Megastar: West Greene’s Jackson one of WPIAL’s best
When he was a running back for the Steelers from 1950-1957, a common refrain was “Hey diddle diddle, Rogel up the middle,” referring to running back Fran RogelĢƵ ball-carrying, or perhaps directional skills.
Rod Huffman, in his fourth season as West Greene head coach, wasn’t far off recalling that Rogel line when he served as volunteer assistant at West Greene in 2014.
It was simple, Huffman laughed: “For the junior high team the game plan was simple: Ben to the right, Ben to the left, Ben up the middle.”
Huffman was referring to current Pioneers junior Ben Jackson, who ranks as the WPIALĢƵ No. 3 rusher, with 1,454 yards, and leads the ĢƵ Touchdown Club with 150 points and is fourth in the WPIAL in scoring and touchdowns (24), including a career long 84-yarder against Mapletown on Sept. 14.
All that despite missing West GreeneĢƵ last game and half of the previous game due to an ankle injury, although he is likely to return to action this Friday.
“Our varsity and junior high teams practiced on the same field and we could see Ben was a talented runner,” Huffman continued.
With 3,939 total career rushing yards, Jackson ranks second behind Rodney Wilson (6,304) on the schoolĢƵ all-time list. Jackson surpassed 3,000 career yards against Chartiers-Houston Sept. 7, when he recorded a career-high 336 yards on the ground. He scored five touchdowns twice this season, against Chartiers-Houston and Avella. His 44 career touchdowns also ranks second on the schoolĢƵ all-time list, behind WilsonĢƵ 75.
Jackson was averaging 204 yards per game and was on pace to reach the 2,000-yard plateau before the injury.
“Ben is definitely not a one-season wonder,” Huffman said. “I saw this coming. I saw BenĢƵ success on the horizon in middle school and this is something we knew would happen.”
An all-conference running back as a freshman and sophomore, Jackson is one of the keys to West GreeneĢƵ recent resurgence, evident in HuffmanĢƵ second season, in 2016, when the Pioneers went 3-7 overall and 2-5 in the Tri-County South, after going 0-9, 0-8 in 2015. In HuffmanĢƵ initial season, West Greene scored 58 points the entire season, when Jackson was in the eighth grade and not on varsity roster.
In JacksonĢƵ freshman season in 2016, West Greene narrowly missed a postseason berth. Last year the Piobneers went 7-4, 4-3, to qualify for the playoffs for the first time since 1993. West Greene fell in the first round to Rochester 39-14.
As a freshman, Jackson piled up 1,199 yards rushing, with 10 touchdowns. His longest was for 55 yards. As a sophomore, he upped his rushing numbers to 1,286 yards, with another 10 touchdowns and a longest of 64 yards.
As this season winds down, the Pioneers (6-3, 6-1) are tied for first place in the Class 1-A Tri-County South and have clinched a playoff spot for the second consecutive season.
Jackson does more than just run the ball for West Greene.
“Ben is good on both sides of the ball,” Huffman said, noting that Jackson, at 6-foot-1, 205 pounds, lines up at running back on offense, but “he brings a lot to our defense as a strong safety and outside linebacker. However, Ben is better offensively and is one of the better running backs in the WPIAL, not just Class A.”
Speed, power, and great field vision represent JacksonĢƵ strengths, Huffman noted, but added that “he is also patient and has the ability to wait on his blockers to open holes.”
Adding that Jackson can also catch the ball out of the backfield, “he is an all-around package for a running back.”
But Huffman said that there is even more to Jackson.
“He is also a leader off the field, humble and a spiritual leader. He leads by example and is completely unselfish. He is quick to give credit to other players.”
In fact, despite his individual achievements, Jackson recalled a play his freshman season that pointed West Greene in the right direction. He proudly recalls Pioneers quarterback Zach Pettit running for a touchdown against Jefferson Morgan in 2016, ending an 18-game winless streak dating to 2014.
Jackson is also quick to point out another factor in West GreeneĢƵ football success.
“We have a close team,” he observed. “We fell a little short my freshman year. But we were determined to make the playoffs last year and we’ve been successful so far this year. We are just like a band of brothers. We really turned around our record last season,” he added, noting that teammates Wyatt White, senior tackle, Cole Widdup senior guard, Brock Bedilion, junior guard, and Andrew Litton, junior linebacker have also been major contributors to the Pioneers’ success.
In the classroom, Jackson maintains a 3.9 grade average, and is a member of the National Honor Society, Science Club, Peer Mentoring, Peer Court, and Engineering Club.
Once football season ends, Jackson, whose parents, Brian and Crystal, fostered his football career when he was in the first grade, turns his athletic attention to basketball and track. On the basketball court, he was West GreeneĢƵ sixth man as a freshman, but emerged as a power forward last year.
As a member of the track team, he competes in the 100 and 200, javelin, triple jump and long jump events. As a freshman, Jackson went to the WPIALs in the triple jump and javelin; as a sophomore he advanced in the 100, triple jump and javelin.
He holds the school record in the triple jump and, while his speed may not always be as evident on the football field, his personal best 100 time of 10.99 speaks for itself.
Despite his success on the basketball court or track, Jackson prefers football. “I like the competitive aspect of the game and the physicality of football,” he said.
While a playoff berth now secured, Jackson also has an eye on his future, possibly in the landscape or engineering architectural field. Speculating that, if college is in his immediate future, he would hope to be able to play football. But at the same time, he hinted that he may first enter the U.S. Marines, following a close friend into the Service.




