HSSR 2025 Football Rankings - SCHSL & SCISA

Staff Reports • October 21, 2025

Bethesda Sophomore QB Jordan Turner (5-10,150) rifles a short pass.

HSSR 2025 Football Rankings- SCHSL & SCISA


HSSR Div. I AAAAA Ranking - (Entering Week 9 of Season, 10-24 2025)

1.    Dutch Fork 6-1 (284-104)

2.    James Island 7-1 (300-65)

3.    Sumter 7-1 (331-151)

4.    Dorman 6-2 (285-113)

5.    Ashley Ridge 5-3 272-178) 

6.    Summerville 6-2 (280-157)

7.    Stratford 7-1 (323-145)

8.    Carolina Forest 7-1 (339-143)

9.    Ridge View 6-2 (290-91)

10. Spartanburg 5-3 (257-199)



HSSR Div. II AAAAA Ranking - (Entering Week 9 of Season, 10-24-2025)

1.    Irmo 8-0 (327-133)

2.    Northwestern 8-1 (436-246)

3.    Indian Land 8-0 (293-68)

4.    Greenwood 7-1 (295-152) 

5.    TL Hanna 7-1 (278-158)

6.    Gaffney 6-2 (242-143)

7.    Berkeley 6-2 (279-129)

8.    Greenville 6-2 (184-137) 

9.    White Knoll 5-3 (230-107)

10. Myrtle Beach 6-2 (269-259)


HSSR AAAA Football Ranking - (Entering Week 9 of Season, 10-24-2025)

1.    South Pointe 7-1 (227-76)

2.    South Florence 7-1 (342-102) 

3.    AC Flora 8-1 (360-89)

4.    Daniel 7-1 (329-125)

5.    Gray Collegiate 6-2 (290-127)

6.    North Augusta 7-1 (354-106)

7.    Seneca 8-1 (375-132)

8.    Hilton Head 7-1 (317-136)

9.    Camden 6-2 (277-168)

10. Bluffton 6-2 (304-140)  

11. Midland Valley 6-2 (261-198)

12. Wren 6-2 (328-207)

13. May River 6-2 (239-134) 

14. Bishop England 6-2 (257-104)

15. Hartsville 5-3 (316-292)


HSSR Class AAA Ranking - (Entering Week 9 of Season, 10-24-2025)

1.    BHP 8-0 (388-72)

2.    Oceanside Collegiate 7-2 (367-170)      

3.    Loris 8-0 369-87)

4.    Newberry 8-0 (336-122)

5.    Woodruff-7-1 (316-162)

6.    Dillon 5-3 (299-143)

7.    Mountain View Prep 7-1 (376-136)

8.    Orangeburg Wilkinson 7-0 (209-38) 

9.    Marlboro County 6-2 (227-92)   

10. Powdersville 6-2 (284-208)    

11. Christ Church 6-2 (285-198)     

12. Silver Bluff 5-4 (256-229)

13. Waccamaw 6-2 (269-108) 

14. Swansea 6-1 (291-111)

15. Pendleton 5-3 (229-138)

 

HSSR Class AA Ranking - (Entering Week 9 of Season, 10-24-2025)

1.    Timberland 7-1 (261-133)

2.    East Clarendon 7-1 (240-66) 

3.    Philip Simmons 6-2 (342-108)

4.    Strom Thurmond 6-2 (316-127)

5.    Batesburg-Leesville 5-3 (298-123)

6.    Clinton 6-3 (369-186)

7.    Andrew Jackson 5-3 (221-176)

8.    Hampton County 6-3 (364-150)   

9.    Central 6-1 (252-98))   

10. North Central 6-1 (190-145)

11. Chester 6-3 (168-142)  

12. Fairfield Central- 6-3 (295-163)  

13. Saluda 5-3 (229-118) 

14. Manning 5-3 (257-192)  

15. Cheraw 4-4 (199-193)  


HSSR Class A Football Ranking - (Entering Week 9 of Season, 10-24-2025)

1.    Bamberg-Ehrhardt 8-0 (406-49)

2.    Abbeville 6-2 (325-106)

3.    Carvers Bay 8-0 (227-99)  

4.    Cross 7-1 (264-39)

5.    Johnsonville 6-1 (199-114) 

6.    Ware Shoals 8-0 (304-115)

7.    Latta 6-1 (252-119)

8.    HKT 6-2 (372-122)  

9.    Lamar 6-2 (279-255)

10. Dixie 6-2 (278-202)  

11. Baptist Hill 7-2 (296-88)

12. Lewisville 5-3 (226-169))

13. Scotts Branch 5-2 (217-155)

14. Lake View 3-4 (107-140))

15. CA Johnson 4-4 (208-258)

 


SCISA AAAA Football Ranking - (Entering Week 9 of Season, 10-24--2025)

1.    Northwood Academy 8-1 (357-103)

2.    Hammond 7-1 (187-61)

3.    Heathwood Hall 6-2 (172-57)

4.    Laurence Manning 4-4 (209-158) 

5.    Porter Gaud 3-5 (197-144) 

6.    Ben Lippen 2-6 (113-210))


SCISA AAA Football Ranking - (Entering Week 9 of Season, 10-24-2025)

1.    Wilson Hall 7-0 (286-122)

2.    Pinewood Prep 5-3 (337-181)

3.    Florence Christian 5-2 (178-121)

4.    Trinity Collegiate 5-3 (229-147)

5.    John Paul II 5-3 (192-217)

6.    Hilton Head Christian 3-5 (230-327)


SCISA AA Football Ranking - (Entering Week 9 of Season, 10-24-2025)

1.    Bethesda Academy 7-0 (324-74)

2.    Calhoun Academy 7-1 (326-137)

3.    Pee Dee Academy 4-2 (183-141)

4.    Greenwood Christian 6-2 (217-155)

5.    Orangeburg Prep 5-3 (234-193)

6.    Thomas Sumter 4-5 (228-235)


SCISA Class A Football Ranking - (Entering Week 9 of Season, 10-24-2025)

1.    Williamsburg Academy 7-1 (275-93)

2.    Dorchester Academy 7-0 (302-71) 

3.    Beaufort Academy 5-2 (227-125)

4.    Colleton Prep 6-1 (2304-116)

5.    Carolina Academy 3-5 (191-144)

6.    Thomas Heyward 2-3 (151-126) 


SCISA 8-Man Football Ranking - (Entering Week 9 of Season, 10-24-2025)

1.    Holly Hill Academy 8-0 (358-172)

2.    WW King 8-0 (352-130)

3.    Laurens Academy 7-1 (306-169)

4.    Jefferson Davis 6-3 (285-15)

5.    Kings Academy 5-3 (179-164)

6.    Cathedral 4-3 (222-196)

 


By Larry Gamble December 7, 2025
Larry Gamble HSSR, Photo Editor Orangeburg - The titans of SCHSL Class AAAAA clashed at Oliver C. Dawson stadium and it was a match of skill and determination between Summerville and Dutch Fork . The game was close until the 4th quarter when Dutch Fork capitalized on critical turn-overs to add touchdowns to their score. The Dutch Fork win 40-20 over Summerville belies the three quarters of excellent game play with neither team out of contention to be the winner.
By Larry Gamble December 7, 2025
Larry Gamble HSSR, Photo Editor Orangeburg - The Class AA Championship placed Hampton County against Strom Thurmond in the cold rain at Oliver C. Dawson stadium. The Hurricanes could not outlast the Rebels as they took the state runner up trophy home after the 26-7 defeat.
By Worthy Evans December 6, 2025
By WORTHY EVANS Contributing Writer HSSR ORANGEBURG – J’zavien Currence and the South Pointe Stallions ran, ran, and ran again on a rainy Saturday afternoon at South Carolina State’s Oliver C. Dawson Stadium Saturday afternoon. All South Florence seemed to be able to do was watch as Currence, a Mister Football finalist who signed with South Carolina three days before, and R.J. Brown , run away with the Bruins’ hopes for a second straight SCHSL AAAA state championship. Currence accounted for 124 yards and two touchdowns on 18 carries, and 5 tackles on defense. Brown bulldozed past South Florence defenders for a personal best 193 yards and two TDs on 21 carries to lead the Stallions to a 35-14 victory, their first state title since 2021 and eighth state title in South Pointe’s history. “It was a super special week for us,” Currence said about his signing while working to finish the season with a championship. “A week of focus and a week of having fun at the same time. It means everything to me. Going out fighting with the guys I came in with, that’s it.” Brown’s productivity came after a week of focusing on the team’s rushing attack. “We worked for this. I did a lot of film study, I did a lot of work on my body, I worked for this,” Brown said. “It means the world to me and I know it means the world to my teammates and my coaches.” Fourth-year Stallions head coach Bobby Collins praised his team’s year-round work ethic, which showed in the final week of preparation. “These are blue-collar kids. They come to work every day,” Collins said. “No ego guys. Nobody on the sidelines with bad body language, coaches pushing them to the next level, I’m excited for my kids. They deserve this moment.” South Pointe (14-1) limited South Florence (13-2) to 113 total yards. Messiah Jackson , who led the Bruins with 1,628 passing yards and 22 touchdowns in addition to 660 rushing yards and 22 scores going into Saturday, was 8-for-16 with for 36 yards, a touchdown and three interceptions. Currence, who is set to be in the Gamecocks’ secondary in 2026, had 2,764 yards and 24 touchdowns along with 1,497 rushing yards and 18 touchdowns before Saturday. The Stallions enjoyed a free rushing attack in the first half and finished the afternoon with 316 rushing yards on 47 snaps. “I told every coach on my staff that we’re not throwing this football right now,” Collins said. “It’s either going to be in 0’s (Currence’s number) or 4’s (Brown’s number) hands.” The Stallions opened the game with Currence leading a 9-play, 80-yard scoring drive, and he finished it with a 12-yard touchdown run. Later in the first quarter C.J. Wherry intercepted a Jackson pass in the end zone, and the Stallions kicked off another 80-yard scoring drive, with Brown’s 47-yard touchdown run putting South Pointe up 14-0 with 11:39 in the second quarter. Currence closed out a third scoring drive with 1:31 left in the first half with a 9-yard TD. While the Stallions offense ran wild in the first half, South Pointe held the Bruins to 61 rushing yards and minus-1 yard passing in the first two quarters. The defensive onslaught continued when Kadin Watkins snagged his second interception on the Bruins’ first possession of the second half and returned it 13 yards to the end zone to put the Stallions up 28-0 with 10:23 mark of the third quarter. South Pointe looked to continue the rout, but two Stallions fumbles, both recovered by Bruins Defender Willie Kennedy , put South Florence back into the game. Currence fumbled to set up South Florence at the Stallions’ 29-yard line. Jackson capped the short drive with an 11-yard TD run with 2:59 left in the third. The next turnover came on a bad snap that resulted in Jackson’s 22-yard touchdown pass to Gabe McLaughlin at the 1:10 mark. South Pointe stopped the Bruins rally with a grinding 14-play, 80-yard scoring drive that ate up most of the fourth quarter. “That last drive, it was all 0. His perseverance on that last run, they stropped him three yards in the backfield, but his legs kept moving.” On the run that Collins described, the Stallions faced a fourth-and-3 at midfield and Currence kept driving his legs over the first-down marker for a 5-yard gain. “He’s the most humble, hardworking kid I’ve ever been around,” Collins said of Currence. “Him making the plays in the end, that was no shock for me, he’d do that every day in practice.” Brown broke free on that drive with a 29-yard run to the 1-yard line, then closed it out on his push through the goal line with 4:54 left in the game. “It was super important to us,” Currence said. “Coach always tells me to be a thermostat, not a thermometer. When times get tough just keep the guys cool and level headed. We had been in moments like these before and we had to rally together to get it done.” After that score South Pointe forced the Bruins to turn the ball over on downs. From there the Stallions ran out the clock. “They’re such a great football team,” South Florence head coach Drew Marlowe said about South Pointe. “Our first-half offense really struggled to do anything. We couldn’t separate from them and couldn’t get away from them. Marlowe, who led the team to the last four 4A state championship games and winning two of them, credits the seniors with finishing their final game as Bruins with a trip to Orangeburg. “It says a lot about this senior class,” Marlowe said. “They maxed out their careers, they got to play in 60 football games and four state championships. They came up short today, but I’m so thankful that the Lord brought me to Florence and has allowed me and us to experience this incredible ride.” South Florence 0 0 14 0 – 14 South Pointe 7 14 7 7 – 35 First Quarter SP - J’zavien Currence 12 run (Lawson Miller kick) 8:04 Second Quarter SP - R.J. Brown 47 run (Miller kick) 11:39 SP - Currence 9 run (Miller kick) 1:31 Third Quarter SP - Kadin Watkins 13 interception return (Miller kick) 10:23 SF - Messiah Jackson 11 run (Coy Joyner kick) 2:59 SF - Gabe McLaughlin 22 pass from Jackson (Joyner kick) 1:10 Fourth Quarter SP - Brown 1 run (Miller kick) 4:54 SP SF First downs 19 12 Rushes-yds 47-316 34-77 Passing yds 18 36 Att-Com-Int 3-2-0 16-8-3 Fumbles-lost 3-2 2-0 Penalties-yds 14-115 4-40 Punts-avg 2-30.0 2-36.0 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING SP - R.J. Brown 21-193, J’zavien Currence 18-124, Rasean Brown 4-32, Zymier Gordon-Miles 1-2, Team 3-35. SF - Messiah Jackson 20-36, Cameron James 8-31, Gabe McLaughlin 6-10. PASSING SP - J’zavien Currence 2-3-0. SF - Messiah Jackson 8-16-3. RECEIVING SP - Dalian Duncan 2-18.  SF - Gabe McLaughlin 1-21, Ja’Aun Perkins 2-9, Malik Robinson 2-5, Cameron James 2-2, Semaj Parker 1-1.
By Larry Gamble December 6, 2025
Larry Gamble HSSR, Photo Editor Orangeburg - The SCHSL Class AAAA title game matched the South Florence Bruins against the South Pointe Stallions in probably, on paper, the closest match up of the weekend so far. Both teams exhibited good discipline fought hard for the yards they got, but the Stallions seemed to find more ways or the extra effort to convert critical plays and find the end zone or turning key turn overs into points, and sealed their win 35-14.
By Neill Kirkpatrick December 6, 2025
By Neill Kirkpatrick Special to the HSSR Orangeburg – After last season’s instant classic in the AAAAA DII state championship game between Northwestern and Irmo many were looking for the same in Friday night’s contest but as coaches will tell you each year is different and this game was as the Trojans scored 35 unanswered points in the second quarter to win their seventh state title 55-13. The Trojan’s evened their state championship record at 7-7 but this was the first time they had gone back-to-back. They also became just the 16 th team in state history with 7 or more state championships joining area rival South Pointe in that group. “To do something that had not been done at Northwestern, I’m still in a bit of shock over it” said head coach Paige Wofford . “This goes beyond description. I never thought that the game would have gone like that. I’m so proud of our players. We had a bunch of new guys when the season started. They worked hard and continued to improve each week and this is the end result.” The Yellow Jackets were looking to win their first state championship since 1980 but this game was all about “Murphy’s Law” for them as nothing they did could turn the tide and stop the Trojan’s in the second quarter. “Sometimes things don’t go your way but you still have to stand by the road,” said Irmo head coach Aaron Brand . “This game doesn’t take away the accomplishment of the season or the last three years. This group has won 37 games in that time which is the best three-year span in school history.” Brand continued, “The team didn’t quit and played hard all night. I’m proud of their effort and fight. This game was a teaching moment. Despite the outcome of the game the sun will come up tomorrow.” The Trojan’s scored on their first two drives of the game going 59 yards and 46 yards to go up 14-0. Xavier Means capped off both drives with runs of three and two yards, respectively. Means hit David Flood for a 29-yard gain on the first drive and then connected with Kameron Vance for 25 yards on the second drive. Irmo would take their second drive and go 84 yards in 13-plays to cut into the Trojan lead at 14-6. Maleek Miller would finish the drive with a three-yard touchdown run. The drive was aided by two pass interference penalties on the Trojan. The touchdown brought the Irmo crowd to it’s feet and the Yellow Jackets were back in the game. Then the second quarter began! The Trojan’s began the second quarter by finishing off a 74 yards drive when Mean’s scored his third touchdown of the night from the eight. The score mad it 21-6 Trojans and then the roof fell in on the Yellow Jackets. Irmo punted and the Trojan’s Jonathan Spurgeon returned it 34-yards to the Yellow Jackets 28. Two plays later Means hit Flood from 14 yards out. Then Tamarion Watkins (Texas A&M signee and 17 th ranked player by HSSR) stepped in front of a Dre Dopson pass and returned it 39 yards for a touchdown. Score 35-6. Next Vance blocked a Irmo punt and returned it 12 yards for a touchdown. The onslaught ended after an Irmo fumble at the 50-yard line which was recovered by Kobe Neely. Means connected again with Flood on a 35-yard pass that gave the Trojan’s a first and goal at the Irmo three. Means finished the drive and the onslaught with a one-yard run and the teams went to the half with Trojan’s lead at 49-6. The Trojan’s Mean’s and Vance hooked up from 10 yards and for Irmo Dopson hit Ethan Singletary from 12 yards out to finish out the scoring. The second half was played with a running clock. Means finished the game going 14-17 for 188 yards and two touchdowns while rushing for 60 yards and four touchdown. Nigel Smith rushed for 104 yards and Flood had six receptions for 92 yards and a touchdown. For Irmo, Dopson was 12-26 for 124 yards while Amire White rushed for 102 yards. Miller had 6 receptions for 64 yards.
By Dennis Bruson hssr.com Associate Editor December 6, 2025
Red Raiders dominate second half to win first titlp since 1990
By Larry Gamble December 6, 2025
Larry Gamble HSSR, Photo Editor Orangeburg - Game three of the SCHSL Football Championship games was a perfect cold and damp evening but without most of the rain coming down at Oliver C. Dawson stadium on the SC State campus. Northwestern took and early lead and never looked back as they defeated Irmo 55-13. 
By Larry Gamble December 6, 2025
Larry Gamble HSSR, Photo Editor Orangeburg - The SCHSL Class A Championship game featured Lamar and Bamberg-Ehrhardt dueling in the rain at SC State University's Oliver C. Dawson Stadium. Lamar put points on the board first, but the Red Raiders proved to have the drive to go the distance in their 35-21 victory.
By Dennis Brunson hssr.com Associate Editor December 6, 2025
Landsharks top Belton-Honea Path 28-7 for AAA title in contest marred by postgame fight
By Larry Gamble December 5, 2025
Larry Gamble HSSR, Photo Editor Orangeburg - Photo gallery from the Oceanside Collegiate vs Belton-Honea Path rematch game this time under the clouds and in rainy conditions at SC State's Oliver C. Dawson Stadium. Final score in the rematch, Oceanside 28, BHP 7.
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