What defines a season? Statistically speaking, for a team playing in a conference the level of the Fox Valley Conference, the season is defined by whether or not the team's scoring margin exceeds 37.5 points per game. The Fox Valley Conference, as currently comprised, has won two state football championships in the last 20 years. Conference teams have also made it to the semifinals five times in the last five years. This makes it a mid-level conference. In order to be a solid favorite for winning a state championship from a mid-level conference, history has shown the team needs to have a regular season scoring margin greater than 37-1/2 points per game. As an example, that is what defined Rockford Boylan's back-to-back championships in 2010 and 2011, and Springfield Sacred Heart-Griffin's back-to-back championships in 2013 and 2014. Prairie Ridge's regular season scoring margin was a positive 40.2 points per game this year, which exceeds the required threshold for being a solid championship favorite. Cary-Grove's scoring margin was an excellent 32.8 points per game, but does not exceed the threshold. The two scoring margins suggest Prairie Ridge is about 7-1/2 points better than Cary-Grove this year, which translates to roughly a 70% chance of winning a game between the two teams. The Fox Valley Conference has looked outstanding in the playoffs so far this year, so I do expect the two teams to get past their quarterfinal opponents and meet in the semis. Weather, turnovers, and the pressure on Prairie Ridge knowing they are expected to win that game (these are only high school kids after all) could cause the mild upset, but I expect Prairie Ridge will win the game and go on to beat Sacred Heart-Griffin in the championship game.