Heelan holds off Panther challenge

Within 6 points late, Creston/O-M falls 47-20

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Creston/Orient-Macksburg senior Luke Neitzel crashes to the ground while hauling in a 23-yard touchdown pass from Brandon Phipps in the second quarter of Creston/O-M's 47-20 opening round playoff loss to Sioux City Bishop Heelan Wedneday. (Contributed photo by TERRY FREEMAN)

A squib kickoff designed to neutralize Heelan’s dangerous return game backfired. The Crusaders got the ball on their own 45, with a dangerous aerial attack poised to strike.

Solsma completed a 20-yard pass to Connor Spears. Then, he connected with Niles down the right side for a 36-yard touchdown, putting the hosts up 23-13 at halftime.

That score loomed large when the Panthers faced that 26-20 deficit in the fourth quarter.

“We were just trying to squib it down to the 20 or 25-yard line, and just couldn’t get it past the front row,” Morrison said. “I thought we had a great plan to come up here and win the football game. It came down to giving a good team opportunities to score with a short field, and you can’t do that. But we held our own at times, too.”

Frain shines

Trevor Frain ended up having a big night offensively, both running and receiving. On the Panthers’ first touchdown drive, he broke through an opening for a 57-yard run to the Heelan 18. Three plays later, he fielded a Phipps pass in the short flat, and turned the corner for an 18-yard TD with 5:46 left in the first quarter. Gavin Leith’s kick closed it to 13-7.

Frain had a team-high 69 yards rushing. Neitzel, drawing constant attention from the Crusader defense, managed 43 yards on 20 carries.

Phipps was 9-of-27 passing for 181 yards and two touchdowns. Briar Evans had two catches for 76 yards, Frain caught two balls for 42 yards and Neitzel and Colby Taylor each had a pair of receptions for nearly 30 yards.

“When they had field positions, we held them to field goals a couple times,” Morrison said. “It was kind of like the LC game in that respect, but I thought we had more offensive firepower in this game.”

Heelan’s line, featuring 6-foot-7, 300-pound Bryce Sweeney and Zach Skibinski, 6-3, 225-pound senior, performed well, according to coach Roger Jansen.

“We hadn’t done a very good job running the football in the last three or four weeks, and in order to finish games out, you have to be able to run the football and put some drives together,” Jansen said. “I told the guys, if we are going to win this football game, we’re going to win it up front. I think we had the advantage tonight, at least.”

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