IN A FLASH

Ten semifinalists lead Panthers to repeat championship

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Creston/Orient-Macksburg wrestling fans erupt with cheers as junior 113-pounder Kruz Adamson rides out Cole Peckham of Glenwood in the final seconds of Adamson's 6-2 win in the finals. Adamson was one of six Hawkeye 10 Conference champions for the Panthers, who defended their team title. (CNA photo by SCOTT VICKER)

The Creston/Orient-Macksburg wrestling team held a slim half-point advantage over Glenwood, 78.5-78, heading into the semifinal round of the Hawkeye 10 Conference wrestling tournament here on Saturday.

Things really got rolling for the Panthers when 113-pounder Kruz Adamson, the first of 10 Panther semifinalists, scored a dramatic upset victory over second-seeded and Class 2A fifth-ranked Chris Hopkins of Harlan, igniting the Creston/O-M fan base and the Panther team to a repeat  Hawkeye 10 Conference tournament championship.

Creston/O-M beat out Hawkeye 10 duals champion Glenwood 242.5-223 for the team title.

Adamson and Hopkins went back-and-forth in their semifinal matchup. Adamson would score a takedown and back points, and then Hopkins would neck wrench Adamson, earning five points.

“Crazy match,” head coach Darrell Frain said. “He gets a takedown and puts the kid on his back, so we get a little lead. We know Hopkins and how he wrestles. He neck wrenches us two times, so two five-point moves.”

The match entered the final seconds tied at 15, when the official stopped the match with 1.9 seconds remaining and assessed Adamson a one-point penalty for putting a figure four on Hopkins’ head.

“It was unfortunate,” Frain said. “He did figure four the head. He didn’t try to, but in that situation, they had to call it. But, 1.9 seconds, you get a fresh start.”

Adamson thought he had cost himself the match when he was assessed the penalty.

“I was thinking, ‘crap, I just cost me the match.’” Adamson said. “Then I looked back and saw he was one point ahead of me, and I thought ‘OK, I can do this.’ I saw coach Frain kind of get up and grab my stuff and one second left.”

Standing neutral in the middle of the mat, on center stage in the middle of the gym right in front of the Creston/O-M fans, Adamson, nicknamed “Flash,” lunged forward on the whistle, grabbed Hopkins’ ankle and was able to get the takedown, all in the final 1.9 seconds, causing the Creston/O-M fans to erupt in celebration as Adamson sat on the mat with a look of disbelief on his face after his 17-16 win.

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