Southern Lehigh rallies past Pottsville in District 11 Class 4A semifinals

Pottsville's defense getting in position against Southern Lehigh (Photo by Eli Doyle).
CENTER VALLEY — A nearly perfect first half had Pottsville up by three touchdowns in Thursday’s District 11 Class 4A semifinal against Southern Lehigh.
A dominating second half by Southern Lehigh running back Sean Steckert left the Crimson Tide heartbroken and wondering what could have been.
Steckert scored his sixth touchdown of the game on a 2-yard run with 9 seconds left to lift the Spartans to a dramatic 41-34 victory over Pottsville, ending the Crimson Tide’s season.
The win advances top-seeded Southern Lehigh (10-2) to next Thursday’s district championship game against Bethlehem Catholic, a 35-14 winner over Lehighton, at 7 p.m. at Catasauqua High School.
“They played their hearts out, did a lot of great things, learned a lot … but this hurts,” Pottsville coach Mike Brennan said. “My heart goes out to our team, especially our seniors, who paved the way this year, who bought into 100 percent to everything we did, and our underclassmen followed.
“We did so much good this year. I’m extremely proud of them and extremely hurt for them right now. We left it all on the field. This is part of the game of football.”
Pottsville (6-6) did everything right offensively in the first half.
JuJu Bainbridge ran wild, rushing 25 times for 168 yards and scoring four touchdowns on runs of 14, 1, 16 and 5. Andrew Allen was 10-for-10 passing for 98 yards and scored a rushing touchdown on an 8-yard scamper.
With offensive coordinator Tyler Hartranft nailing every play call, Pottsville racked up 18 first downs and scored on its first five possessions, three of which were 10-play drives.
The Tide defense chimed in, too, as Jacob Filiac recovered a Southern Lehigh fumble that led to a touchdown, and sacks by Max Clews and Logan Kessler in the second quarter forced a quick three-and-out that preceded Pottsville’s fifth touchdown.
When Bainbridge powered into the end zone on a 5-yard run with 47 seconds left in the first half, Pottsville led 34-13.
“We had rhythm and we had confidence,” Brennan said. “It all starts with the running game and with those offensive linemen who developed so well over the course of the year.
“JuJu is a workhorse. He had 25 carries in the first half, doesn’t need a break. Andrew was efficient. He’s responded to coaching all year, played within himself and distributed the ball to our playmakers. We had lots of guys step up.
“To score 34 points in the first half … I was real proud of our kids.”
