Northern Berks Patriot Item

EXETER FALLS IN FINAL

Exeter is hurt by its own mistakes in a 34-14 loss to Cocalico in the District 3 Class 5A championsh­ip game

- By Matthew Knaub mknaub@readingeag­le.com

Exeter’s quest to repeat as district champions and continue its perfect season came to a halt on Friday night.

Mistakes plagued second-seeded Exeter, which was unable to recover from its miscues and ultimately fell 34-14 to 12th-seeded Cocalico in the District 3 Class 5A title game at Don Thomas Stadium in Reiffton.

“You can’t make the mistakes we made in big games and come out on top,” Exeter coach Matt Bauer said. “The turnovers hurt us in key moments.”

Exeter committed three turnovers, six penalties for 40 yards and finished 1-for-3 on fourth-down conversion attempts. Cocalico scored seven points off the turnovers, and was given advantageo­us field position on Exeter’s failed fourthdown conversion­s.

“We really couldn’t make a lot of advances either way, offensivel­y or defensivel­y,” senior Joey Schlaffer said. “They’re a really hardnosed team.”

Cocalico’s grittiness was on full display from the onset as it opened the game with a 16-play drive that lasted more than eight minutes and was capped by a 2-yard touchdown run from fullback Sam Steffey. The junior finished with 17 carries for 40 yards.

Cocalico (10-4) extended its lead late in the first quarter when running back Brayden Eppinette broke loose for a 46-yard touchdown to make it 130. The ensuing extra point was unsuccessf­ul, as holder Dane Horning mishandled the snap and was unable to run it into the end zone for two points.

Trailing by multiple possession­s for just the second time this year, Exeter got on the board midway through the second quarter as running back Richie Karstien bowled his way into the end zone on 4th-and-1. The senior finished with 83 yards and two touchdowns on 21 carries.

Exeter had a chance to take the lead in the final minute of the first half after taking over at its 47 with 38.6 seconds left. But quarterbac­k Mason Rotelli threw an intercepti­on on first down and Cocalico took advantage quickly scored with an explosive play. Quarterbac­k Josh Myer found running back Aaryn Longenecke­r for a 42-yard touchdown with 21.8 seconds remaining. Following the successful extra point, Cocalico led 20-7 at halftime.

Myer completed 2-of-2 passes for 87 yards, finding Longenecke­r for the score and on another 45yard pass later in the game. Longenecke­r finished with 87 yards receiving, 16 yards rushing and one incomplete pass, which came on a trick play in the second half.

Looking to erase a 13-point deficit, Exeter turned to Schlaffer — the team’s starting tight end and the county’s leader in receiving yards and receiving touchdowns — at quarterbac­k at the start of the third quarter. He threw an intercepti­on on that first possession.

“We just tried to get our

feet underneath us and eliminate the mistakes,” Bauer said. “We needed a little bit of a change of pace. Joey gave us a spark all year — we were going to try anything at that point.”

Schlaffer settled down later in the third quarter, leading Exeter on its lone scoring drive of the second half. After connecting with tight end Zachary Zandier on a 38-yard pass on thirdand-10

deep in its territory, Exeter completed its drive with a 1-yard touchdown run from Karstien to cut it to 20-14 following the extra point.

“I thought that was probably one of the closest points in the game,” Schlaffer said about his team cutting the Cocalico lead to six. “We thought we’d come back.”

Cocalico responded early in the fourth quarter as Myer ran for a 14-yard touchdown. Longenecke­r scored on the ensuing twopoint conversion to make it 28-14 with just over 11 minutes remaining.

Exeter (12-1) struggled to muster much offense in the fourth quarter as mistakes led to stalled drives. Rotelli, who eventually re-entered the game, completed 5-of-17 passes for 28 yards and two intercepti­ons, while Schlaffer completed 2-of-3 passes for 73 yards and one intercepti­on.

On the ground, Rotelli

had 8 yards on nine carries, while Schlaffer had 18 yards on five carries. Schlaffer, a Penn State commit who came in with 879 receiving yards on the season, was held without a catch, though he did draw a pass interferen­ce penalty.

Cocalico put the finishing touches on its victory late in the fourth quarter when Myer ran for a 5-yard touchdown to make it 34-14. The ensuing extra point was no good.

Cocalico will play PineRichla­nd in a state semifinal.

The district title is Cocalico’s first since 2019. Its title game victory as the No. 12 seed marks the lowest seed to ever win a District 3 football title, as no team below the No. 8 seed had ever won a title in any classifica­tion prior to Friday night.

“They played basically mistake-free football,” Bauer said. “Hats off to them.”

 ?? BILL UHRICH — READING EAGLE ?? Quarterbac­k Mason Rotelli is consoled following the Eagles’ loss in the District 3Class 5A final Friday at Don Thomas Stadium.
BILL UHRICH — READING EAGLE Quarterbac­k Mason Rotelli is consoled following the Eagles’ loss in the District 3Class 5A final Friday at Don Thomas Stadium.
 ?? BILL UHRICH — READING EAGLE ?? Exeteri’s Richie Karstien picks up tough yards in the District 3Class 5A final Friday at Don Thomas Stadium.
BILL UHRICH — READING EAGLE Exeteri’s Richie Karstien picks up tough yards in the District 3Class 5A final Friday at Don Thomas Stadium.

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