SOL Football Wrap (10-18-24)

Check out the recaps for SOL football teams in action Friday. CB East/Pennridge photos courtesy of Tracy Valko, CB West/North Penn photos courtesy of Kim Supko, Pennsbury/Abington photos courtesy of Darryl Rule of J&D Photography & Wissahickon/Hatboro-Horsham photos courtesy of Michael Rice Photography. CLICK HERE to view Suburban One Sports' FOOTBALL GALLERIES.

SOL National Conference

CENTRAL BUCKS EAST 21, PENNRIDGE 12
The Patriots needed a win, and they got one.
Granted, they had to overcome some obstacles to do it, but they rose to the occasion and came up with the big Senior Night win.
“It was a great win – it really, really was,” East coach John Donnelly said. “Our kids were just fired up and what it means going into this last week and what’s on the line, so we’re ecstatic and so proud of the way our kids played and the potential for next week and beyond.”
The Patriots – who were without starting quarterback Logan Simkiss (injury) – split time behind center between senior Ben Shelton and sophomore Jack Rogers.
“We used two quarterbacks tonight that have not taken a lot of snaps, and they did a great job,” Donnelly said. “It also falls on the line and the tight ends, who did a great job blocking.”
A pair of huge runs in the first half resulted in East touchdowns. With 4:20 remaining in the first quarter, sophomore Mike Price lined up in the wildcat and ripped off a 68-yard touchdown run.
“Mike Price went over a thousand yards tonight, which is fantastic in nine games,” Donnelly said. “He actually missed time for different things – he missed a game and a half. To me, he’s one of the best running backs in the league, and he’s such a humble kid.”
On the second play of the second quarter, Reuben Bell raced 52 yards for a touchdown, and Brady Wojnicki’s extra point made it a 14-0 game.
“Reuben is a kid that got some time last year as a sophomore,” Donnelly said. “We haven’t thrown it a ton this year, but defensively, he’s been a corner for us. He’s a track kid that can really run. We got him in space tonight, and he made a great run.
“He had two very good runs tonight – the one he took to the house.”
The Patriots took that two-touchdown lead into halftime, and the Rams made things interesting when Will Dougherty capped a drive of more than eight minutes with a four-yard touchdown run. East blocked the Rams’ extra point attempt and still held a 14-6 lead.
With East driving in the fourth quarter, the Rams came up with an interception on a double pass attempt, but East’s defense forced a three-and-out.
“I thought the defense was really good tonight,” Donnelly said. “Noah Keating is an excellent quarterback. He still made some plays tonight, but I thought we really pressured him hard, and we did a great job against the run.
“Our defensive coordinator, Zach Nelson, was a former East quarterback, and he’s now calling the defense for us. I thought he did a great job. We cobbled a bunch of things together. We just manufactured plays.”
The Patriots drove down the field again, and this time Price scored on a 10-yard run for a 21-6 lead. Pennridge responded with a drive of their own, and Keating delivered a 14-yard touchdown pass to Chase Marshall. The Rams’ two-point attempt failed, and the Patriots led 21-12.
East recovered the Rams’ on-sides kick, and with two minutes remaining and the Patriots facing a third-and-four, Price got a first down, and the win was assured.
“Pennridge battled back,” Donnelly said. “We just stayed enough ahead of them.
“The last drive – in order to kill the clock, we had to continue to gain first downs. We did and were able to salt the game away.”
The Patriots coach credited the efforts of several players.
“I thought Joey Craig had a great game in all three phases of the game – as a punt returner, as an outside linebacker, as a running back,” Donnelly said. “I thought he really had a great game.
“Timmy Fuhrmeister, I think, is one of the best defensive linemen in the league, and he also plays right tackle for us. I thought he had a great game. He’s just been incredible all year long.
“Tip our cap to our two quarterbacks who were able to step in in Logan’s absence this week. We’ll see what next week holds for Logan because we miss him on defense and offense, but there’s a chance he’ll be ready to go next week.  I thought Ben Shelton and Jack Rogers did a great job as inexperienced guys. They haven’t taken a lot of snaps. I thought they did a really, really good job. I’m just proud of their ability to make some plays.”
Central Bucks East (4-5, 2-4) will close out the regular season at Central Bucks West Friday in a rivalry game with playoff implications for the Patriots. Pennridge (4-5, 2-4) will be on the road at Central Bucks South.
Central Bucks East     0-14-0-7   21
Pennridge                  0-0-6-6   12

CENTRAL BUCKS WEST 17, NORTH PENN 14
(Game scoring info courtesy of @MPcabrey/The Reporter)
End of game scoring drives are becoming commonplace in the SOL this season.
CB West added its name to the list of teams effectively executing the two-minute drill and breaking a 14-14 tie when – with six seconds on the scoreboard clock - Ryan Clemens nailed a 33-yard field goal to win it.
“The key for us was executing the two-minute drill and being able to get in field goal range with no timeouts and being able to convert, giving Ry the opportunity to hit that field goal,” West coach Rob Rowan said.
The game-winner was set up after the Knights were forced to punt, and the Bucks took over on their own 39 with 1:33 remaining.
“Noah Miller orchestrated a really nice drive,” Rowan said. “He found Ryan a couple of times in the pass game, and Ry actually had a couple of runs. Those two really connected throughout the drive.”
And just how confident was Rowan when he turned the game over to Clemens for the game-winner?
“Very, very confident,” the Bucks’ coach said. “He’s a guy I just have immense trust in.
“It was interesting – yesterday, he hit a 27-yard field goal from the right hash to finish practice. We kind of played a game – I brought the whole team out, they were jumping in front of him, making noise, just having some fun, and he banged it right through.
“So, yes, I had immense confidence in him to go out and get it done. Not only him – the long snapper, Jake Stranix, who has been absolutely as consistent as they get. He is phenomenal when it comes to doing his job. Noah (Miller) with a tremendous hold, and also, the protection. It takes all four components to be able to make that happen. We practice special teams a lot because it wins and loses games, and obviously, that happened tonight.”
Points didn’t come easily for either side, but the Bucks had the early advantage and took a 7-0 lead late in the opening quarter after a 32-yard touchdown run by Devin McGowan. They upped that lead to 14-0 in the second quarter when Clemens capped a 60-yard drive with an eight-yard touchdown run.
The Knights made it a 14-7 game when – after a 29-yard Matt Bucksar pass to Matt Pownall – Aiden Ashley scored on a three-yard run. The Bucks took that 14-7 lead into halftime, a score that stood until early in the fourth quarter when Christian Johns-Wallace scored on a one-yard run. Setting up the tying TD was a big fourth down run by Bucksar.
“I thought we started the game offensively moving the ball really well,” Rowan said. “We took a 14-0 lead. I knew they weren’t going to go away. We kind of exhaled a little bit offensively – got off track, got off rhythm, and they made some plays.”
Neither team scored until Clemens delivered the game-winning field goal in the closing seconds.
“Obviously, it’s a great win when you beat a really good North Penn football team,” Rowan said. “Overall, I thought our defense played really well throughout the game.
“We gave up a couple plays here and there, but for the most part, we really made them earn everything. They’re good. They made a couple of nice plays.”
The Bucks’ coach credited several players who made significant contributions.
“I thought Chris Hutchinson defensively was a really welcome presence back,” Rowan said. “He’s been out the past couple of weeks, and he was a force all night up front.
“I thought Devon McGowan had a really strong game as well both in the return game on special teams and the role he plays in our offense. He just had a really nice impact tonight.
“Those are two guys that don’t get a lot of credit all the time but stood out and played really good games.”
Central Bucks West (7-2, 5-1 SOL) will host Central Bucks East in Friday’s regular season finale, and North Penn (7-2, 4-2) will be on the road at Abington Friday.
North Penn                0-7-0-7   14
Central Bucks West    7-7-0-3   17

CENTRAL BUCKS SOUTH 35, NESHAMINY 7
(Check back for final game stats)
The Titans took a modest 14-7 lead into halftime but then put 14 unanswered points on the board in the third quarter on their way to their ninth win without a loss.
“They’re a good football team, and they’ve been doing some good things, and I think they’ve been getting better as the season went on,” South coach Tom Hetrick said of Neshaminy. “We knew it was going to be a battle. It was their homecoming and all that stuff.
“They scored on their first possession, so we were down 7-0 out of the gate. We haven’t played behind too much this year, so I was happy that we were able to realize there’s a lot of football to play, so let’s just keep playing.”
The Redskins’ scoring drive was highlighted by a clutch fourth-and-long completion from quarterback Mike Eckart to Jason Giraldi at South’s three-yard line. Carter Clee took it in for a touchdown that spotted the Redskins a 7-0 lead.
The Titans answered with a touchdown drive of their own, evening the score when quarterback Owen Pinkerton raced 22 yards for a touchdown.
Late in the second quarter, the Titans came up with a stop at their own 16 and marched 84 yards for the go-ahead touchdown by sophomore Braylen Cape, who took it in from 19 yards out with 1:06 remaining that sent the Titans into halftime with a 14-7 lead.
A big play on the drive was an 18-yard Pinkerton pass to Matt Harmon. Pinkerton also had some big runs.
“We were feeling pretty good,” Hetrick said. “Our defense was tightening up. Their quarterback (Mike Eckart) is a good player, and #12 (Jason Giraldi) is a good receiver, and they hit him on a pretty nice route.”
The Titans scored on their opening drive of the second half when Pinkerton capped a 74-yard scoring drive by punching it in from two yards out to give South a 21-7 lead. The big play on the drive came when Pinkerton connected with Eddie Bowen – the Titans’ star defensive lineman – on a 32-yard pass to the Redskins’ two.
“He almost scored,” Hetrick said. “He came out of the backfield for that one. It was a nice catch. We thought they were in man coverage, and they called a timeout and came out and weren’t in man coverage.
“Their kid actually had a nice play on it, but Eddie made a nice catch. He deserves it because he works so hard for us on both sides of the ball, so put his name under the lights a little bit – he deserves it.”
South upped its lead to 28-7 late in the third quarter when Pinkerton connected on a 42-yard scoring strike to Danny Gies.
“He was efficient – I don’t know what his completion percentage was, but he was making good decisions,” Hetrick said of Piinkerton. “They were giving us certain things that he saw, so when he sees certain things, we give him the green light to take those things. He was able to do that, and both Danny Gies and Matt Harmon made some nice catches and had some nice yards after the catch.”
Four minutes into the fourth quarter, Cape put an exclamation mark on the win with a dazzling 14-yard touchdown run through the heart of the Redskins’ defense, capping a 35-0 run by the Titans after falling behind early.
“It was on a counter play - he just sort of stayed in it, and he had patience,” Hetrick said. “He saw a little skinny something and stayed in there, and boy, that was a great run.
“He had a great game. He had some really nice runs in that second half where we can see he’s starting to come into his own, so we’re pretty excited about him.
“To be honest, to put 35 points up against their defense – I was really happy with because they have a very sound defense and some guys that fly around the football.”
After allowing an early touchdown, the Titans’ defense was once again impenetrable.
“As a whole, our defense continues to be pretty good,” Hetrick said. “We have some guys that can make some plays, so to hold them to seven points – we were pretty happy. “Our defensive front played well.
“Jimmy Wade continued to be Jimmy Wade and made some things happen. We handed him the ball a little bit, and he participated on the offensive side, which he’s excited about. He’s a pretty dynamic player so we’re excited about it. We think we have three or four running backs we’re confident to hand the ball to, and it keeps them all fresh, so that’s a good thing. It was a good win.”
The Titans had 370 total yards of offense, 242 on the ground and 128 through the air. Neshaminy had 191 yards total offense - 135 rushing and 56 passing.
For the Redskins, Clee led the way with 74 yards and one touchdown. 
Central Bucks South (9-0, 6-0 SOL) will host Pennridge in Friday’s regular season finale, and Neshaminy (6-3, 3-3) will host Pennsbury in the annual rivalry game Friday.
Central Bucks South  0-14-14-7   35
Neshaminy                  7-0-0-0   7

PENNSBURY 42, ABINGTON 0
The Falcons scored early and often, and their defense stymied the Ghosts at every turn on their way to the mercy rule win. Not a bad way for the Falcons to celebrate Senior Night.
“It was nice obviously to win,” Pennsbury coach Galen Snyder said. “Secondly, we got an opportunity for a lot of the seniors to get in and play and enjoy their Senior Night, which was big.
“I think we got out of the game without too many injuries, and that was helpful too.”
The Ghosts opened the game with an on-sides kick attempt that was recovered by the Falcons near midfield. Pennsbury took advantage of the short field, scoring a touchdown on a one-yard plunge by Kaiden Brown.
When the Ghosts attempted to go for it on fourth down near midfield, the Falcons came up with a sack at Abington’s 40 and once again took advantage of the short field. Quarterback David Kane hooked up with Walker Murry on a 29-yard pass to the Ghosts’ one-yard line. Again, Brown took it in for the touchdown and a 14-0 lead after one quarter.
The two teams exchanged fumbles with the Falcons turning yet another short field into a touchdown on a one-yard Brown run for his third of the game.
Pennsbury changed things up for their fourth touchdown of the half. The drive was capped with Kane connecting with Murray on a 15-yard pass to the Owls’ 10-yard line, and Jordan Brensinger did the rest, scoring a TD that sent the Falcons into halftime with a 28-0 lead.
In the third quarter, Brensinger delighted the crowd with a 62-yard touchdown run, and in the fourth quarter, senior George Kormazu scored from one yard out for the 42-0 final.
The Falcons’ defense kept the Ghosts at bay all night.
“Chris Karamis had a couple of sacks – he’s had a good year for us,” Snyder said.
Pennsbury (4-5, 2-4 SOL) will travel to Neshaminy for a game with district playoff implications. Abington (1-8, 0-6) will host North Penn in its final game of the season.
Abington                0-0-0-0   0
Pennsbury         14-14-7-7   42

SOL Continental Conference

UPPER DUBLIN 17, BENSALEM 10
The Flying Cardinals have been living on the edge, keeping life interesting for their fans with wins that come down to the wire. They have won their last three games by a combined 13 points with Friday’s seven-point win on the heels of back-to-back three-point wins as time expired.
“Bensalem has some good athletes, and Alex (Houston) is doing a nice job,” UD coach Bret Stover said. “They’ve gotten better. They’ve been playing together since they were freshmen and now they’re all juniors. Look out next year – they’re going to be tough.
UD’s first drive ended on a bit of an ominous note.
“We drive down, fumble the ball at the 20 going in,” Stover said. “They get the ball back, kick it back to us. We go down and score a touchdown (on a one-yard run by Ron Shepherd), and it’s 7-0. It was a nice drive, and really, we were in control.”
Bensalem scored on a fake punt to even the score.
“We got the ball with a minute-and-a-half left, and we go down and kick a field goal, so it was 10-7,” Stover said. “Then they go down, and they kick a field as time expires, and it’s 10-10 at the half.
“We go in at halftime -they’re jumping up and down, and we’re angry. The defense was playing good, but (the Owls) have big play capability. We came out of halftime, and we go all the way down field. We’re in field goal range, and we get a holding penalty, and then they have two sacks.
“Bensalem got the ball back, and they had it the rest of the quarter, so we each got a possession in the third quarter, but nobody scored.”
It was still a 10-10 game heading into the fourth quarter.
“They get the ball back, they’re driving, and they missed a 37-yard field goal,” Stover said. “We got the ball at the 20, and we go on a drive. We’re fourth-and-one at our own 29, and we went for it, and we got it.
“Then Ron (Shepherd) busted a big run off, and we were in their territory. We grinded it a little bit, took some time off the clock. We scored a touchdown, and Ron scored again from six yards out, so now it’s 17-10.”
Shepherd scored the go-ahead TD with six minutes remaining in the fourth quarter.
“They go on a little bit of a drive, get a first down or two, and our defense holds and turns them over,” Stover said. “They had all their timeouts, we got a first down with a minute-and-a-half left, and we just fell on the ball and got out of there.”
Stover lauded the efforts of several players in the win.
“Shane Greenberg had an interception on a screen pass, and he had a good night for us,” Stover said. “They have a screen pass, and we worked all week on it.
“Our offensive line was outstanding. They get the game ball.”
Comprising UD’s offensive line were Logan Fitzmaurice, Phil Roll, Christian Holland, Benji Ravitz, Potter Rudl, Justin Waugh and Evan Sanders.
Upper Dublin (7-2, 6-0 SOL) will host Souderton in a conference showdown Friday. The Indians and Quakertown both have one loss in conference play.
“It’s kind of been this way with us, Quakertown and Souderton the last couple of years,” Stover said. “It’s as close as I can get to a rivalry in the Continental.
“When you start the year, you want to be in this position. We clinched a piece of (the conference title) tonight, and we’d like to win it outright. I’m sure Ed (Gallagher) would like a piece of it and George (Banas) would like a piece of it. We control our own destiny, and that’s what you want. You don’t want to rely on anyone. We’re excited about the opportunity.”
Bensalem (4-5, 2-4) will be on the road at Harry S Truman Friday.
Upper Dublin      7-3-0-7    17
Bensalem         0-10-0-0   10

QUAKERTOWN 21, COUNCIL ROCK SOUTH 0
The visiting Panthers took care of business on both sides of the football, opening up a 14-0 halftime lead and adding a second-half touchdown while their defense pitched a shutout.
“We went down there and got it done,” Quakertown coach George Banas said. “I think we left 14 points on the field – one time (our player) stretched the ball over the end line, and they grabbed it and took it from him, and they called it a fumble. To start the second half, we got a kickoff return close to the 50 and fumbled it away.
“I thought we had some opportunities that we could have maybe put it away a little bit sooner, but CJ Szydlik does a really nice job at Council Rock South, and the kids are tough. It's always physical. They play aggressive, downhill football. It was their Senior Night, their homecoming, so they were amped up.”
 The Panthers got on the board with 1:35 remaining in the first quarter when Gavin Carroll scored on a three-yard run, and late in the second quarter, quarterback Brady Martin scored from two yards out.
A nine-yard touchdown run by Carroll with 4:35 left in the game gave the Panthers their final margin of victory.
“It was a trickle effect tonight,” Banas said. “Jackson Connelly ran the ball real tough early. He got banged up a little bit late in the game, so he didn’t play the majority of the second half.
“Gavin Carroll just had some really tough yards tonight. Brady (Martin) hit his receivers well tonight on short stuff. Not as much the big play. We were off just a little bit on big plays tonight – one step here or one step there or just overthrew them. We just didn’t connect on the big ones we’ve been getting the last couple of weeks. Those are things we can work on for next week.”
The story of Friday’s win was the Panthers’ defense, and when Carroll scored his first TD in the first quarter, the offense actually had all the points they would need to win this one.
“Last week, we were at Truman, and we still don’t get the shutout because we played the whole second half with (our backups), and the kids get upset because they lose their shutout,” Banas said. “Tonight was a closer game, so our starters played the whole game, and they really did a nice job defensively.
“Our linebacking corps tonight really, really did a nice job. Kyler Roesener and Gavin Carroll really flew around tonight as inside backers and were able to get in the backfield. The way they tackle is crazy because it almost looks like a wrestling move – like they’re shooting for a single, wrapping up and taking the guys down. They really performed well tonight.
“Our outside backers – Gavin Mushrush and Owen Wynne – did a really nice job too. They stepped up and set the edge for us as well. The D-line – we had them moving quite a bit tonight – stunting and angling and things like that. Council Rock South didn’t take hardly any shots downhill because we had their quarterback under duress pretty quick. Some of our D-line and D-ends plus our linebacking corp.”
Quakertown (5-4, 5-1 SOL) will travel to Cheltenham on Friday, and Council Rock South (3-6, 2-4) will host Council Rock North in the annual rival game.
Quakertown              7-7-0-7   21
Council Rock South   0-0-0-0    0

CHELTENHAM 50, HARRY S TRUMAN 14
The Panthers bounced back from last week’s heartbreaking last-second loss to Upper Dublin with a no-doubt-about-it win on the road.
“It was a good game,” Cheltenham coach Troy Gore said. “Our kids played hard, their kids played hard. We were able to score on defense, on special teams and on offense.
“All three of our units scored, so we were happy with the way we played, but we still have to go back and minimize all the mistakes that we made.”
There were heroes galore for the Panthers in Friday’s win.
“James Smith scored on a 60-yard fumble recovery,” Gore said. “Jared Higginbotham scored on a 50-something-yard pass from Kendall Jackson, and he also scored on a two-yard run.
“Justin Cowans scored on a fumble recovery in the end zone. Ahsaiah Upchurch scored on a 40-yard touchdown pass, Carsen Giddiens scored on a touchdown pass (both from Jackson). Michael Dunn scored on a three-yard touchdown pass (from Jackson).”
Jackson, the Panthers’ sophomore quarterback, continued what has been a standout season behind center.
“Offensively, it was our quarterback,” Gore said. “He’s only a sophomore, and to break all the records he’s breaking as a sophomore, it’s awesome.”
The Panthers’ coach also credited a player who was a defensive catalyst – Isaiah Simpson.
“He played a good game,” Gore said.
Cheltenham (3-6, 3-3 SOL) will host Quakertown on Friday, and Harry S Truman (1-8, 0-6) will host Bensalem Friday.

SOL American Conference

PLYMOUTH WHITEMARSH 21, UPPER MORELAND 14
(Game scoring info courtesy of @emor09 X/The Reporter/Times Herald)
The Colonials expected a fight, and the Golden Bears gave them just that.
It took a fourth quarter drive to give the Colonials their first lead of the night, and that lead was in jeopardy when UM drove down the field. The drive, however, came to an abrupt halt when Chase Rarrick delivered a huge interception at PW’s five-yard line to seal a win that assured the Colonials at least a share of the conference crown.
“They were 7-1 coming in, and you can’t be 7-1 and not be a good football team,” PW coach Dan Chang said. “I think we were expecting a battle, and we got every bit of a battle that entire game.
“We didn’t take the lead until (2:42) was left in the game, so it was definitely a game where we overcome some adversity, made some plays when we needed it. It was a good win for our team.”
If there were any thoughts that this might be another PW cakewalk, they were put to rest in a hurry when – on their opening drive – the Golden Bears pulled out a little trickery.
“First play of the game, they hit a little reverse flea flicker for a big play, and right off the bat, momentum was their way,” Chang said of a flea flicker that resulted in long completion by quarterback Alex Foley. “They scored four plays later, and we were on our heels to start. All of a sudden, we’re in a fight.”
Aidan Tuffy ‘s one-yard touchdown run put UM on top 7-0.
Early in the second quarter, the Colonials knotted the score on a three-yard TD run by Everett Baker.
“We went three-and-out on our first drive and gave the ball back to them,” Chang said. “Luckily, we made a stop and tied it up.”
Setting up Baker’s equalizer was a 63-yard completion from quarterback Caiden Leszczysnki to Marcus Laffredo.
“That was a really nice ball and then Marcus made a great run after the catch and got us down there,” Chang said. “Caiden Leszczysnki threw for 100 yards and made some nice throws.”
Midway through the second quarter, Upper Moreland regained the lead when Foley connected with Tuffy for an 18-yard touchdown pass. Again, the Colonials responded with Everett scoring on a one-yard plunge to cap an 80-yard scoring drive that sent the two teams into halftime deadlocked 14-14.
“They went up again, and we answered with a big drive,” Chang said. “It was a lengthy drive with maybe 15 plays to go into half to tie it up. That was a big one for us. It was definitely a little momentum push in our way.
“Third quarter we come out – it was another long drive, 10-15 plays. We take a sack that gets us out of field goal range, and we don’t get any points. That was tough, but our guys rallied and put together another long drive. In the second half, I think we really controlled the clock and controlled time of possession.
“I think it’s a credit to our guys to be able to continue pushing hard. We were moving at a decent clip, and I think we wore them down a little bit towards the end.”
A 35-yard touchdown run by Baker with 2:42 remaining in the game gave the Colonials their first lead, 21-14.
“I thought Ev Baker tonight ran really hard again,” Chang said. “He was something like 18 (carries) for 148 or 150, and he accounted for all three of our touchdowns.”
The Golden Bears did not go down quietly.
“They were driving and driving,” Chang said. “I thought our D-tackle, Jadon Joseph, who I think is one of the best D-tackles in the district, played phenomenal tonight.
“He made a couple of huge plays, a big sack on that drive. He was all over the place tonight. We got them to fourth-and-15 and give them a long conversion. All of a sudden, momentum is back in their direction.”
Until, that is, Rarrick came up with a huge interception to seal the win for the Colonials.
“It was his birthday yesterday, so he makes a great play down at the goal line – picks it off at the goal line to seal it,” Chang said.
The PW coach credited the efforts of several other players in the win.
“Offensively, Everett Baker was really tough for us,” Chang said. “Christian Diciurcio ran the ball really well for us and blocked as well.
“We had one of our O-linemen go down, and our next guy up, Roman Powel, got in there and did a really nice job as well.”
Plymouth Whitemarsh (7-2, 4-0 SOL) will travel to William Tennent Friday, and Upper Moreland (7-2, 2-2) will be on the road at Hatboro-Horsham.
Upper Moreland               7-7-0-0   14

Plymouth Whitemarsh    0-14-0-7   21

WISSAHICKON 42, HATBORO-HORSHAM 20
(Check back for a complete game wrap)

SPRINGFIELD TWP 43, WILLIAM TENNENT 7
(Check back for a complete game wrap)




 

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