Great PA Teams
By Hal Wilson
From
USC had won the 1988
title with a win over Pittsburgh Central Catholic 7-0, but the Panther
administration chose not to participate in the first-year
In 1989, the
Panthers conquered all. In the WPIAL playoffs, USC first beat Hempfield 32-14, then shut out Woodland Hills, before the
North Hills title game. Hollidaysburg and Wilson of West Lawn fell in the State
playoffs.
The Panthers had
shared WPIAL AA titles in 1974 and 1975, playing a 6-6 tie with Gateway in 1974
and a scoreless game with
Then, in a showdown
at North Hills, the Indians, who had won 44 straight home games, leaped to a
26-7 halftime lead. The Indians’ quarterback, Geoff Bender, had completed his
first eight passes. Down, but far from out, the Panthers staged a great second
half rally and came on to edge the home team in a 27-26 thriller.
Star halfback Pete Habib was injured in the later
Habib returned for the semi-final with Woodland
Hills and its 250 pound fullback, Anderson. The score was 19-0 at the half.
Then linebacker Phil Dunn returned an interception for a touchdown, and the
Panthers never looked back, winning 27-0.
The AAAA rematch
final against North Hills at Three Rivers Stadium was a much anticipated game.
The Bender twins, Geoff and Jason, were poised for an epic battle. It was not
to be, however, as Render’s Panthers rolled to 17-0 halftime lead, scored on
their first second half possession, and the rout was on. USC’s
margin stretched to 38-0 before North Hills tallied two late TD’s. The final count of 38-14 was one the most decisive in
WPIAL championship history.
Geoff Bender was
intercepted five times in the first half. Two-way Panther Mike Quealy intercepted three Bender passes, returning one for a
TD, and caught three from junior USC quarterback Mark Gentile, one for a 35
yard touchdown.
In the PIAA state
semi final, the Panthers had little difficulty with Hollidaysburg, winning
51-21. In the championship game at
Three Panthers were
selected to the All-State first team. Doug Whaley was named to the offense and
Pete Habib and Phil Dunn were honored on the
defensive unit. Offensive tackle Dan Nogar and nose
guard Jim Colonna were third team choices.
Whaley had an
outstanding career at Pitt, while Dunn starred at
Jim Render is a
native of
The Panther run of
eight WPIAL AAAA title games in just ten years:
1988 USC 7
1989 USC 38 North Hills 14
1991 Connellsville 17 USC
7
1992 USC 10 North Allegheny 7
1993 North Hills 21 USC 14
1994
1995
1997 USC 28 Penn-Trafford 27
USC won an amazing
69 straight WPIAL Quad-A conference games during this same ten year period.
Other All-State
first teamers in these years included defensive
linemen Jim Mansfield in 1988 and Mark Hondru in
1992, D-back Mike Tomko in 1993, all-purpose back
Cullen Hawkins in 1995, offensive tackle Jason Bisson in 1996. Second team honorees included Hondru in 1991, quarterback Alan Hamrick in 1992, defensive
tackle Todd Amick in 1993, and punter Jay Junko in
1997.
In 2003, the
Panthers reached the AAAA final again, losing to the oncoming Pittsburgh
Central Catholic Vikings, 42-10.
USC’s all-winning 1989 offense:
E 83 Eric
T 77 Brad MAUERSBERG 6-3 235
G 66 Jay GRONINGER 5-11 210
C 52 Brian
G 68 Lew
WETZEL 6-2 210
T 74 Dan NOGAR 5-11 240
E 88 Phil DUNN 6-0 200
Q 19 Mark GENTILE 6-5 180
H 35 Pete HABIB 6-0 190
H 44 Mike QUEALY 6-2 175
F 24 Doug WHALEY 5-11 190
The opportunistic
Panther defense:
T 68 Lew
WETZEL 6-2 210
G 66 Jim COLONNA 6-2 185
T 57 Joel MINIK 5-11 205
L 24 Doug WHALEY 5-11 190
L 34 Keith MARTIN 6-0 190
L 85 Andy WELTY 6-1 170
L 88 Phil DUNN 6-0 200
B 20 Kevin ORIE 6-3 177
B 35 Pete HABIB 6-0 190
B 44 Mike QUEALY 6-2 175
S 3
Terry HAMMONS 5-8 155
The 1989 Panther
State Championship record:
34
55 TRINITY 0
43
14
27 NORTH HILLS 26
47 SHALER 6
27
16 RINGGOLD 0
21 NORTH ALLEGHENY 14
34
WPIAL AAAA PLAYOFFS
32 HEMPFIELD 14
27 WOODLAND HILLS 0
38 NORTH HILLS 14
STATE AAAA PLAYOFFS
51 HOLLIDAYSBURG 21
12
WILSON
West Lawn 7
Render recently said
of his 1989 team, “We had a lot of winners – good athletes who were quality
kids – and fine leadership from players like Doug Whaley”.
Whaley said recently
that “Coach Render was straight-forward – we always knew where we stood; in his
program, we were well prepared for football week-by-week, as well as for life
after football.”
He remembers the
long journey in 1989 from the first practices through the 15 game season to the state title game – and the physical and
emotional commitment involved.
He is still thrilled
by the sign near the USC school building listing the 1989 champions.
Doug Whaley is now
Pro Scouting Coordinator for the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Defensive back Kevin
Orie went on to
An earlier Panther
All-Stater, 1981 punter John Bruno, was a key player
in
