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Lehigh Valley high school sports: Jeff Pukszyn approved as new Whitehall athletic director | Basketball

High school sports has been a part of Jeff Puksyzn’s life from the moment he was born. His grandfather Pete Krah was a legendary Allentown Central Catholic athlete, coach and equipment manager who was a member of the 1947-48 PCIAA state championship basketball team, the MVP in the 1948 Lehigh Valley Invitational Tournament and the […]

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High school sports has been a part of Jeff Puksyzn’s life from the moment he was born.

His grandfather Pete Krah was a legendary Allentown Central Catholic athlete, coach and equipment manager who was a member of the 1947-48 PCIAA state championship basketball team, the MVP in the 1948 Lehigh Valley Invitational Tournament and the chief adviser to Central’s 1973 PIAA girls basketball state championship, the first in state history.

Tina Krah, Puksyzn’s aunt, was a member of that first ACCHS girls state title team and went on to become a graduate assistant coach at Michigan State, a head coach at San Jose State, an assistant AD at Vanderbilt and later was the director of the NCAA Division I women’s basketball championships.

Puksyzn’s first cousin, Tim McGorry, was the quarterback on Central’s 1998 state championship football team, and later became the offensive coordinator on the 2010 Vikings state champs and had a successful stint as Central’s head coach.

“I think the coaching and administrative parts of sports certainly are in our bloodline,” Pukszyn said.

Pukszyn spent 29 years involved with the Moravian University football program, first as an all-league player after transferring from Kutztown University, and then 26 seasons with the program from 1997-2022 as a coach with the last 12 years as the Greyhounds’ head coach.

Over the last two years, he has been a member of the Whitehall football staff as Andy Marino’s defensive coordinator.

On Monday, he officially took on a new leadership role as he was approved by the school board as the Zephyrs new athletic director. He will replace Bob Hartman who is retiring in August after 23 years.

Pukszyn, a 1993 ACCHS graduate who will turn 50 in July, is excited about the opportunity but knows he has big shoes to fill.

“Being at a Division III school you always have to chip in and at Moravian we hosted things like Landmark Conference baseball and softball championships and you have to help out with some of the extra administrative duties,” he said. “So, I got to experience some of that at Moravian where I was always surrounded by some really good people and I always thought I’d like to get into administration.”

After leaving Moravian, Pukszyn came to Whitehall where he has been the defensive coordinator on Marino’s staff for two seasons and became an assistant athletic director in the current school year starting with winter sports.

“I’ve been very fortunate to be around a guy in Bob Hartman who has done an amazing job at Whitehall and in leading District 11 and also at the PIAA level,” Pukszyn said. “I have been with Bob since November and the learning curve has been great because I’m around a guy who has done it for so long and done it in the right way and for the right reasons. It has been a great experience and I am glad he’s going to be around here for a few more months.”

Puksyzn has connections throughout the local football community. He considers Emmaus coach Harold Fairclough a close friend and remembers picking him up and taking him to school for a few years when they both played at Central in the early ’90s.

He said Jason Roeder, the Freedom coach, was his college roommate and the two of them became such good friends that Roeder was the best man in Pukszyn’s wedding.

Pukszyn obviously has close ties at Liberty where his daughter Emma was a standout basketball player and is now at Moravian. His son, Jake, was an a first-team all-league selection in both football and basketball for the Hurricanes and is now a budding track star.

His youngest child, Cole, is a 13-year-old seventh grader at Nitschmann Middle School in Bethlehem.

Pukszyn said his children may have gotten all of their athletic ability from his wife, Erin, who was a Division I softball player at the University of Delaware.

With all of his connections, Pukszyn has a good feel for what’s going on in high school sports across the Lehigh Valley and particularly in the Eastern Pennsylvania Conference.

While Whitehall has completed numerous projects in recent years to upgrade its facilities to the point that it has hosted league, district and state championship events, there’s still an old-school, blue-collar mentality in the school.

Pukszyn has embraced the “Zephyr Tough” culture that Whitehall has emphasized in recent years as being one of the smaller schools in the EPC, but still never backing down from a challenge.

“One of my players at Moravian was Jackson Buskirk and when I got here in 2023 we had a really good year and Jackson said ‘that’s what Whitehall is’ and he described this school perfectly,” Pukszyn said. “He said we might not be the biggest school with the biggest guys or the fastest guys but here you’re going to get guys who love playing football and love playing sports and guys who want to be coached hard. Jackson said there’s no quit in a Whitehall kid and that’s what has made Whitehall a unique place over the years.”

Pukszyn said that going back to when legendary John Bendekovits instituted the weight training program in the 1970s, Whitehall has had athletes who played with a chip on their shoulder and that has continued through the decades with the “Zephyr Tough” mantra part of the school’s fabric.

As for the current landscape of high school sports, particularly in the EPC, Pukszyn said “in talking with Bob, things are going pretty well right now.”

“That’s not to say there’s not going to be challenges in the league, district and across the state,” he said. “Our league, the EPC, is ultra competitive and especially having had an opportunity to coach in it the last two years here at Whitehall, I see a lot of mutual respect for each other. That’s awesome to see.

“Everyone works extremely hard at their schools and what we want to do at Whitehall is give our guys and girls the best possible experience they can have in their four years here,” he added. “Bob emphasized that. We want them to compete in as many sports as they can. There’s a great community feel here and I am excited about being a part of it.”

©2025 The Morning Call. Visit mcall.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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Butte Sports Weekly (Through July 5)

ButteSports.com is your complete source for Mining City sports. Made for Butte sports fans by Butte sports fans, ButteSports.com is a constantly-updating, no-cost website that features the Montana Tech Orediggers, Butte High Bulldogs and Butte Central Maroons, as well as any other individual and team sports that Butte sports fans care about. That includes extensive […]

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ButteSports.com is your complete source for Mining City sports. Made for Butte sports fans by Butte sports fans, ButteSports.com is a constantly-updating, no-cost website that features the Montana Tech Orediggers, Butte High Bulldogs and Butte Central Maroons, as well as any other individual and team sports that Butte sports fans care about. That includes extensive coverage of the Frontier and Big Sky Conferences.



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Lessons work both ways at 12th annual Palmer Williams Group event

The Palmer Williams Group held its 12th annual Athletic Youth Camp on Saturday at Highpoint Park in Prichard. But Saturday’s event was different from the 11 that preceded it. Sherman Williams, the president of the Palmer Williams Group, is now the head football coach at Murphy High School, a position he took on March 24. […]

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The Palmer Williams Group held its 12th annual Athletic Youth Camp on Saturday at Highpoint Park in Prichard. But Saturday’s event was different from the 11 that preceded it.

Sherman Williams, the president of the Palmer Williams Group, is now the head football coach at Murphy High School, a position he took on March 24.

In addition to the Alabama and Auburn football alumni on hand to instruct the campers in safety, techniques and fundamentals for football, Williams also brought along seven seniors from the Murphy football team. The Murphy cheerleaders also attended to conduct that portion of the camp.

Williams said in addition to benefitting the 4- through 13-year-olds participating in the camp, the event also should be instructive for the high school helpers.

“It’s very important that the example be set that we are able to show the children how to participate in the community,” Williams said, “so we take them to church, but we also want them to get them involved in community service so they can understand the importance of it.

“It’s an example for the age group that’s going to be graduating high school, hopefully going off into college, then going on and having a successful career in whatever they choose to do. It gives them the idea of how important it is to give back. Once you’ve made your mark, you give back and you’re helping the younger generation. That keeps everything going smooth.”

Murphy middle linebacker Ronald Poole Jr. was among the volunteer instructors.

“I know how it was,” Poole said, “once being a kid looking up to the older kids, seeing them doing their football thing and wanting to be like them, so it’s being a role model.”

At Blount High School (fewer than 3 miles from the site of Saturday’s camp), Williams became the first Alabama high school player to rush for more than 3,000 yards in a season. In 1990, Williams ran for 3,004 yards and 31 touchdowns on 307 carries to lead the Leopards to the AHSAA Class 5A championship.

“I was not familiar with Sherman Williams,” Poole said. “As soon as he became my head coach, I did my research and saw that he was a very good man. I just want to do everything I can to show him that I can be a leader.”

After starring at Blount, Williams went on to play on Alabama’s national-championship team for the 1992 season and the Dallas Cowboys’ Super Bowl XXX-winning team in the 1995 season. But Williams was found guilty on Dec. 6, 2000, by a federal jury in Mobile of one count of conspiracy to distribute marijuana and two counts of attempting to possess marijuana with intent to distribute. He also pleaded guilty to a counterfeiting charge.

While Williams was in prison, his college roommate, David Palmer, kept in touch with him. Like Williams, Palmer had been a state prep star – at Jackson-Olin in Birmingham – and played in the NFL after the Crimson Tide.

Williams was incarcerated for 15 years. When he was released from prison, he and his former teammate sought a way to influence disadvantaged youngsters in a positive manner before the children’s minds acclimated to the negative influences they commonly saw around them. The result was the Palmer Williams Group.

While Highpoint Park serves as the hub for the Palmer Williams Group’s Highpoint Cowboys youth teams in football, baseball, basketball, softball, soccer and cheerleading, the organization has programs that extend beyond sports based on the belief, as Williams often says, “Children are the future.”

On Saturday, the camp staff also included Juan Crum from Murphy High School and Auburn, Chris Edwards from Jess Lanier High School and Alabama, Pierre Goode from Hazlewood High School and Alabama, Victor Lockett from Shaw High School and Alabama and Patrick Thomas from Williamson High School and Auburn.

The campers also received a safety lesson from the Prichard Fire Department and ate lunch.

For his next football activity, Poole is forecasting “a major change” for Murphy in the 2025 season. The Panthers have only six victories to show for the previous four seasons and most recently won a postseason game in 2011.

“You’re going to see way more developed kids, way more better football,” Poole said of Williams’ first team at Murphy. “Better football, better athletes.”

Mark Inabinett is a sports reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on X at @AMarkG1.





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Tyler Boyd returns home to host youth football camp in stadium that now bears his name

NFL wide receiver and former Pitt Panther Tyler Boyd returned to his hometown of Clairton on Saturday to host his eighth football camp. The camp was hosted in the stadium where he helped make history, and that now bears his name. Advertisement RELATED COVERAGE >>> Channel 11 talks with Tyler Boyd ahead of Clairton football […]

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NFL wide receiver and former Pitt Panther Tyler Boyd returned to his hometown of Clairton on Saturday to host his eighth football camp.

The camp was hosted in the stadium where he helped make history, and that now bears his name.

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RELATED COVERAGE >>> Channel 11 talks with Tyler Boyd ahead of Clairton football stadium being renamed in his honor

Boyd said it was an honor to play in the stadium and, at the end of the day, he just wants to pass on the skills that will help kids succeed in life.

“We’re trying to develop team camaraderie, team chemistry, team players,” Boyd said. “Confidence, competitiveness, and just unselfishness. That alone is going to take you far in life.”

Boyd is currently a free agent and has voiced interest in playing for his hometown Steelers.

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Baja Arizona Notes: Miia Campos, Monica Ortiz, Bart Peterson, Paul Reed and Matt Sierras

Share Tweet Share Share Email Longtime youth baseball coach Matt Sierras with a few of his former players. (Sierras Family Photo) Former Canyon del Oro standout Miia Campos collected an RBI double to help UT Tyler beat Tampa 3-0 in the second game of the […]

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Longtime youth baseball coach Matt Sierras with a few of his former players. (Sierras Family Photo)

Former Canyon del Oro standout Miia Campos collected an RBI double to help UT Tyler beat Tampa 3-0 in the second game of the NCAA Division II Softball World Series to go along with a two-run RBI double in a 6-0 win over Tampa in the first game of the series.

Campos helped the Patriots win back-to-back national championships for the first time in D-II history dating back to 1997-1998.  Campos was a CSC Academic All-American.

(Miia Campos Photo)

Amphitheater High athletic trainer Monica Ortiz earned the District 7 and National Secondary Schools Athletic Trainer of the Year awards this past week at the NATA Secondary School Athletic Trainer convention held in Florida. In May, Ortiz won a $1,000 grant from the WhataTeacher Program and she provided over 5,000 sandwiches and snacks for athletes to eat on game days. The grant was renewed for $5,000.

In addition, longtime trainer Bart Peterson was awarded the District 7 Servant’s Heart Award. Peterson served as the Palo Verde trainer from 2000 until this summer and he is now located at Rincon/University High. He was also the AD at Palo Verde from 2010-2014.

(Michelle Ranney Gonzalez Photo)

Alabama A&M hired Paul Reed as the associate head women’s basketball coach this past week.

“We are thrilled to welcome Paul Reed as our associate head coach,” head coach Dawn Thornton said in a release. “Paul brings a wealth of experience and a proven track record of developing talent and building winning programs. His dedication to fostering strong relationships with players and his commitment to excellence on and off the court make him an invaluable addition to our team.”

Reed was the head coach of the girls’ varsity team at Tucson High (2005-11). In his six years at the helm, Reed led the Badgers to four state tournaments and three regional titles. He was named the Southern Arizona Coach of the Year in 2007, 2008 and 2009 and finished with a 129-63 overall record. He shifted over to two years at Cienega two years at Cienega and he compiled a 45-13 overall record and led the Bobcats to a pair of appearances in the state tournament. In 2014, Reed was named the Southern Arizona Coach of the Year for the fourth time in his career after guiding Cienega to a regional championship and a runner-up finish at the Arizona Girls’ State Basketball Division II playoffs. Cienega concluded the season at 26-2.

Reed was previously an assistant at Long Beach State, Washington, Cal and St. Mary’s.

(Alabama A&M Graphic)

Pima County Transportation Manager Matt Sierras has been a youth baseball coach since 2004 and Little League since 2006. He is currently managing the San Xavier Majors team at the District 12 playoffs where his squad will face Rincon Monday at 5:15 p.m. for a shot at the championship game from the winner’s bracket. According to his family, this will be his last year coaching and members from his teams from 13-15 years ago attended his 6-5 victory over Sunnyside Friday night.

Sierras has also been an assistant coach at Tucson High since 2012.










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Company walks back allegations against Cowboys WR

Cowboys land star wideout George Pickens The Pittsburgh Steelers traded star wide receiver George Pickens to the Dallas Cowboys for a 2026 third-round pick. Sports Seriously George Pickens might not have bailed on his youth football camp at the last minute after all. On Friday, TruEdge Sports released a statement via NFL insider Jordan Schultz, […]

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George Pickens might not have bailed on his youth football camp at the last minute after all.

On Friday, TruEdge Sports released a statement via NFL insider Jordan Schultz, walking back their accusation that the Cowboys’ wide receiver had pulled out of hosting his youth camp with the company at the last minute. TruEdge said their email to families “mischaracterized (Pickens’) intent and actions” and that they never communicated directly with the former Steelers wideout.

Instead, the sports camp company is chalking the whole situation up to a miscommunication with Pickens’ representatives, which “led to confusion about the camp’s status and future direction.”

“While our frustrations stemmed from the uncertainty surrounding the event, it was never our intention to publicly question George’s professionalism, integrity, or commitment to the community,” TruEdge’s statement read. “We now understand that the tone and implications of our message were not only inappropriate but inconsistent with our values as an organization.

“We recognize that he was navigating a significant career transition during this time and that his team kept open lines of communication with us.”

In their initial email to families who had registered for the George Pickens Youth Football Camp in Pittsburgh, TruEdge Sports wrote that Pickens “decided to walk back on his word and is no longer interested in attending the camp.”

They went on to say that his decision to back out “not only reflects a disappointing lack of accountability, but also shows a disregard for the families and children who were excited to meet him.”

In his social media posts releasing the statement, Schultz called the situation a “very overblown narrative.”

The camp has since been rescheduled to a new date in late July with Steelers tight end Pat Freiermuth stepping in as its new host. TruEdge also promised in their initial email that they were in talks with several other Steelers players to make appearances at the camp.





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Washington Commanders’ Brian Robinson Jr. hosts youth football camp

ROANOKE Va. (WFXR) – Washington Commanders’ star running back Brian Robinson Jr. made his way to the Blue Ridge area this morning. Inspiring young athletes with valuable football knowledge and hands-on football activities. Advertisement Despite the extreme heat dozens of young athletes took to the field for a day filled with energy, excitement, and learning. […]

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ROANOKE Va. (WFXR) – Washington Commanders’ star running back Brian Robinson Jr. made his way to the Blue Ridge area this morning. Inspiring young athletes with valuable football knowledge and hands-on football activities.

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Despite the extreme heat dozens of young athletes took to the field for a day filled with energy, excitement, and learning. The camp featured motivational lectures, skill-building stations, competitive contests, and awards.

With Robinson leading the way, the atmosphere was upbeat, creating an unforgettable experience for every player. Which was a familiar feeling Robinson remembers having when he was their age.

“I remember when I was their age, I used to go to camps and, you know, star players camps and stuff. And it was so exciting that, you know, just me coming and giving back, you know, having an opportunity to give back and was seeing these kids light up and seeing these parents and stuff this. So it’s all to not bring their kids out in 100 degrees to just come out here and get some work with me. I really appreciate it, ” says Robinson.

Each child also got the chance to learn hot to build their confidence and character while learning and playing the game of football.

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