After two games on the road, Uxbridge is heading back home. They will welcome the St. Paul Knights at 7:00 p.m. on Friday. Uxbridge knows how to get points on the board -- the squad has finished with 31 points or more in their past four contests -- so hopefully St. Paul likes a good challenge.
Last Friday, Uxbridge was able to grind out a solid victory over Auburn, taking the game 52-43.
Camden Lachapelle was his usual excellent self, rushing for 286 yards and five touchdowns while picking up 11.4 yards per carry. Those 286 rushing yards gave him a new career-high. Talen Rosborough was in the mix too, providing Uxbridge with two touchdowns.
Uxbridge was unstoppable on the ground and finished the game with 303 rushing yards. That's the most rushing yards they've managed all season.
Meanwhile, winning is always nice, but doing so behind a season-high score is even better (just ask St. Paul). They breezed by Abby Kelley Foster to the tune of 48-20 on Friday. With that win, the Knights brought their scoring average up to 26.6 points per game.
St. Paul had a senior duo take command as John Walsh Karam threw for 130 yards and four touchdowns while completing 71.4% of his passes and Angelo Scavone gained 163 total yards and a touchdown. Walsh Karam didn't just play on offense: he also picked up a sack and made three total tackles.
Uxbridge's victory was their ninth straight on the road dating back to last season, which pushed their record up to 8-0. Those victories were due in large part to their offensive performance across that stretch, as they averaged 42.2 points per game. As for St. Paul, the win made it two in a row for them and bumps their season record up to 5-3.
Friday's match will pit two of the most dominant backs against one another: Lachapelle and Scavone. Lachapelle just won't slow down this season and has run in 20 touchdowns while averaging 175.6 rushing yards per game. Scavone has been a dominant force too and has run in 3 touchdowns while averaging 97.1 rushing yards per game.
Article generated by infoSentience based on data entered on MaxPreps