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Elsbury sisters return to podium

Autumn scores silver, Maeley bronze as South Tama girls send four to state wrestling tournament

PHOTO BY JAKE RYDER - South Tama County sophomore Autumn Elsbury, front, nears a takedown against top-seeded Naomi Simon of Decorah during Saturday’s 170-pound championship match at the girls’ state wrestling tournament at Xtream Arena in Coralville. Simon, a University of Iowa recruit, won her fourth state title with a 15-2 major decision over Elsbury.

CORALVILLE — Even against unbeatable odds, Autumn Elsbury wrestled to win on Friday night.

The South Tama County sophomore did not spoil a storybook ending for Decorah’s Naomi Simon in the 170-pound championship match — Simon, a University of Iowa commit, achieved her goal of becoming Iowa’s first four-time girls state champion with a 15-2 major decision.

CORALVILLE — Even against unbeatable odds, Autumn Elsbury wrestled to win on Friday night.

The South Tama County sophomore did not spoil a storybook ending for Decorah’s Naomi Simon in the 170-pound championship match — Simon, a University of Iowa commit, achieved her goal of becoming Iowa’s first four-time girls state champion with a 15-2 major decision.

“I was just trying to stay out of the stuff she likes because then she can’t control you,” Elsbury said. “I just tried not to pressure myself too much because I’ve never been this far in the state tournament. But there was some pressure, just because when you’re in the finals, you’re that close.”

PHOTO BY JAKE RYDER

Earlier in the day, Elsbury pinned Waverly-Shell Rock’s Karissa Oldenburger in the semifinals. She said she was energized after watching Maeley, her older sister, get upended in a 135-pound semifinal that denied Maeley a chance at back-to-back state titles.

“But I still had to focus on myself,” Autumn said. “I knew she could wrestle back, I knew she could pull it off and get the next best thing, and that’s really all you can do.”

Maeley dropped a 4-2 match in sudden victory to Dubuque Wahlert’s Bella Miller, a freshman who went on to win the 135-pound title.

“I didn’t wrestle my best,” Maeley said. “It sucks being the returning champ, but it doesn’t define me. I didn’t quit. … I’m wrestling on a torn ACL right now — it’s not an excuse, I didn’t tell anybody, I just wrestled through it. And I had a good career.”

Maeley was able to end her senior season with one more victory and a 9-3 decision over Isabella Deeds of Ridge View.

PHOTO BY JAKE RYDER

“That loss sucked, but the pressure just went away and it was for fun at that point,” Maeley said. “I’ve warmed up with [Deeds] before on teams together and just never wrestled a live match. But I knew I could win it. But there’s no need to be cocky about it or anything. I was just enjoying my last match.”

Elsbury ends her high school career as a three-time placewinner — she earned bronze in the final IWCOA tournament in 2022 as a sophomore.

“It’s been a ride,” Maeley said. “I’ve had a great career.”

As for Autumn?

“This was a great experience, and I’m gonna push myself even harder to hopefully be on top of the podium next year.”

PHOTO BY JAKE RYDER