HAMILTON ? When Bishop Fenwick’s Rufus Rushins showed up to the Pingree School and saw a couple of inches of snow on the football field, he knew it was going to be a good day. Rushins, of Lynn, ran for 193 yards and scored two touchdowns to lead the Crusaders (11-1) to a 28-0 win over Pingree Thursday morning. Rushins finished his career as Fenwick’s all-time leading rusher with 5,761 yards, and the most touchdowns, 71, passing Bobby Tarr (2004-07) in both categories. He is also the state’s fifth-leading rusher. “If I had to pick one (of the school records), it would be the rushing yards,” Rushins said. “The touchdowns are great, but gaining all those yards is an indication of how hard my offensive line and I had to work.” Fenwick quarterback Matt Renzulli threw a pair of touchdown passes, to Peabody’s Myles Connor for 40 yards and to Lynn’s Cody Mullen for 57 yards. The Crusaders’ defense also limited the Highlanders (4-5) to just two first downs in the second half. Pingree played without its starting quarterback, Griffin Beal, and while backup Justin Assad had some moments, Pingree’s spread offense had a hard time gaining any traction. “They (Highlanders) hung in there and give them credit, but with their injury issues, it really made it tough for them, especially with their offense in these conditions,” Fenwick coach David Woods said. Still, Pingree’s offense was able to move the ball in between the 20s, but couldn’t make it into the end zone. Of the Highlanders’ four drives in the first half, three ended with stops on fourth down. The other drive ended when Assad fumbled after picking up a first down on fourth-and-15. Fenwick’s offense was also hampered by miscues in the first quarter. A 50-yard touchdown pass from Renzulli to Mullen was negated due to a holding penalty, and the Crusaders turned the ball over later on the same drive when Renzulli and Rushins mishandled an exchange. The Crusaders finally got onto the scoreboard with their next possession, an 85-yard drive that featured two big receptions to Connor, the first for 32 yards on fourth-and-3, and then two plays later a 40-yard bomb down the right sideline. The try for two points was no good and Fenwick led, 6-0, with 7:13 left in the second quarter. Fenwick got the ball back at its own 30 for its next possession, and two plays later Rushins rumbled 66 yards around left end, and his 2-point conversion rush made the score 14-0, which is how the game stood at halftime. Using Rushins liberally, the Crusaders put together a good-looking march on their first drive of the second half, but Pingree stopped Rushins on fourth-and-4. Assad went around right end for 50 yards on the next play for the Highlanders’ biggest gain of the day, but Pingree’s drive stalled, partly due to an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty, as the game began to get chippy.On the first play of the fourth quarter, Renzulli hit a wide open Mullen at about the Pingree 40 and he raced into the end zone for an easy score. The try for two points failed and Fenwick led, 20-0, with 11:43 left.A Pingree three-and-out gave the ball right back to the Crusaders at midfield, and Renzulli picked up 21 yards on a keeper to set up Rushins for a 1-yard plunge that broke the tie with Tarr for the school record for touchdowns. He also ran for the 2-point conversion in what turned out to be the final carry of a spectacular high school football career. “Rufus is just a unique talent,” Woods said. “There are times he gets the ball when it looks like he’s going to be tackled for a 2-yard loss, and he ends up making 20 yards. What makes him special is he’s a great kid who’s worked hard. We’ve been lucky to have him.” Rushins was awarded the game ball, while Renzulli was awarded the game MVP trophy. “When I woke up this morning and I saw snow on the ground, I smiled because I knew it was going to be a good day to run the football,” Rushins said. “It’s an awesome fee