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Sports - Will County

Oswego edges Joliet West in defensive battle

Joliet West's Matthew Prieboy gets ready to kick a field goal as Jaxon Aubry holds during the first half Saturday against Oswego at Joliet West. The 36-yard field goal would be West's only score as it lost to Oswego, 7-3.

JOLIET – It was expected to be a low-scoring game Saturday between Oswego and Joliet West, and it was exactly as advertised.

After stopping West on the opening drive of the game, Oswego marched 81 yards in 17 plays, consuming 8:30 on the clock. Anthony Grimes scored from a yard out to earn a hard-fought 7-3 victory over the Tigers in a Southwest Prairie Conference matchup.

Neither side could get anything established offensively, mostly because of strong defensive efforts by both teams.

The Panthers (3-0) had drives of 11 and nine plays in the first half, but West’s defense held them at bay and stopped both drives on fourth-down situations.

After the nine-play drive stop by West, the Tigers (1-2) took over on their own 23-yard line with 2:08 left in the half.

Sophomore quarterback Jaxon Aubry engineered an 11-play drive that included nine passes, but stalled at the Oswego 14-yard line. After a five-yard penalty on West, Matthew Prieboy hit a 36-yard field goal to end the half and the scoring in the game.

“Credit the West defense for how they played,” Oswego coach Brian Cooney said. “But this one feels like a loss. We will take 3-0, but we will prepare this week like we are 2-1.”

West never could get a running game established against the Panthers’ big front. Aubry was 14 of 36 passing for 147 yards, but also had two interceptions.

“I hate losing, especially in these tight games, but we are right there,” West coach Jason Aubry said. “We are very close. Our defense again stepped up and played very, very well. Offensively, we started to move the ball a little bit, and then we had errors.

“So many opportunities on the offensive side. A dropped ball, an errant pass, a penalty at the wrong time are some of those little things that make a big difference in a game like this. We never got the running game established, which would have opened up the pass even more. We have a fairly young offense.

“Kevon Dorris made a couple of really nice catches, and then there were a few times the ball just bounced off his hands. We have young guys, but there is a time in a season where you can’t blame it on young guys anymore. Yeah, they are sophomores – but at this point in the season, we should be rolling, and I think we are getting to that point.”

West forced Oswego into three second-half turnovers as Andrew Smith intercepted a pass, with Robert Ford and Julius Garrett recovering Panthers fumbles, but could not take advantage of the situation.

After the Garrett fumble recovery, West put together one last drive with 6:15 remaining. It was the longest drive of the second half by either team – eight plays. But Oswego held on a fourth-and-five, and ran out the clock.

Oswego was led by senior running back Drew White, who rushed for 130 yards on 30 carries.

The Panthers’ Nick Marra added 56 yards on the ground, with 10 carries and quarterback Levi Olson was 5-of-15 for 103 yards. His big target was senior Elliot Pipkin, who had four receptions for 98 yards. Kyle Keeton and Matt Maruna had the two second-half interceptions that stopped Tigers drives.

Jeff DeGraw

Jeff DeGraw is a contributing reporter to Shaw Local News Network