delco programs to ever have made a PIAA final, and the reason involves the legacies that Holt and Barr left at their respective programs, and also the freedom for successors to apply their personal spin on that heritage.

“It’s pretty cool, because you don’t know that it’s happening as it’s happening,” Holt said Thursday. “There wasn’t any structure when you were making it happen. It just happened, and it’s a real positive.”

Holt was revered through the decades at Radnor. Siemons founded the program in 1965; Holt began working his way through the middle school ranks in 1968, after three years in the army stationed in Alaska and Vietnam. He filled every role up the ladder before taking over the Raiders varsity.

When he took over, Holt saw the way in which programs like Lower Merion, Upper Darby and Barr’s Strath Haven operated, incorporating the past into the present.

“It seemed like the thing to do,” Holt said. “When you build a history and current players see the older players come back and make the hall of fame and they come back to the induction at the yearly banquet, there’s just a connection.”

Even the notoriously feisty Barr knew it, and his respect for Holt speaks volumes.

“It’s easy for me to hold animosity toward some coaches because sometimes that drove me to be more successful,” Barr said. “But for Sam, I admired him from the time I met him. …

“Sam had never gotten into states – I think they only took three teams from District 1. They were playing large schools like we were, we were playing for the championship of District 1, and I remember watching his face when Radnor clinched third place to get into states, and him hugging his son, Eric (a two-time All-Delco goalie who graduated in 1993). I almost felt like this is better than me winning districts.”

“Strath Haven was really who planted the flag, and the rest of us were really intent on competing with Mike and his teams,” Holt said. “Right now, that we’re rooting for each other is really cool.”

Were that history hermetically sealed like a ship in a bottle, it would make for a good reminiscing and little more. But at both programs, it’s a living, breathing history. Radnor has only had five head coaches in program history. Alan Mezger, the 1990 Daily Times Player of the Year, took over for Holt. Kyle Shilcock-Elliott, another former Holt player, followed, leading Radnor to the 2004 PIAA Class AA title. Now, Joe Caruolo is in charge, with Shilcock-Elliott as his assistant, a pairing which brought home a Class AAA district title two years ago.

Caruolo didn’t play for Holt, but rather earned All-Delco honors playing at Carroll. Holt raves about “a screaming goal” Caruolo scored against Radnor back in the day.

But like his four predecessors, Caruolo teaches in the district. After the Raiders advanced to the final Tuesday, Caruolo thanked Holt for preserving the history that he’s imparted to the team.

“To be a part of history and make your own history, that’s kind of what differentiates us from a lot of programs,” Caruolo said. “Credit to Sam Holt who kept record of the history dating back to 1965 and allowed you to play for something special … to play a role in history.”

The line of descent is more direct at Haven. Ryan O’Neill was the 1995 Daily Times Player of the Year, fueling one of Barr’s five state titles. He joined the staff and took over when Barr resigned in 2006.

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The Strath Haven boys soccer team, under the tutelage of coach Ryan Smith (standing, far right), poses with its medals after winning the District 1 Class 3A championship at Upper Merion High School. The Panthers will play for the PIAA title Friday night

The Strath Haven boys soccer team, under the tutelage of coach Ryan Smith (standing, far right), poses with its medals after winning the District 1 Class 3A championship at Upper Merion High School. The Panthers will play for the PIAA title Friday night

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Palermo, Perrins drive Strath Haven into state title game

WEST GOSHEN — Some soccer teams park the bus, stacking 10 players behind the ball in search of a 1-nil win. Others, like Strath Haven, take the bus, cut the breaks and race it downhill.

The Panthers have taken an offensive ride, full of counterattacks and quick strikes through the PIAA Class 3A tournament, and kept the wild ride going Tuesday night with a 3-2 defeat of District 12 champion Archbishop Wood at West Chester East High School.

Strath Haven trailed 2-0 1:07 into the second half before rallying for three goals. Nick Palermo scored twice, and Nate Perrins headed home the winner, his 15th goal in six postseason games.

“At the end of the day, that speed, that momentum wave we’ve ridden has done us well every single time,” Panthers coach Ryan O’Neill said. “It’s gotten us here. This is who we are now. And it’s been successful.”

Haven could not have gotten off to a worse start. Ryan Morgan fired the Vikings in front midway through the first half. Wood doubled its lead just after the break when Joe Baranoski played a long, hanging ball into the Panthers’ penalty area.

Haven defender Simon Bolinger misjudged his jump and sent his header over his keeper, Noah Atsaves.

On the other side of the field, the Panthers failed to string anything together. Palermo had a chance in the first minute, but every other look came from well outside the 18-yard box.

Still, the Haven offense lurked. The club hadn’t been shut out all season. And Tuesday would be no different.

“One of our messages, you always have to keep your head up, keep battling,” Perrins said. “And good things will come out.”

Palermo led the charge. Following the own goal, he made a run down the left side. Perrins played him into space and Palermo did the rest, sprinting toward the Wood goal and sending keeper Connor Ford the wrong way.

“I thought (Perrins) played a really good ball,” Palermo said. “I saw the lane open, so I tried to go back post. I kind of whiffed it and went near post, but the goalie guessed back post. Which is kind of lucky.”

Thirteen minutes later, the teams were even at two. It came on a throw-in, a Perrins’ flick-on and a loose ball that found its way to Palermo. He buried it.

The senior had come up big in a similar spot last spring, when he scored the overtime winner in Haven’s run to the PIAA Class 2A lacrosse final.

“He had a big day,” Perrins said. “Something about semifinals and states and him.”

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Strath Haven's Nick Palermo goes in on Archbishop Wood goalie Connor Ford for a game-tying goal Tuesday night at West Chester East. The Panthers would go on a 3-2 victory in the PIAA Class 3A state semifinal game. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media

Strath Haven’s Nick Palermo goes in on Archbishop Wood goalie Connor Ford for a game-tying goal Tuesday night at West Chester East. The Panthers would go on a 3-2 victory in the PIAA Class 3A state semifinal game. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media

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Garnet Valley raises Cain in states opener

UPPER DUBLIN — Garnet Valley swept past District 11 runner-up Emmaus, 3-0, Tuesday in a PIAA Class 4A state tournament opener at Upper Dublin High School, while rolling up scores of 25-17, 25-20, 25-23.

“Overall, I was really pleased with how we played tonight,” Garnet Valley head coach Greg Wood said. “We got out of system midway through the third set, but really, this game was a tough draw for both teams tonight. You had two top centers in the state in this game.

That would be Garnet Valley senior Rachel Cain and Emmaus’ Caroline Bond. The Jaguars, the District 1 4A runner-up, got 41 assists, two digs, three aces and two kills from Cain, an East Stroudsburg commit.

“Rachel set beautifully tonight, did a good job of getting us in system,” Wood said.

The victory boosted the Jaguars’ record to 20-3. Two of the losses were to Bishop Shanahan, the second one in the District 1 Class 4A championship final.

The Garnet Valley attack was punctuated Tuesday night by kills from seniors Ally Hartney (18 kills, two blocks, three aces, hit .593) and Emma Rokosky (14 kills, six digs, two aces, hit .520).

“Ally has been fantastic,” Wood said. “She’s hit .500 for us all year, has been in double digits for kills and blocks.”

The Jaguars also received tough defense Tuesday night from Rowan-bound senior Julia Bowes (28 digs) and senior Gwen Clark (six digs, four kills).

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Garnet Valley’s Rachel Cain sets a ball in the first game of what became a 3-0 Jaguars victory over Emmaus in a PIAA Class 4A tourney opener at Upper Dublin Tuesday. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media)

Garnet Valley’s Rachel Cain sets a ball in the first game of what became a 3-0 Jaguars victory over Emmaus in a PIAA Class 4A tourney opener at Upper Dublin Tuesday. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media)

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George goal gets Penncrest first states win

All it took for Penncrest girls soccer to get its first states win was, in order, a rise in classifications to 4A, a three-hour bus ride Tuesday and a penalty kick goal conceded inside of five minutes.

From there, it was all clear sailing, really.

Goals by Kara Mullaney and Juliana George sent Penncrest, the fourth seed from District 1, past District 4 champion Williamsport, 2-1, at Loyalsock High School.

Mullaney’s goal in the 24th minute came off the rebound of a Kate Sparling shot that rang the crossbar. The sophomore attacking mid stuck with it, though, and buried the rebound.

Mullaney’s goal equalized a Sydney Bruno penalty in the fourth minute, which speedy forward Katie Penman won off a sliding Bryn McLaughlin near the edge of the penalty area. But the Lions (11-7-4) didn’t give their goalkeeper much more to do on the night, McLaughlin making two saves, plus a crucial slide tackle on Penman outside the back early in the second half.

George finally got the Lions ahead with 15 minutes to play, the diminutive winger finally poking home the ball on a penalty-area scrum, the likes of which the Millionaires had survived on several occasions, thanks in large part to 11 saves from Lila Vogelsong in goal. But not this time.

George’s tally bucks another trend. Penncrest’s win is their first in their three appearances, the last two in Class 3A. Last year, they lost in double-overtime to Fleetwood and fell 3-0 to Manheim Central two years ago, both times as the District 1 runner-up. But that’s in the past, from a team that entered its district tournament as the 20th seed and had to win three road games to get to states.

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Perrins, Strath Haven finally get their kicks in

EAST GOSHEN — The bicycle kick was remarkable even if the ball didn’t quite land on goal. Just hanging in the air to make solid contact was amazing considering the persistent rain at West Chester East High Tuesday.

Then there was the heel kick that missed the mark, although by no more than a foot, which would have given Strath Haven the early lead in its PIAA Class 3A state playoff opener against Mechanicsburg.

But those chances began to haunt Nate Perrins and the Panthers as their rushes up the field proved fruitless.

The Panthers didn’t score in the first half while the Wildcats did, Justin Flemming tallying on a less than aesthetically pleasing toe shot with 8:34 to go in the first half. And it was still a one-goal deficit 74 minutes into the one-and-done match scheduled for 80.

Perrins didn’t want to call it a career remembering the ones he didn’t net as much as the eight goals he did in the playoffs entering this game, including the overtime winner against Holy Ghost in the District 1 championship.

“Obviously, it’s going through my head,” Perrins said. “But I felt like I’d get more opportunities, and I did. You’ve always got to keep your head high. You can’t put yourself down because if you put yourself down, you’re not going to score.”

On this strange, surreal day featuring a couple of massive rainbows burning through the rain and bracketing the East football field like McDonald’s arches, there would be no regrets for the Panthers or their captain.

Just when it seemed the Wildcats would bring more honor to a league boasting of defendings Class 4A state soccer champion Lower Dauphin, Perrins collected the ball and rocketed a turnaround volley into the near corner from about 18 yards out to knot the game at 1 with 5:45 left in regulation.

That sent the Panthers (14-6-2) and their fans into a noisy celebration, and their coach, Ryan O’Neill, into silent prayer.

“The fear was that we’ve been scoring goals, we’ve been scoring a lot of them and feeling very dangerous,” O’Neill said. “So, there was a little bit of feeling like a jinx that we wouldn’t get one.”

The Panthers made more noise down the homestretch but couldn’t score and that led to overtime. Under PIAA rules there are two five-minute, sudden-win periods followed by penalty shots, if necessary.

In the first three minutes of extra time it looked like Nicholas Palermo won the game for the Panthers. But the closest official was shielded by a mass of bodies and didn’t signal a goal. For a while that was beginning to look like another of those unfortunate plays you might remember, rather than the fortunate ones.

Perrins wasted no time turning that bad thought away as he hammered home another turnaround side volley nearly identical to the first goal to give the Panthers a 2-1 decision. The next challenge for Strath Haven is Athens, which defeated Crestwood, 3-1, Tuesday.

“We were just happy we won,” goalkeeper Noah Atsaves said. “If we had lost it might have been a different conversation with that other stuff but we won. I’ve got so much trust in my team, so much trust in Nate and the people playing offense that I knew we were going to pull one out. I knew when we went into overtime that we were winning that game just because of the high intensity we were playing with. So many chances are going to lead to a goal, and that’s what happened.”

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This bicycle kick by Strath Haven's Nate Perrins didn't find the mark, but was impressive nonetheless. It also was indicative of things to come for the Panthers Tuesday against Mechanicsburg in a PIAA Class 3A match. (Nate Heckenberger/For Digital First Media

This bicycle kick by Strath Haven’s Nate Perrins didn’t find the mark, but was impressive nonetheless. It also was indicative of things to come for the Panthers Tuesday against Mechanicsburg in a PIAA Class 3A match. (Nate Heckenberger/For Digital First Media

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Haverford’s Donnelly, Strath Haven’s Forbes medal at PIAA championships

As a sophomore, Haverford’s Mike Donnelly finished 101st at the PIAA Class 3A cross country championships. A year later, he left Hershey with a medal.

The junior concluded his season with a 15th-place finish Saturday on a muddy course that was different than the route used since 2006. The PIAA decided on Thursday to switch from the Parkview Course to the one used for the PIAA Foundation meet because of wet conditions. The change did not bother Donnelly. The Delco champ crossed the finish line in 16 minutes, 46 seconds to become the first Haverford runner to earn a medal at the state meet since David Fowler placed 23rd in 2013.

The top 25 individuals in each classification earn a medal.

Donnelly progressively moved through the field in the 3.1-mile race. He was 33rd after the first mile and 17th after two miles. Donnelly’s effort also helped the Fords finish ninth in the team competition, their best since an eighth place in 2005. Teammate Josh Fingerhut was 86th in the field of 218 runners. Evan Peetros (121st), Brendan Campbell (128) and Aiden Tomov (136th) rounded out the top five runners for the Fords.

Penncrest junior Patrick Theveny was the next best Delco finisher. He was 42nd overall in 17:09 despite a slow start. Theveny was 127th after the first mile and moved up to 54th at the two-mile mark. Teammate Benjamin Klinger placed 96th overall.

Girls Cross Country

A lot of first-time cross country runners would like to have the rookie season Strath Haven senior Grace Forbes had. After winning the Delco championship and taking third at the District 1 Class 3A championships, Forbes capped her year with a medal at the PIAA championships.

Forbes finished 24th in the girls Class 3A race, the lone medal winner from Delco. Forbes, the 2018 Daily Times Girls Track and Field Athlete of the Year, finished in 20 minutes, 3 seconds despite falling twice on the muddy course. It was the best finish by a Strath Haven runner since Hannah Grossman was second in 2011.

Teammate Paige Day also had a strong day. The sophomore was 56th with a time of 20:39. She moved up 40 places from the two-mile mark to the finish.

Penncrest freshman Sophie Cohen had a strong debut at the state meet. She was 83rd overall and 14th among ninth-graders in 20:58.

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Haverford High runner Mike Donnelly is Main Line Boys Athlete of the Week

The Haverford High junior finished 15th at the PIAA Class 3A cross-country championship, finished seventh at Districts, third in the Central League Championships and first at the Delco Championships. Haverford boys’ cross-country coach Harry Green said, “He’s an extremely supportive and thoughtful teammate and even as a junior has become a leader on our team. He knows the sport, he knows how to encourage and motivate his teammates, and he knows how/when to make everyone laugh. He’s a tough and talented young distance runner with a bright future.”

Fun Facts – Mike Donnelly

Favorite Book – Catcher In The Rye.

Favorite TV Show- The Office.

Favorite Movie- Catch Me If You Can.

Favorite Athlete- Walter Payton.

Favorite Pre Race Song- Phenomenal by Eminem.

Favorite Team – Eagles/Sixers.

Favorite Pre Race Meal – Baked penne.

Family members: parents Michael and Robyn, younger brothers Ian and Alec.

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Garnet Valley in sync in playoff opener

CONCORD — The first of what Garnet Valley hopes will be several playoff games could not have gone any better. Everything worked for the Jaguars. Everything.

Third-seeded Garnet Valley dominated its way to a 49-14 victory Saturday over No. 14 Pennsbury in the first round of the District 1 Class 6A playoffs. The Jaguars are 11-0. They will host No. 11 Quakertown Friday night in the quarterfinals of this tournament.

Postponed by one day due to Friday’s torrential rain, this one was decided early on. Garnet Valley forced a turnover on each of Pennsbury’s first three possessions. Before the Falcons could get into the red zone, it was 28-0. Before they could score, it was 35-0. The running clock commenced early in the second half.

It wasn’t close. And the Jaguars did all of this with their backup quarterback.

“It all started with the offensive line being physical, just pushing forward and getting us yards,” said Ryan Gallagher, the backup. “We just followed.”

Gallagher was subbing for starter Cole Palis, who was nursing an injury suffered last week. He did not look like a replacement, rushing for 142 yards and a touchdown and passing for 18 yards and another score. The Jaguars, as a team, ran wild for 466 yards.

They kept moving forward. They kept getting short fields. They kept scoring touchdowns. They were prepared.

“We got exactly what we thought we were gonna get,” said Garnet Valley coach Mike Ricci of Pennsbury’s 4-2-5 defense. “Our guys did a really good job of executing against it.”

The Jaguars piled up 50 yards on 10 plays and scored on Colin Robinson’s one-yard run to start the game. Fumble. Three plays later, Dominic LaBricciosa raced in for a 34-yard score. Interception. Seven plays later, Dan Bradley hit from 35 yards out. Fumble. Six more plays and then came Gallagher’s three-yard keeper.

It was Garnet Valley doing Garnet Valley things at the most opportune time. How? Practice.

“We had a great week of scout team practice, our scout team guys gave us a great look,” lineman Cade Brennan said. “We really knew what was coming and we handled it well.”

After Pennsbury finally put a drive together, but turned the ball over on downs, Garnet Valley had some fun. A 77-yard Gallagher run got the ball inside the 10. On fourth down, Gallagher found the 6-foot-4 Brennan for his first touchdown since eighth grade. It was 35-0.

Everything really did work.

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Junior Ryan Gallagher filled in quite nicely at quarterback as Garnet Valley rolled over Pennsbury, 49-14, in the opening round of the District 1 Class 6A playoffs Saturday night. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media)

Junior Ryan Gallagher filled in quite nicely at quarterback as Garnet Valley rolled over Pennsbury, 49-14, in the opening round of the District 1 Class 6A playoffs Saturday night. (Pete Bannan/Digital First Media)

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