Pennsylvania High School Football Rankings: Top 25 Teams

By Andy Villamarzo
July 1, 2025
St. Joseph's Prep starts the 2025 season in a familiar spot, at the top of the High School Football America Pennsylvania Top 25 high school football rankings, powered by NFL Play Football. The Hawks will be going after their fourth straight state championship and tenth overall.
SJP will get a rest test to start the season when it opens against 4A champion American Heritage (Plantation, Florida) on Friday night on national television. The Hawks are No. 7 in HSFA 300 national rankings while American Heritage sits at No. 21 in America.
The top four teams in our statewide rankings created with our proprietary algorithm are members of the Philadelphia Catholic League's Red Division. . They include No. 2 La Salle High School, who will start their season against No. 7 Pittsburgh Central Catholic. No. 3 Monsignor Bonner will open against Simon Gratz. No. 4 Roman Catholic opens with an out-of-state opponent, playing North Carolina's Providence Day.
Within the state, No, 11 Harrisburg will open their season at home, welcoming upstart No, 22 Upper St. Clair, featuring a new sprung offense under head coach David Shazier and new transfer quarterback Malik Richards, a three-star recruit without strong intangibles and an impressive case to increase his national pedigree.
22. Upper St. Clair
Head Coach: David Shazier (11th season)
Offensive Coordinator: Robert Tory (1st season)
Defensive Coordinator: Archie Stanfield (7th season)
2024 Record: 3-9
Top Seniors: QB Malik Richards, HB Raekwon Williams, WR Zane Jones, OT Brock Xavier, MLB Ashton Beckwith, CB Abdul Hamzah
Synopsis
Last fall was supposed to be a rebuilding year at Upper St. Clair. Instead, it turned into something closer to a reckoning.
The Panthers limped through a bruising schedule and stumbled to a 3-9 record in state play, a season defined by inconsistency, youth, and growing pains, at key positions. But, just when it seemed like a the year would fade quietly into memory, Upper St. Clair delivered one of the most stunning results in Pennsylvania high school football - an emphatic late-season upset of top-ranked St. Joseph's.
At the center of it all was then-junior wide receiver Zane Jones, whose explosive performance and game-winning touchdown flipped the script on the Panthers' season and hinted that something much bigger might be brewing in Pittsburgh's South Hills.
Now, with a new quarterback, an influx of talent, and a growing national spotlight, Upper St. Clair enters the new season as one of the most intriguing underdog programs in the state.
If last season exposed anything, it was the need for stability under center. Graduated quarterback Cedric Hall battled valiantly through a tough year, but the Panthers' offense struggled to stretch the field consistently. That changes dramatically with the arrival of Malik Richards, a transfer from highly regarded La Salle High School.
Richards, a three-star dual-threat quarterback, brings a skill set Upper St. Clair simply did not have a year ago. He's fluid in the pocket, dangerous on designed runs, and owns the arm talent to attack defenses vertically - an immediate upgrade that raises the ceiling of the entire offense.
College programs all over the country have already taken notice. Richards is currently forecasted to be leaning towards staying home and committing to Pittsburgh, while still holding scholarship offers from Tulane, California, and West Virginia. For the Panthers, his arrival signals a philosophical shift: this is no longer an offense content to survive games - its one built to dictate them.
Richards didn't arrive alone.
Standout running back Raekwon Williams, another three-star recruit, transfers from Harriburg with offers from Boise State, Virginia, and South Carolina. A Power 4 running back to be, Williams adds immediate physicality and game-breaking speed to an offense that struggled with consistency last season. His presence gives Upper St. Clair a true tone-setter and reliability in the backfield.
Still, everything begins and ends with Zane Jones.
Once lightly recruited and largely unknown outside local circles, Jones has exploded overnight onto the regional - and now national - scene. Over the summer, he dominated camp settings at both Penn State and Pittsburgh, turning heads with his route precision, burst off the line, and ability to separate against top-tier defensive backs.
At 6-foot-2 with elite body control and an emerging physical edge, Jones has become the Panthers' unquestioned No. 1 option and emotional engine. His breakout performance against St. Joseph's wasn't a fluke - it was a preview.
Jones enters the season with a clear mission: maximize exposure, elevate his teammates, and proven that Upper St. Clair belongs on the same field as Pennsylvania's elite. For a program coming off a 3-9 record, that confidence matters.
Upper St. Clair won't be picked to win the state. The schedule remains unforgiving, and chemistry - especially between a new quarterback and a young supporting cast - will take time to solidify.
But, this team is no longer a doormat.
With Richards raising the offensive floor, Williams bolstering the backfield, and Jones emerging as one of the most compelling playmakers in the state, the Panthers are positioned to make noise. They are experienced in adversity, hungry after last season's failures, and confident after proving they can top giants.