Not Mark, but I'll chip in. Multiple holding calls, a couple of targeting calls, a roughing the passer, an intentional grounding, and the usual false starts/illegal shifts/substitution infractions, and Glades Central ad two sideline warning calls. We had a bizarre ending the the first quarter when Sebring picked up 3 consecutive 5 yard penalties on defense to have three straight plays without any time on the clock I've watched a metric ton of football and I've never seen that many plays in a row with no time on the clock. Speaking of the clock, the most egregious officiating error on the night came when an official signaled for the clock to keep running when a kid from Sebring was forced out of bounds. After some discussion, they put about 14 seconds back on the clock. No idea what the official was thinking there.
Ironically, the same thing happened at Jensen v FPC tonight, except the official didn't give ANY signal to stop the clock OR keep it running after a ball carrier went out of bounds. Maybe 7 seconds or so ticked off before one of them was like, "Hey, we need to stop the clock". They also had a moment where they lost track of what down it was, but after a 2-3 minute discussion, they got the call right. Otherwise, it was a well called game.
Herein lies the problem. What's the difference between a booster business owner making a "properly executed NIL agreement" with a player and that same booster just paying the player to come here an play? Answer: Nothing, just paperwork.