Category: Football

It’s been a while since these teams have lost a Big Central football game, and they’ll go into 2026 with long winning streaks

The Bernards football team began the 2025 season with a 23-game winning streak against the Big Central Conference. After winning the North 2, Group 2 title in 2023, then reaching the finals in 2024, this year’s team suffered a first-round exit, falling to Madison at home, 22-21.

These things happen, but Bernards will ride a 32-game win streak against league competition into the 2026 season, with a chance to set the Big Central record.

The current mark is 35, held by St. Thomas Aquinas, but that ended back on October 17th, when they lost to then-top-ranked St. Joseph-Metuchen, 41-19, in North Edison. Bernards’ last loss against the BCC came on September 2, 2022 to Hillside, 35-20.

The Mountaineers had been making up ground on St. Thomas this year, with all BCC teams on their regular season schedule, and St. Thomas playing out-of-conference teams besides their division schedule. But next year, they’ll need just three league wins to tie the mark, and four to break it.

The Big Central has not yet released its divisional alignments, nor the schedule for the next two seasons.

Next on the list are New Providence and Manville, also smaller schools. (Bernards is a Group 2, while the others are Group 1s.) The Pioneers have won 13 straight in conference play, going 8-0 vs. the BCC this year after winning their last five against the league in 2024. The Mustangs’ streak is at 12, 7-0 this season after also finishing with five straight against the Big Central a year ago.

Those are the only league teams in double-digits, with St. Joseph-Metuchen on an eight-game BCC winning streak, all those wins coming this season.

Group 1 Glassboro rules New Jersey…

Statewide, the longest winning streak belongs to Glassboro, which has won 27 in a row, their last loss coming in the 2023 Group 1 final at Rutgers to Mountain Lakes. They won the state Group 1 title last season with a 13-0 record, and this year finished 14-0, beating Cedar Grove this past Sunday at Rutgers to win a second straight state championship.

Washington Twp. is next at 14 straight, all this year, in a 14-0 season in which they won the state’s Group 5 title. The Minutemen took out Old Bridge in the Central Jersey Group 5 title game.

Old Tappan – and West Morris were also in the mix, at 17 and 12 games, respectively, but Old Tappan lost to Cedar Creek, 34-7, in the Group 3 final at MetLife Stadium last Friday, and West Morris lost to Old Tappan in the Group 3 semifinals the Friday prior. Butler also saw its 11-game win streak snapped – with all coming this year – in the Group 1 semifinals, a 24-21 loss to Cedar Grove, but they’ve also won 27 of their last 30 games.

That leaves just Fort Lee – a Super Football Conference Ivy team, which is not eligible for the playoffs – next up with an eleven-game win streak.

The longest state streak coming into the season was held by Group 5 Toms River North, which lost its Week Zero opener this season, 21-0 to Red Bank Catholic on August 28th.

For the record – literally, and figuratively – Glassboro would have a long way to go to reach the overall state mark. Nearby Paulsboro won 63 games from 1992 through 1998. The Bulldogs would need 36 more wins to tie that mark, which – assuming they’d have to play 14 games a year – would mean they’d have to win two more Group 1 titles in 2026 and 2027, then win their first eight games of 2028.

Randolph also won 54 straight – and went 59 without a loss – from 1986 to 1991.

But there’s also an asterisk here. New Jersey didn’t play beyond sectional finals until 2018, and added the state group championships in 2022. So, until 2012, when the playoffs expanded to five groups, 16 public schools could have ended the season undefeated, then 20 after that. But in 2018 ,that number shrunk to ten, and now only five public schools (minus the Ivies) can end their season without a loss.

Nowadays, it’s much harder to win as many games as Paulsboro and Randolph did.

Back to Bernards…

But lets get back to the Mountaineers. Take out the playoffs, and Bernards holds the state’s longest active regular season winning streak, now at 34 games, with their 2022 Hillside loss also serving as their last regular season defeat overall.

You read that right, by the time Bernards steps on a football field again for an actual game, it will have been almost four years since their last regular season defeat. They are 40-5 overall – regular season and playoffs – in the last four seasons.

The extra two wins (compared to their Big Central streak) have been against their only non-conference regular season opponents since: Week Zero in 2024 at Monmouth, a 35-6 victory, and at Jefferson in Week Zero of 2023, a 47-6 win. They also opened with a Week Zero win in 2022 against Overbrook, 21-6, but the Hillside loss came the week after.

This season, Bernards played a Big Central crossover against Cranford in Week Zero, coming up with a 27-15 win.

Glassboro has the next longest regular season win streak, now at 19 games, going 8-0 this year and last, after winning their final three regular season games of 2023.

On the losing end…

It’s been a tough few years for Middlesex County football, with the state’s longest losing streaks belonging to Highland Park until the last game of 2023, JP Stevens, then Ferris up in North Jersey, and back down here to New Brunswick, and now Dunellen.

The Zebras snapped a 32-game losing streak in their season finale against West Windsor-Plainsboro, a co-op between the North and South high schools, on October 29th. (We’ll have more on that win in the next week or so, so stay tuned!)

The Destroyers went 0-9 in Year One under Phlip McGuane, who replaced longtime mentor Dave DeNapoli following his retirement. But adjustment was to be expected after decades under the same coach in the same system, and so the Destroyers will look to use their experience to get back in the win column next season.

Their last win came on October 19 of 2023, a 34-28 win over Brearley.

Next on the list are Orange and West Windsor-Plainsboro at 14, and Long Branch and Paterson Eastside at 13 straight losses heading into 2026.

Sectional champs Phillipsburg, Bridgewater-Raritan finish 1-2 in final Bellamy & Son Paving Central Jersey Sports Radio Top Ten

The Big Central Conference’s two sectional champions finished No. 1 and No. 2 in the Bellamy & Son Paving Big Central Conference Rankings, with North 2, Group 4 winner Phillipsburg taking the top spot, and Bridgewater-Raritan – the North 2, Group 5 winner – finished second.

For Phillipsburg (10-3), it was the Stateliners’ tenth state sectional title – and second in a row – for a program that just wrapped its 120th year of football. Phillipsburg – which graduated several key players from last year’s title team – made it right back to the final, beating Montgomery to bring home another piece of hardware. They also won the American Silver Division title, sweeping the group.

Bridgewater-Raritan, meanwhile, won the North 2, Group 5 title, it’s first-ever sectional title in school history in their fourth all-time trip to the finals. The Panthers were the No. 1 seed in the section, and beat Bayonne to bring home the trophy.

Coming in third was St. Joseph-Metuchen (8-2), which ran the table in Big Central play, including a win over eventual sectional champ Phillipsburg during the regular season, 21-0. They won the American Gold Division, going 3-0, but were knocked out of the Non-Public A playoffs in the opening round by Bergen Catholic.

A sign featuring the text 'BELLAMY & SON PAVING' in bold red and yellow letters, highlighting residential and commercial paving services.

In fourth is Old Bridge (10-2), which reached the Central Jersey Group 5 finals, losing to Washington Twp. The Knights’ only other loss came to Piscataway in the regular season, in a Big Central crossover game.

Checking in at No. 5 – its first ranking this season – is Summit (9-3). The Hilltoppers took two regular season losses, both with QB Alex Schwark out of the lineup, but reached the North 2, Group 3 finals, falling to undefeated West Morris in the title game.

At No. 6 is Montgomery (8-4), which had an astounding turnaround in Year One under first-time head coach Sean Carty, who had previously served under Zoran Milich as Offensive Coordinator. The Cougars won eight games after going 1-9 last year, and made their first sectional final in program history, falling at Phillipsburg in the title game.

Sayreville (9-2) checks in at No. 7, having won the National Silver Division. They lost to Old Bridge in the Central Jersey Group 5 semifinals, with their only other defeat coming to Montgomery.

A sign featuring the text 'BELLAMY & SON PAVING' in bold red and yellow letters, highlighting residential and commercial paving services.

National Gold Division Champion Piscataway (8-3) comes in eighth. It was the highest win total for the Chiefs since the COVID pause – one of two teams, along with Carteret, not to play in 2020 – and they took just two regular season losses: to Sayreville and to eventual North 2, Group 5 champion Bridgewater-Raritan. They missed a rematch with the Panthers, falling to Bayonne in the sectional semifinals.

At No. 9 is New Providence (10-1), which was the last undefeated team remaining in the Big Central Conference until the Pioneers lost at home to Cedar Grove in the North 2, Group 1 title game, a rematch of last year’s sectional final. They were the Patriots Silver Division champions, and will carry an eleven-game win streak against Big Central competition into next season.

And two other teams tied for tenth place: Bernards (9-1) and Somerville (8-2), in no particular order. The Mountaineers were Patriot Gold Division champions and ran the table this season until a first-round, 22-21 playoff loss to Madison in the opening round of the North 2, Group 2 playoffs. The Pioneers were three-way Co-Champions in the Liberty Silver division with Montgomery and Rahway – beating the Indians, but falling to the Cougars – and their only other loss was a 14-13 home loss to Matawan in the opening round of Central Jersey Group 3.

Below is the complete Bellamy & Son Paving Final High School Football Top Ten for the 2025 season:

A table displaying the final rankings for the Big Central Conference high school football teams in 2025, listing team names, records, previous rankings, and notable achievements.

Phillipsburg finishes at No. 1 spot in Coach Borden’s final 2025 Big Central Top Ten

The 2025 football season had many twists and turns with two Big Central teams winning Sectional Championships: Phillipsburg defended their North 2, Group 4 title while Bridgewater-Raritan won the North 2, Group 5 Championship.

Old Bridge, Montgomery, New Providence and Summit all advanced to their sectional semi-finals.

A total of 25 teams made the playoffs, with Manville winning its first-ever playoff game, after going undefeated in the regular season.

When I began the BCC Camp Caravan Tour on August 11, my goal was to be sure I saw all 59 teams over the last two years, whether it was at a preseason practice, scrimmage or game. Once again I was able to see those teams I missed last season, which meant attending my first game at Samuel E. Jefferis Athletic Stadium at South Hunterdon High School.

I am also grateful to Joe Bellamy of Bellamy & Sons Paving, Carleigh Stillwagon of Elite Custom Apparel, and Bob Trivosonno of Metro Team Sports for helping me honor 59 players from the BCC as members of the 2025 Borden’s Ballers Football Team.

A BIG THANK YOU TO MIKE PAVLICHKO & THE CREW AT CJSR!

Happy Holidays to all the Coaches, Players, Team Managers and your families!

Now, here are my final overall BCC and county/regional rankings for 2025!

2025 BCC Top 10 football teams graphic featuring rankings and records, with names like Phillipsburg, Bridgewater, and Old Bridge highlighted.
Graphic displaying the Top 10 teams in the Middlesex region for the 2025 football season, featuring team names, records, and associated sponsorship logos.
Graphic displaying the final 2025 Central Jersey BCC Top 10 football teams with team names and records.
Image of the final 2025 BCC West football rankings, showcasing the top 10 teams with their records, including Phillipsburg at 10-2 and Bridgewater at 9-4.

OPINION: High School Football has a shiny new toy, but NJ coaches seem hell-bent on breaking it

As the folks at Varsity Aces – Twitter home of the Bergen Record high school sports scribes – noted on Friday, conversation among reporters in the MetLife Stadium press box during the first four of seven state football championships centered around the seeding procedure for the state tournament.

Specifically, it appeared to center around how the state divides up its “sections” on Cutoff Weekend.

“Back in the day” – we’re talking just eight years ago, by the way, not 1974 – there were 20 geographic sections in the state for public schools, four per group. Each had approximately 16 teams, and the top eight made the playoffs.

Some sections were brutal, like North 2, Group 5. Some were not. But that’s the way it went.

Starting in 2018, the NJSIAA – mainly at the behest of a couple of mammoth superconferences, the Super Football Conference in the North and the West Jersey Football League in the South – came up with the “NJ United” plan. And it instead divided the state into two supersections per group, North and South.

The top 16 of 32-or-so teams made in, then they were divided geographically. Eventually, it was decided to “snake” brackets so that each was relatively equal based on strength. State championships in each group were added for the first time in 2022, and this past season, teams were divided geographically again, after the fact, mainly to cut down on travel times in the most congested state in the country.

Now, there is talk of forgetting North and South and taking the top 32 teams in each group statewide, regardless of geography, and splitting them up, perhaps going back to the snaking model.

Who’s ready for a first round game with Montclair traveling down to Washington Township? Hammonton at Northern Highlands? Park Ridge at Glassboro?

Does anyone else see how ridiculous that is?

When will someone stand up and be the voice of reason and simply say, “No.”

We’ll find out in the off-season, when the NJSIAA football committee meets, and takes into account a recent New Jersey Football Coaches’ Association survey on snaking and geography. They’ll come up with yet another tweak, then roll it back the next year when people see how it actually worked – or didn’t – in real life.

The only other big-time sports organization that does anything like this is the NCAA Tournament. The Big Dance. March Madness. And when was the last time you heard a school say “We’re South Regional champs?”

Exactly. Never. They don’t say it. They say “We’re in the Final Four!”

So why are New Jersey’s high school football coaches hell-bent on stripping any meaning away from sectional titles?

Washington Township won the Central Jersey Group 5 title this season. The home field of the Minutemen is 15 miles in a straight line southeast of Center City Philadelphia.

For God’s sake, someone please look at a map!

And the NJSIAA needs some consistency on this issue. In 2024, it eliminated group size from the football power points formula, noting (correctly) that group size isn’t a great indicator of strength. Then, perhaps most notably, they did the same in all other sports, making it consistent across the board.

And a few years ago, the NJSIAA also eliminated the Tournament of Champions. Besides the fact that it reasoned the same few teams won it every year (who cares?) it also sought uniformity; some sports had it, some did not. The result was to get rid of it entirely.

Further back in the day, it was St. Anthony of Jersey City and CBA battling it out every year in the sectional finals in high school basketball. They could never meet in the Tournament of Champions. That’s just the way it was.

In five of the last six playoff seasons, the Colonia boys’ basketball team has won the North 2, Group 3 title. In all six of those, Ramapo has won the North 1, Group 3 title. That means Colonia and Ramapo have faced off in the same round five of the last six years. Would it be better if they played some years for the sectional title, some years in the sectional semis, and other years in the group semis?

Nope.

So what makes football different? Absolutely nothing.

Here’s a thought. Stop tweaking formulas based on who someone thinks should win a title, or who someone thinks should be the top seed. Or, who gets in the playoffs to begin with based on how good someone thinks a team is.

Playing tough opponents – and losing – doesn’t mean squat, folks. Sorry, about that. The only thing that matters in terms of making the playoffs and where you’re seeded is (or should be) winning.

Now, if you want to give me two 4-4 teams or two 8-0 teams and compare their strength of schedules, that’s a fair comparison. If one 8-0 team played all seven-win teams and the other played cupcakes, by all means, give it to the team with a tougher schedule. That only makes sense.

But a 3-6 team that “challenges” itself – and doesn’t successfully meet that challenge – isn’t worthy of a chance to be a champion. Nor are they worthy of the playoffs.

Win, baby, win.

To be the best, you have to play the best, but you also have to beat the best. If that were the case, Rutgers would be in the College Football Playoff almost every year. (Exaggeration, but you get the point.)

But back to the geography question, and the 1-32 seeding theory. Such an idea would take any and all meaning away from sectional championships. They are still esteemed and revered in every other sport. Because they are first determined by geography, not concerned with equal brackets.

But if the football coaches in this state want the best 32 statewide in each group, do us all a favor and don’t pretend anyone is the champion of a section.

They’re just in the Final Four.

Former Piscataway standout Malcolm Jenkins is inducted into Philadelphia Eagles’ Hall of Fame

At Piscataway High School, Malcolm Jenkins was part of a Chiefs football team that would later earn even more recognition it did at the time, hard to fathom when that 2004 squad – his senior year – went undefeated, beat Phillipsburg in overtime for a state title, and set a modern day Middlesex County record with seven shutouts in its 12 games.

Jenkins played his collegiate ball at Ohio State, classmate Kyle Wilson went to Boise State, and Anthony Davis went to Rutgers. Eventually, all three went to the NFL, earning the 2004 team another distinction: having three players on the same squad picked in the first round of the NFL Draft.

On Friday afternoon at Lincoln Financial Field, Jenkins – who won two Super Bowls as a member of the Philadelphia Eagles – was inducted into the team’s Hall of Fame at halftime of their game against the Chicago Bears.

“Philly, we’re back together again. And this time, it’s forever,” Jenkins wrote on the team’s website in a letter to fans in advance of the honor.

“When I left the Eagles in 2020, I said it felt like a breakup. I meant that,” Jenkins wrote. “You don’t just walk away from something that shaped you, challenged you, and held you accountable without feeling like a piece of you was left behind. What I didn’t know then was that love doesn’t always require proximity. If it’s real, it will find its way back. Today, being inducted into the Eagles Hall of Fame feels like finding my way home.”

Click below to hear Jenkins’ comments at a press conference on being inducted into the Eagles’ Hall of Fame:

Jenkins was drafted in 2009 by the New Orleans Saints, and played there through 2014, then moving on the Philly, where he was a member of the franchise’s second Super Bowl champion teams, in Super Bowl LII. He also won Super Bowl XLIV with New Orleans

He’s also an entrepreneur, social justice activist, and philanthropist, establishing the Malcolm Jenkins Foundation, whose goal – according to its website – is to “expand economic opportunity for youth and young adults in underserved communities by delivering culturally grounded programs in financial literacy, education, and career pathways – empowering the next generation to build lasting economic security and generational wealth.”

The 2004 Piscataway team was the pinnacle of Jenkins’ high school career, where he won three straight championships, beating Hunterdon Central in 2002 playing for head coach Joe Kuronyi, the Union in 2023 and Phillipsburg in 2004 under Dan Higgins, who remains the Chiefs’ head coach to this day.

He also won the state’s 400 meter run in track his junior year.

At Ohio State he was first team All-Big Ten his sophomore season, with 55 tackles and four interceptions, and his junior year as well. As a senior, he won the Jim Thorpe Award, given to the nation’s best defensive back. He had 57 tackles and three picks that year, and was a consensus All-American. He played in the BCS national title game his sophomore and junior seasons.

Services announced for Middlesex baseball senior James Matula

Services for James Matula – the 17-year-old Middlesex High School baseball player who died on November 22 as a result of injuries sustained in a car crash in North Jersey a week earlier – have been announced.

There will be a visitation at Our Lady of Mount Virgin Roman Catholic Church on Harris Avenue from 4-8 pm, with a funeral mass there the next day at 10 am. He’ll be laid to rest immediately following the mass, at Hillside Cemetery at 1401 Woodland Avenue in in Scotch Plains.

The services were announced in an obituary posted by McCriskin Funeral Home.

Matula – who was born in Brooklyn – grew up in Middlesex and was a key member of the 2025 Group 1 state championship baseball team.

Middlesex celebrates with the NJSIAA Group 1 championship trophy after a 3-1 win over Midland Park at the Wood-Ridge Athletic Complex on June 16, 2025. (Photo: Alec Crouthamel)

“James lived life with a passion that was unmistakable,” the obit said. “Determined, adventurous, and always on the move, he embraced every opportunity—eager to try new things, go new places, and experience life fully. He was excited for the future and had even begun considering service in the United States Air Force.

“James deeply loved his family, his friends, and his teammates. He showed kindness to strangers, cared genuinely for others, and made everyone feel valued. People often told his family that James was special—because he was. He carried a heart of gold and radiated love wherever he went.

“He enjoyed baseball, hunting, fishing, camping, snowboarding, golf, music, dirt bikes, and, most recently, lifting at the gym.”

christmas gifts under the christmas tree

It’s Black Friday, so here’s our Wish List for High School sports in 2026 and beyond

We’re not greedy.  This isn’t a long list. 

Granted they might be some big ticket items, but that’s why we’re keeping this list short.

Still, as much as we love high school sports, there’s always room for change.

Many of you will be headed out to the malls today.  Some of you probably already have been and are headed home, shopping bags in hand.  You might even be headed back out after lunch for Round Two.

But here are a fewal things we’d like to throw in the proverbial cart for 2026, and even the 2026-27 school year, in chronological order.

Shot Clock in Basketball…

The NJSIAA this fall made it official, instituting a running clock in high school basketball.  A few leagues had already done it, with the Skyland Conference adopting it two seasons ago, and the Greater Middlesex Conference adopting it for this year, but now all that has been trumped by the state’s version.

Similar to what has been used for years in high school football, a running clock will automatically kick in during any game where the margin is 35 points or more in the second half, only to return to normal if the game goes to overtime.

The clock would only stop for time outs, technical fouls, injuries, or when requested by the officials, such as a scorebook discrepancy.

A shot clock at that point might seem counterintuitive, as it would encourage more shooting, and could lead to more scoring and even bigger blowouts.

But one of the complaints about the mercy rule clock is less time for development of players.  We think a shot clock will at least help that by discouraging teams from standing around just to run the clock down.  Rather, it would force the play to some degree, and encourage teams to run specific sets or plays.

And, it could keep the games entertaining for fans, who came out hoping to see a game, but might instead see the contest over so fast they might miss it if they blinked.

But it would be even more valuable in games that don’t have a running clock, which would be the majority of games.

No one likes watching a team up by ten kill time by holding onto the ball.  Consider than even in football, when a team “eats the clock” by taking their time and keeping the ball on the ground, running it up the gut, there’s still a play clock.  Imagine if there wasn’t?

According to the NFHS, which makes rules for high school sports – some of which are optional for states to adopt, like the basketball shot clock – 32 of 50 states use some form of a shot clock.

It’s time for New Jersey to become the 33rd.

Professional Baseball Championship Venues…

Very few high school sports have the ability to hold championships at professional stadiums.  After all, there is no “professional” track and field in New Jersey, no bowling arena per se.

High school football, of course, has Rutgers (college) and MetLife (home of the NFL’s Jets and Giants), while basketball plays the state finals all at Rutgers now, ditching Toms River North (nice arena) in the name of equality for the boys and girls (we agree).  And ice hockey’s state finals are at the Prudential Center in Newark, home of the NHL’s Devils.

Know what other sport Jersey has plenty of professional venues for?  Baseball!

Mercer County’s Veterans Park and Bob DeMeo Field is a picturesque setting, we’ll grant you.  But parking is limited.  Internet – especially for media – is spotty.  (Electronic parking ticket takers even had issue last season.) 

What’s more, if it rains, the fields are often unplayable for at least 24 hours.  A quick, half-hour deluge suspended the Non-Public A final two seasons ago and postponed the B final between St. Thomas Aquinas and Gloucester Catholic, which was decided just as the STA bus pulled into the lot, a wasted trip.  Then there’s the issue of the late night curfew, which reared it’s head last season

Admittedly, the NJSIAA likely either gets to use the park for free (the association is headquartered in Mercer County, in nearby Robbinsville) or a reduced rate, and it’s convenient for staff either coming from their offices or who live close to work, but there are so many minor league parks in the state.

Imagine if they rotated each year:  once at Yogi Berra Stadium in Montclair, the next year at TD Bank Park in Somerset, then at the Trenton Thunder ballpark on the waterfront.  All three are beautiful, capable facilities – with full infield tarps, by the way – with plenty of parking, cell service, scoreboards with video, and food options for fans.  There are locker rooms in which to get ready.

Sure, there’s the cost, but keep in mind many high school teams rent these facilities for individual games.  TD Bank hosts dozens of high school games every year.  If Manville and Montgomery can afford a single game at the home of the AA Yankee-affiliated Somerset Patriots can’t the NJSIAA afford a few?

And how cool would a team photo look with an NJSIAA trophy and Sparkee the mascot?

Scheduling could be tricky, but with three to choose from – not to mention the new Middlesex College facility being built in Edison, which will be a bit smaller but also have a full press box and be shared with Rutgers, allowing for Big Ten Network broadcasts – this could work out well.

Replay in Football…

Granted, this has been tried before, and it failed, as officials literally blew two replay calls in one playoff season before the NJSIAA ended it, but we think it’s time for a “review.”

The technology has gotten better.  Nearly everyone has a video replay system.  State finals will have multiple angles on the game broadcasts by NJ.com at both Rutgers and MetLife Stadiums this weekend.  They even show plays on the video board in the stadiums.

So why can’t we get video replay right?

Study what went wrong, figure out how to fix it, and maybe even have someone in the booth there whose some job it is to conduct a review.

Times have changed.  Everyone has a cell phone now, there’s a lot of media taking video, and when the common person can tell a call was wrong by calling it up on YouTube, but the officials have no recourse to overrule, we’re doing the game a disservice.

Remember the Camden-Manasquan basketball fiasco two years ago?  Know what the NJSIAA did in response?  They paid themselves to have backboard lights installed at each of the high school venues that host neutral site state tournament rounds, whether it’s the Non-Public sectional finals or the Public state semifinals.  And, of course, Rutgers has those lights for the state finals.

A problem occurred, and the NJSIAA made the perfect call in doing something about it.

For football, let’s start with the state finals, and hopefully work out way back to other rounds, and maybe the regular season.  That part may be the most difficult of the bunch, but at least for the finals, we owe that much to teams that are playing longer than anyone else, and for the biggest trophy the NJSIAA hands out.

In final Union County Thanksgiving Day clash, Roselle Park tops Roselle, 41-19, while Phillipsburg falls to Easton at Lafayette Coll.

A tight game through the first 24 minutes, the final 24 belonged to Roselle Park.

The Panthers topped the Roselle Rams at home, 41-19, in the final Thanksgiving meeting between the two teams, the 106th game between the two schools.

Roselle Park (6-4) never trailed in the game, with Anthony Cianfrocca scoring twice on touchdown runs in the first half.  The first came from 21 yards out and gave him team a 7-0 lead with 5:26 to go in the opening quarter.  The second one a one-yard jaunt that broke a 7-7 tie to give his team back the lead.

They would go into the half up 20-13, the  outscore the rival Rams 21-6 in the second half.  Maxwell Griffin had all three Panther touchdowns, from 25- and 39-yards out on offense, and on a 44-yard pick six in the fourth quarter.

A hand holding a commemorative coin for the 106th game between the Roselle Rams and Roselle Park, featuring a ram logo and the text 'ROSELLE RAMS 106TH GAME'.
A commemorative coin for the pregame coin toss marking the 106th meeting between Roselle and Roselle Park on November 27, 2025. (Photo: Marcus Borden)

Raekwon Anderson, Shymir Burgess and Tyrone Smalls, Jr., scored the three touchdowns for Roselle.

Roselle finished the season 2-9 with the loss.  But Roselle Park leads the all-time series 55-44, with eight ties.  Starting next season, the game will be played on Cutoff Weekend. 

Click below for postgame reaction from Marcus Borden with victorious Roselle Park, presented by Sportsplex at Metuchen:

It was the last remaining Turkey Day game in Union County – with Plainfield and Westfield meeting for the final time last season – and leaves Phillipsburg as the only Big Central team to play on Thanksgiving, in their annual meeting with Easton that shows no sign of ending any time soon.

Easton 35, Phillipsburg 6:

Easton beat the Stateliners Thursday, 35-6, to claim their program record 14th win of the season, less than a week after Phillipsburg lost 41-21 to Ramapo in the Group 4 semifinals at Maloney Stadium.

It was all Easton early, as they scored four times in the first half, including three touchdown runs, and a blocked punt Anthony Diaz recovered in the end zone. The lone ‘Liner score came via an 81-yard touchdown pass from sophomore QB Dominic Bracco to his brother, Mike Bracco, a senior.

The Stateliners end their season at 10-3, following a second straight Thanksgiving Day loss to the Red Rovers, after winning back-to-back contests in 2022 and 2023.

Gameday with Marcus Borden: Thanksgiving Edition/Season Wrap-Up!

Well, that’s about it for the Big Central Conference! The last two teams – Phillipsburg and Bridgewater-Raritan – were eliminated from the playoffs in the group semifinal stage last week, and we talk about it all with Central Jersey Sports Radio analyst Marcus Borden!

Mike and Marcus first take a look playoff losses for the Panthers and Stateliners, but reflect back on their excellent seasons as well, before looking ahead to the annual Phillipsburg-Easton game on Thanksgiving, as well as the final Turkey Day meeting between Roselle and Roselle Park, which Marcus will be covering for Central Jersey Sports Radio. And we tease ahead to postseason awards, which will be coming out over the next few weeks to put a wrap on the 2025 high school football season!

Click below to listen to the final 2025 episode of “Gameday with Marcus Borden”:

“The Big Central in 2 Minutes” – State Semifinals!

Thanksgiving is here, but once that’s done, that’s it for Big Central football in 2025, and Mike Pavlichko takes a look back on this week’s edition of “The Big Central in 2 Minutes!”

On this week’s episode, Mike looks back at tough state semifinal losses for Phillipsburg and Bridgewater-Raritan, while teasing the Stateliners’ game against Easton on Turkey Day, and the final Thanksgiving Day game between Roselle and Roselle Park – of which, Marcus Borden will have coverage on Twitter!

All on this week’s edition of “The Big Central in Two Minutes!

Click below to listen to the final episode of “The Big Central in Two Minutes” for 2025: