If you were looking for playmakers on the football field this fall, Sussex County was the place to be. Standout quarterbacks and running backs were all over the place. Individuals piled up rushing and passing yardage and their teams amassed a ton of points.
It all started at quarterback. Three different ones in particular were terrific, the best one being Sparta’s Shane Hoover, who was 160 for 231 passing for 2,265 yards and 30 TDs. The strong-armed Hoover is headed to Seton Hall to pitch but has clearly gotten the attention of college football coaches on the recruiting trail. Hoover is the first-team All-Sussex pick at quarterback.
In another year, Wallkill Valley’s Zack Clarken (1,539 yards, 16 TDs, 5 INTs, 664 yards rushing, 7 TDs) or High Point’s John Elko (81 for 135, 1,241 yards, 13 TDs, 102 for 754 rushing, 11 more TDs) would be first-team All-Sussex quarterback.
Both are sure-fire first-team players but Hoover gets the nod.
Running back? The position was just as loaded as quarterback was, with a large group of backs who were among the best their respective schools have ever had.
Pope John’s Tylik Hill was one of the best runners Sussex County has seen in a long, long time (more on him below) and in the discussion with some of the greats the running back-rich Lions have ever had. Hill may well be the best in school history.
Lenape Valley’s Kevin Giusti came out of nowhere to pile up huge rushing numbers. Giusti picked up steam in midseason and wound up accumulating 1,245 yards rushing and 10 touchdowns. He also set the school’s single-game rushing record when he carried a whopping 40 times for 351 yards against Hackettstown.
High Point’s Jerron Martress is already one of the best runners in Wildcats history despite being just a junior. He was 267 for 1,671 yards rushing, scored 26 TDs, and joined forces with Elko to help create an offense that moved the ball up and down the field all year.
Sussex Tech’s Brian Gruber was one of the best players in school history – if not THE best – and rushed for 1,227 yards and 16 touchdowns despite the fact that opposing teams packed the box in an effort to stop him. He finished his career carrying 488 times for 3,439 yards and 40 TDs in three years.
How great was the running back position in Sussex County this year? Well, in another year, Newton’s Nick Kurilko would be a sure-fire first-team running back. He rushed 159 times for 939 yards and 14 touchdowns – first-team numbers in almost any other year but just short this year. But he was one of the best 1-2 linebackers this year (along with Pope John’s Tyler Houser) and is most certainly a first-team linebacker.
Team of the Year: High Point. Seemingly out of nowhere, the Wildcats became an incredible offensive machine (almost 40 points per game) using the run (RB Jerron Martress burst onto the scene) and the pass (QB John Elko was terrific as a runner and passer) to go with a physical offensive line (Cody DiCarlo, Donald Weiss, Ryan Jaick, among others). The Wildcats scored over 40 points five times and at least 32 points four other times. Raise your hand if you saw this coming, which leads us to …
Coach of the Year: Bill Percey, High Point. Very, very tough call here. A few weeks ago, it was Percey in a landslide. The Wildcats won the SFC American Blue and have had their best season in many, many years. That is the stuff of which many coaches of the year have been determined over the years.
As an aside, Pope John Dom Gaston has brought the Lions back from the dead. They were 2-7 when the playoffs began, granted against one of New Jersey’s most demanding schedules. If the Lions stun DePaul in the state Non-Public B championship game Friday morning at MetLife, that’s a credit to Gaston, who has brought the program back from the dead (1-9 during his first year four years ago).
Player of the Year: Somewhere in the football heavens, Pope John football coach Vic Paternostro is smiling. The legendary Lions coach would have loved giving the ball to running back Tylik Hill, who had rushed for 277 for 2150 yards and 24 touchdowns entering the DePaul game. He broke loose for 245 yards and three TDs on 18 carries in a 48-14 destruction of St. John Vianney in the Non-Public B state semifinals.
FIRST TEAM
OFFENSE
QB-Shane Hoover, Sparta
RB-Tylik Hill, Pope John
RB-Kevin Giusti, Lenape Valley
RB-Jerron Martress, High Point
RB-Brian Gruber, Sussex Tech
OL-Jordan Plugfelder, Kittatinny
OL-Cody DiCarlo, High Point
OL-Jarrod Cofrancesco, Pope John
OL-Ryan Corino, Newton
OL-Dan O’Leary, Pope John
OL-Mason Rivera, Vernon
TE-Stone Herbison, Sparta
WR-Luke Doster, Sparta
WR-Connor Hoebee, Wallkill Valley
UT-John Elko, High Point
UT-Zack Clarken, Wallkill Valley
UT-Dylan Duerring, Warren Hills
PK-Brody Tanyeri, Sparta
DEFENSE
DL-Donald Weiss, High Point
DL-Jack Phelps, Lenape Valley
DL-Owen Honey, North Warren
DL-Joe Poppa, Pope John
DL-Gavin Wilczewski, Vernon
LB-Nick Kurilko, Newton
LB-Tyler Houser, Pope John
LB-Anthony Tudda, Newton
LB-Hunter Chlodnicki, Sparta
LB-Sam Conetta, Pope John
DB-Kyle Edwards, Hackettstown
DB-Wes Johnston, Pope John
DB-Vin Rispoli, Sparta
DB-Luka Vizzini, Vernon
UT-Brock Duerring, Warren Hills
P-Tanner Gaboda, Lenape Valley
SECOND TEAM
OFFENSE
QB-Luke Irwin, Pope John
RB-Brady Shagawat, Sparta
RB-Aiden Elliott-Abel, North Warren
RB-Jaden Roberts, Kittatinny
RB-Evan Cotter, Newton
OL-Jake Van Eeuwen, Wallkill Valley
OL-Andrew Stoffels, Sussex Tech
OL-Jake Kopich, Lenape Valley
OL-Joe Melillo, Newton
OL-Ryan Jaick, High Point
WR-Slade Muller, High Point
WR-Prince Joshua, Pope John
WR-Ethan Alfonso, Wallkill Valley
PK-Lucas Ingliman, Kittatinny
UT-Hunter Wolfe, Newton
DEFENSE
DL-Jakob Bell, Lenape Valley
DL-Johnny Cammarata, Wallkill Valley
DL-Giovoughni Dureny, High Point
DL-Chris Zander, Lenape Valley
DL-Aaron Pflugfelder, Kittatinny
DL-Anthony Padalino, Sussex Tech
LB-Gavin Mericle, Sussex Tech
LB-Brendon Lehman, High Point
LB-Andrew Barta, Wallkill Valley
DB-Michael Certo, Hopatcong
DB-Niko Martinez, Kittatinny
DB-Trey Moodie, Lenape Valley
DB-Matt Guenther, Hackettstown
DB-Matt Baumann, Vernon
UT-Andrew Sanchez, Pope John