As with scores of football players in South Jersey who will play their final games this week, it will be an emotional farewell, especially for Miskiewicz, who hung in there, finally earned his chance, and doesn't want to see his career end.
Seneca (3-6) will host Cherokee in the season finale for both teams on Thanksgiving.
"It pretty much means almost everything to me," said Miskiewicz, a member of the National Honor Society. "I have been playing since second grade."
He laughs now when recalling how he wanted to quit the sport after his second practice in that second-grade year. His father talked him out of it.
Football has been more than just a game, more than an avenue of competition for Miskiewicz.
He moved to the area from Chicago in 2006, and playing the sport allowed him to transition into a new community much more easily.
At Seneca, he has enjoyed every moment, even when he didn't know if running the varsity offense would be part of the equation.
Coach Bill Fisher concedes that he didn't know if Miskiewicz would be the starter, and the senior was even sharing reps during summer 7-on-7 games.
Yet Fisher, who was an accomplished quarterback at Deptford and then Rowan, saw something in Miskiewicz that he liked.
And the old quarterback was right. This year, the 6-foot-3, 200-pound Miskiewicz has completed 77 of 121 passes for 1,025 yards and seven touchdowns. This is for a Seneca program that traditionally ran the ball in the past.
"He has had a super year," Fisher said.
Last season, Fisher didn't get to see many JV games, but when he did, it seemed as if Miskiewicz was always making big plays. That has translated onto the varsity field.
"He's a player who goes out there and makes things happen," Fisher said.
After not even knowing entering his senior year if he would be the starter, Miskiewicz eventually was named one of the captains.
In modern times, if players aren't starting on varsity as sophomores, there is often impatience. Miskiewicz used his experience on the JV to improve as a player.