Looking back: A great weekend for Creston athletics

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I’ve been doing this for a long time, and last weekend was one of the best 48 hours for Creston sports that I can remember, in terms of success across the board.

On Friday night, the Creston girls had one of their best performances under coach Larry McNutt in two years, dominating Shenandoah from start to finish in a 54-31 victory. Sure, one of Shenandoah’s top two players, Sydney Nielsen, went down with an ankle injury in the first half, but this was a Shenandoah team that came in at 9-5 and Creston’s 4-12 squad took it to them all night.

Zaidy Frank (career-high 21 points) and Brianna Maitlen (nine points) showed what quick feet and tenacity can accomplish around the basket against much taller opponents. Natalie Mostek shut down their lefthanded perimeter player with smart defense, and provided her usual array of stats (14 points, five steals, eight rebounds).

At the same time, the Creston boys were tuning up for the big showdown in Greenfield the following night by pounding the Mustangs in Shenandoah, 79-51.

At Corning, the Creston/Orient-Macksburg wrestlers had a modest 35-28 margin over runner-up Clarinda after one round of the John J. Harris Invitational Tournament. After the quarterfinals later Friday night, it was all but decided already.

Nine Panthers had reached Saturday’s semifinals, and the Panthers were comfortably in front with 95.5 points. Trailing far behind were Clarinda at 58.5 and Tri-Center at 47.

Walking past the old Armory in Corning Saturday on the way to the tournament’s current site — Corning Activity Center — I realized I’ve been to 33 of the 58 Corning wrestling tournaments. Rarely, if ever, have I seen a team totally take control on the first day like Creston/O-M did on Friday.

By the time the Panthers doubled anyone else in the field with four finalists — Kruz Adamson, Jake Marlin, Trevor Frain and Keaton Hulett — the 2012 title defense was in the bag.

It was my first chance to ask Marlin what it felt like to become the all-time victory leader in Creston’s most tradition-rich sport — wrestling.

“I haven’t really paid much attention to it, but it is pretty cool,” Marlin said. “But I’m not happy with it yet. I’d like to get to 200 wins.”

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