The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Fitting Farewell

Pottsgrove caps Pennypacke­r’s home finale with district title

- By Jeff Stover jstover@21st-centurymed­ia.com @MercuryXSt­over on Twitter

It was a “deja vu” kind of night for Pottsgrove Friday.

First in a not-so-pleasant way. Then in a much pleasanter vein at the end.

The start of District 1’s Class 4A championsh­ip game at Pottsgrove Stadium saw visiting Upper Perkiomen strike for a 6-0 lead over the Falcons on its first play after

the opening kickoff. That was a similar situation Pottsgrove faced during a regular-season meeting with Boyertown back on Sept. 8, when the Bears got a lead on it just 39 seconds in.

But like that night, when it pulled together for a 4914 victory, Pottsgrove recovered against the Indians for a 38-14 win. Another bit of “deja vu” was the victory enabled the Falcons to claim a second straight district title, providing a memorable cap to head coach Rick Pennypacke­r’s final game on the field that bears his name.

“It was all for coach,” Falcon quarterbac­k Jay Sisko said against the backdrop of Pottsgrove (11-1 overall) celebratin­g its latest 4A championsh­ip.

Pennypacke­r will be calling it a career at Pottsgrove at the conclusion of this, his 28th season guiding the Falcon grid program to prominence. Along with the game, the night was a celebratio­n of the successful legacy he built at the school.

It started with a number of his former players lining up in a “tunnel” through which he passed while entering Pennypacke­r Field at the start of the night. It ended with a Gatorade shower, the adulation of family and friends alike, the traditiona­l “final walk” from end zone to end zone with his senior players, and the poignancy of coming to grips with the end of an era.

“It’s time for me to go,” Pennypacke­r, clutching a District 1 championsh­ip trophy for the third time, said. “It’s an emotional thing ... the turnout of former player, the win, the trophy.”

It was a night when his last Pottsgrove football team was focused on sending its head coach out in proper style. The Falcons did that from their second possession on, opening a 22-6 halftime lead and putting the game out of the Indians’ reach in a 16-8 second half.

First, UP mounted a game-opening surge that saw Austin Tutolo field the kickoff at his 17 and return it to the Falcon 24. From there, quarterbac­k Tyler Keyser hooked up with wide receiver Ryan Kendra on a corner pass in the end zone, good for a 6-0 lead 20 seconds in.

“We couldn’t ask for a better start,” head coach Tom Hontz said. “Our defense in the first series (three and out) was great. But they (Falcons) are overpoweri­ng.”

Rahsul Faison again provided Pottsgrove’s ground game the spark it needed to recover from the slow start. The senior tailback covered 212 yards on 31 totes and scored three times on runs of 32, 40 and one yards.

Faison also moved up to 15th place in the Pennsylvan­ia Interschol­astic Athletic Associatio­n (PIAA) record books for yards in a season. He came away from the game with 2,833 yards, edging past Eric Reynolds of Central Bucks South (Class of ‘07).

“This was a good way for him (Pennypacke­r) to

go out,” Faison said. “It felt good.”

Sisko completed the Falcons’ eight-play, 50-yard march on its second possession by bulling two yards up the middle with 4:18 left in the first quarter. Its conversion kick was blocked, but a penalty against the Indians moved it one yard closer to the end zone, from where Elijah Chhuour ran it in for an 8-6 lead.

Pottsgrove padded its lead with 3:39 left before the end of the first half, Faison roaring through left tackle. And after holding the Indians to another three-and-out. The Falcons called on their passing game to score with 23 seconds to go, Sisko hooking up with Desmond Austin on a 20-yard completion before finding Ryan Bodolus on a six-yard scoring play.

“We knew we had to get after them,” Sisko said. “We stepped up from a bad start.”

The Falcons’ opening possession off the secondhalf kickoff saw Faison cover much of the 74 yards, capped by his scoring jaunt at the 8:02 mark. But Upper Perk (6-5) responded on the ensuing kickoff by marching 66 yards on 12 plays, Tyler Whary muscling the final yard to cut Pottsgrove’s lead to 28-14 and make it a twopossess­ion game.

“This was a game where the final score wasn’t indicative,” Hontz said. “We both played tough. They (Pottsgrove)

have a heck of a running back, a discipline­d offensive line and a defense that doesn’t quit.

“I felt we were able to move the ball. When we got the running game going, Kendra was moving it.”

In response to the chilling temperatur­es and windy conditions, the game became predominan­tly ground-oriented. Sisko and Chhuour figured prominentl­y on the Pottsgrove side, and Faison’s last scoring run coming two plays after Parris Janusek’s recovery of an Indian fumble with about five minutes left.

“Ground and pound, and finish it out,” Sisko said in describing Pottsgrove’s game plan. “We wanted to wear them down getting after them.”

Another reward for Pottsgrove’s title finish will be having a nearby site for the first round of the state playoffs. It will play next weekend at Spring-Ford ... the site of Pennypacke­r’s high-school career, and the place where the Falcons hope to continue their winning ways.

“It should be a good one,” Faison said. NOTES » Pennypacke­r admitted having no idea the “tunnel” of his former players was being organized. “My wife and (athletic director Gary) DeRenzo kept the secret,” he said. “As a coach, you don’t know what kind of influence you have on the kids. Something like that says a lot.”

 ?? AUSTIN HERTZOG - DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Pottsgrove’s Dez Austin, left, and Rahsul Faison celebrate after Faison’s second-half touchdown Friday against Upper Perkiomen.
AUSTIN HERTZOG - DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Pottsgrove’s Dez Austin, left, and Rahsul Faison celebrate after Faison’s second-half touchdown Friday against Upper Perkiomen.
 ?? AUSTIN HERTZOG - DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Pottsgrove’s Rahsul Faison (2) breaks a tackle on a long touchdown run in the third quarter Friday against Upper Perkiomen.
AUSTIN HERTZOG - DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Pottsgrove’s Rahsul Faison (2) breaks a tackle on a long touchdown run in the third quarter Friday against Upper Perkiomen.
 ?? AUSTIN HERTZOG - DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Pottsgrove’s Parris Janusek (50) hoists the ball up after recovering a fumble in the second half against Upper Perkiomen Friday.
AUSTIN HERTZOG - DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Pottsgrove’s Parris Janusek (50) hoists the ball up after recovering a fumble in the second half against Upper Perkiomen Friday.

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