Penn-Trafford slows down No. 3 McKeesport in upset victory

By:
Saturday, September 15, 2018 | 12:03 AM


Penn-Trafford doubled up high-scoring McKeesport, but it was the Warriors defense that captured the spotlight Friday night.

Josh Cheplick’s fumble recovery for a touchdown in the final minute gave Penn-Trafford some breathing room, and the Warriors held on to upset No. 3 McKeesport, 20-9, on the road in a Class 5A Big East Conference game.

McKeesport entered the game averaging 50.3 points, the most among teams in the WPIAL’s top two classifications.

“Our defense was the story tonight,” Penn-Trafford coach John Ruane said. “They played fantastic and physical.”

Penn-Trafford (2-2, 2-1) harassed McKeesport’s offense for much of the night, forcing the normally run-happy Tigers to throw the ball more than usual.

McKeesport quarterback Konota Gaskins completed 4 of 12 attempts for 100 yards and provided the Tigers (3-1, 2-1) with their only touchdown on a 10-yard scoring pass to Devin Sims in the fourth quarter that cut the Penn-Trafford lead to 14-9 with 4:22 left.

“We couldn’t get our offense going,” McKeesport coach Matt Miller said of the Tigers’ signature triple-option attack. “We were forced to throw the ball a little more than we usually like to. Penn-Trafford is the same as they always are — big, physical. They get on you.”

With Penn-Trafford clinging to a five-point lead, the teams traded fumble recoveries late. Penn-Trafford took over on a botched McKeesport punt return, and the Tigers got the ball back near their own goal line, when Quaran Sayles jumped on a loose ball at the 3.

Gaskins misfired on three passes and faced a fourth-down situation when he fumbled at the goal line and Cheplick recovered for Penn-Trafford to give the Warriors a 20-9 lead with 48 seconds remaining.

Aided by a string of penalties, McKeesport advanced to the Penn-Trafford 15 before the Warriors’ Dominic Rosso intercepted Gaskins at the 1 to preserve the victory.

“We had a great blitz, and Nico Rosso had a great hit (on Gaskins) before Josh Cheplick recovered there in the end zone,” Ruane said. “And then, of course, Nico came up with that interception.

“Man, am I proud of our defensive kids. I didn’t think we performed very well on offense. We did in spurts, but not to our expectations. In certain situations, where we had to make some plays, we had a couple good drives to score some points. But the name of the game tonight was defense, without question.”

Penn-Trafford took advantage of an early opportunity, when Jon Peduzzi pounced on a McKeesport fumble that led to Caleb Lisbon’s 8-yard touchdown run just 1 minute and 46 seconds into the game.

Anthony Beitko’s 23-yard field goal pulled McKeesport within 7-3 with 4:14 left in the first quarter, and it stayed that way until halftime.

Penn-Trafford dented the McKeesport defense several other times in the first half, notably when the Warriors marched to the Tigers 26 with the help of a personal foul that followed Gabe Dunlap’s 10-yard run.

But Marcquis Butler’s fumble recovery helped McKeesport thwart the drive in the closing minutes.

Dave Mackall is a freelance writer.

Tags: ,

More High School Football

Trib HSSN football player of the week for Oct. 13, 2024
This week on Trib HSSN for week of Oct. 14, 2024
2024 WPIAL football playoff picture: Who’s in, on the cusp ahead of Week 8 contests
Amari Gans’ breakout season helps Gateway remain in playoff hunt
High school roundup for Oct. 12, 2024: Western Beaver beats Mohawk in MAC showdown