Pioneers’ Jackson claims TD Club title
West GreeneĢƵ Ben Jackson didn’t even have to play a full season to claim the 2018 ĢƵ Touchdown Club title.
The junior running back, who missed several games due to an ankle injury, officially wrapped up first place in the standings when Charleroi, the final area team in the playoffs, fell to South Side Beaver, 26-21, in the WPIAL Class AA semifinals Friday night.
Jackson scored 26 touchdowns and added a trio of two-point conversions for a final total of 162 points. He is the first West Greene player to win the award which began in 2005.
Jackson wound up second among local players in rushing with 1,541 yards and went over the 4,000-yard mark for his career.
“ItĢƵ great to be the leading scorer,” Jackson said. “I wasn’t sure if I was going to do it with my injury.”
Jackson went down in the Pioneers’ game against Clairton on Oct. 12 with what at first was thought to be a high ankle sprain but was eventually diagnosed as a spiral fracture of his left fibula.
Jackson missed the second half of the Bears game as well as the next two against Jefferson-Morgan and Union. He returned to score his final two touchdowns of the season in a playoff loss to Rochester, although he still wasn’t 100 percent.
Jackson was quick to share the TD Club honor.
“My teammates helped me with that great accomplishment,” said Jackson, who named several of the Pioneers who blocked for his this season, including Wyatt White, Jeremiah Miller, Cole Widdup, Brock Bedilion and Gregory Staggers.
“They did an amazing job this year,” Jackson said. “Wyatt and Brock are two of the best linemen I’ve seen. They really opened up the holes for me. Brock is just so explosive, he really drives off the ball and gives it 100 percent.
“I don’t think I could be where I am without them.”
Jackson helped lead West Greene (7-4) to its first conference championship since 1993 as the Pioneers finished tied for first place in the Tri-County South with California and Monessen.
Jackson complimented West Greene sports overall, not just the football program. The school has had recent success in softball, basketball, baseball and cross country, in addition to on the gridiron.
“We’re making history again,” he said, particularly noting the softball teamĢƵ back-to-back state titles. “ItĢƵ bringing our community back together. People are coming out and cheering for our teams, we’re drawing bigger crowds. When you have all that unity, it really does feel good.”
West GreeneĢƵ Nathan Brudnock was the only area player to score in three different categories with six touchdowns, four two-point conversions and 10 extra-point kicks.
Brudnock was also the second-leading scorer among Greene County players with 54 points. The Pioneers’ Kolin Walker was second with 44 points, Waynesburg CentralĢƵ Nate Stephenson as third with 42, and Jefferson-MorganĢƵ Jacob Broadwater, Austin Foreman and Jonathan Wolfe, and the Raiders’ Luke Robinson all tied for fourth in the county with 30.
Rounding out the top 10 for Greene County were Carmichaels’ Kevin Kelly and West GreeneĢƵ Gavin Scott (tied for eighth with 26), and the Mikes’ Bailey Jones (10th, 24).
Charleroi senior H-back Hunter Perry added two more touchdowns in his final game to finish second overall behind Jackson with 136 points.
A trio of players tied for third place with 112 points: Beth-Center senior quarterback Bailey Lincoski, Southmoreland senior running back Ronnie Robinson and Yough senior running back Dustin Shoaf, who won the WPIAL regular-season rushing title for the second year in a row with 1,968 yards.
Lincoski was the areaĢƵ highest scoring quarterback.
Belle VernonĢƵ Mason Pascoe placed sixth with 102 points, the Bulldogs’ Dominic Fundy was seventh with 98 points and defending champion Jelani Stafford of California followed up his 170 points of 2017 with 94 more this year for eighth place. Tying for ninth were Charleroi teammates Brayden Mahalcin and Dakota Romantino with 90 points.
Romantino was the areaĢƵ highest scoring wide receiver.
Laurel Highlands’ Conner Basinger, the second-leading scorer among quarterbacks, and BentworthĢƵ Trent Cavanaugh tied for 11th place with 86 points. Mount PleasantĢƵ Jake Johnson, the second-leading scorer among receivers, was 13th with 84 points.
Rounding out the top 20 were Elizabeth ForwardĢƵ Zach Benedek (14th, 80), the Leopards’ Larry Callaway (15th, 76), CharleroiĢƵ Geno Pellegrini (16th, 74), the Trojans’ Cochise Ryan and MonessenĢƵ Vaughn Taylor (tied for 17th, 72), the Bearcats’ Owen Petrisek (19th, 70), and B-CĢƵ Devin Dingle, the Greyhounds’ Devin Whitlock and CaliforniaĢƵ Jaedan Zuzak (tied for 20th, 68).
The leading scorers among kickers were CharleroiĢƵ Joe Caruso, who finished 24th overall with 65 points, all on extra points, and Belle VernonĢƵ Cam Guess, who was 27th overall with 53 points on one field goal and 50 PATs.
The top five in touchdowns were Jackson (26), Perry (22), Robinson and Shoaf (18 each), and Lincoski and Pascoe (17 each).
Beth-Center had three of the top five in two-point conversions. JJ Green led the way with eight, Fundy was next with seven and Lincoski had five, as did Stafford and MonessenĢƵ Isaiah Beltram.
ConnellsvilleĢƵ Gage Gillott and the Warriors’ Andrew Smith tied for the lead in field goals with five apiece. The Scotties’ Andrew Rodriguez was next with two, while Guess, FrazierĢƵ Shane McGavitt, SouthmorelandĢƵ Andrew Rodriguez, BentworthĢƵ Trevor Richardson and CaliforniaĢƵ Matt Trunzo each had one.
Following Caruso and Guess in the extra points category were Smith with 31, Rodriguez with 23 and Gillott and the Vikings’ Bradley Tait with 19 each.
Carmichaels, Jefferson-Morgan and Monessen were the only teams to record two defensive safeties.


