There seems to be tension between certain players. I was specifically looking at this stuff tonight and this stood out to me. I saw some high fives that were left hanging. I some some backs turned on congrats. If this doesn't change, I see MR winning again in Annapolis, if it happens. There are other fundamental issues, but it starts here. If this "team" isn't working as a unit, talented teams will focus on these ego-driven star players just like MR did. This has been a problem for FH in the past. Not recently, but definitely in previous years. And it seems to be one now.
He may not be quite as fast as the others, but IMHO, #20 is FH's best all-around back. As I've said before, with #32 as fullback blocking for him, I think he'd be a terror in the backfield. He keeps those legs churning, not afraid to hit, and he's not slow. Regardless, you can't grow a line overnight. Even a less athletic, but well-coached line will 9/10 win out in the third and fourth quarter. So, then there's that.
#15 should work on short, quick passes to frustrate and force man coverage. Then, try the deep pass. It also spreads out the linebackers and gets in their head. Most importantly, they need to be less predictable. Seems obvious, but even tonight's game was pretty predictable. Sure, Smithsburg isn't a stellar team. Which, is exactly why I would've passed 50% of the time. Who cares if you only win by 30 instead of 50.
Bottom line - have a deep situational playbook ready for adjustments on offense and defense. Also, I agree with 4inarowtopthat. Bench players for a series or two when they commit a "hothead" penalty.