Monthly Archives: July 2008

Back by (un?)popular demand. Here are our weekly CFL picks.

Week 3

 

OK, so nobody really demanded this, but since Joe and I don’t have as much time on 92-CITI-FM as we’d like in order to explain ourselves, I’ll explain myself here…

 

And then I’ll probably do some more “‘splainin” on Sunday.

 

Week 3 starts Thursday night with Calgary at Montreal and Toronto at Edmonton.

 

Calgary Stampeders (1-1) at Montreal Alouettes (2-0)

Thursday, 6 p.m. CDT, TSN

The Alouettes proved quite clearly that scoring isn’t a problem when they put up 33 in Hamilton in their opener and 38 at home against Winnipeg in Week 2. Quarterback Anthony Calvillo has tossed six TD passes in two weeks and get this: Calvillo has only seven fewer rushing yards than Winnipeg’s Charles Roberts (Roberts has 87, Calvillo has 80). Calgary has a nice team, but they proved last week, they don’t play very well — at least not defensively — on the road.

Pick: Montreal

Toronto Argonauts (1-1) at Edmonton Eskimos (1-1)

Thursday, 9 p.m. CDT, TSN

Argos head coach Rich Stubler did what Winnipeg head coach Doug Berry won’t do. He told offensive co-ordinator Steve Buratto to allow quarterback Kerry Joseph to call his own plays. Of course, in his zeal to make Michael Bishop happy, Stubler also told the Toronto media that Bishop would play in Edmonton (Note: 24 hours later, Toronto put Bishop on waivers, suggesting the Argos were going to trade him). The Eskimos meanwhile, got an absolutely brilliant performance from offensive player of the week, Ricky Ray, in last week’s 34-31 win over Calgary and looked like a team that feels comfortable in its own backyard.

Pick: Edmonton

B.C. Lions (0-2) at Winnipeg Blue Bombers (0-2)

Friday, 7 p.m. CDT, TSN

Obviously, Canadian football writers aren’t that bright because almost all of them picked B.C. and Winnipeg to challenge for the title in their respective conferences. Now, two weeks in, and they’re both 0-2 and are barely challenging themselves in practice. Winnipeg will be without Milt Stegall, Dominic Picard and Matt Sheridan. B.C. will be with both Buck Pierce and Jarious Jackson. Not sure which team is worse off. 

Pick: Winnipeg

Saskatchewan Roughriders (2-0) at Hamilton Tiger-Cats (1-1)

Saturday, 3 p.m. CDT, TSN

My goodness the Green Riders look good, especially on defence. So many people — inlcuding me — believed that the Bombers had the best front-seven in the league, but it just might be the Riders. Offensively, Saskatchewan has some serious injury problems, but this defence might just be good enough to carry the defending Grey Cup champs. However, this week, they have to stop runningback Jesse Lumsden, the top Canadian last week after blistering the Argos for 189 yards and two TDs. Still, the Ti-Cats have not beaten the Riders in regulation since Aug. 1, 2002.

Pick: Saskatchewan

Blaming the snapper? It’s getting to rock bottom in Bomberland.

Winnipeg Blue Bombers head coach, Doug Berry, in his zeal to rationalize and justify the cutting of Troy Westwood, has decided to blame the long-snapper for the fact Alexis Serna can’t catch.

 

Could it be that everything is unravelling in Bomberland? 

 

At best, the coaching staff is simply in excuse-mode. At worst? At worst, this coaching staff is coming apart at the seams.

 

In his almost daily rush to convince himself and everyone around him that cutting Troy Westwood as the team’s kicker/punter was a good decision, Berry blamed long snapper Chris Cvetkovic for the fact Serna dropped his second snap in two games. Serna’s butter-fingers have now cost the Bombers a touchdown a game, but to blame Cvetkovic for a bad snap? What a crock.

First of all it’s not Cvetkovic’s fault that Serna is three-feet tall and can’t catch. It’s also not Cvetkovic’s fault that his snap was helmet high and Serna decided to jump for it. Huh? Catch the damn ball (by the way, the snap Serna dropped in Week 1 was chest high).

Westwood used to say the most important aspect of punting was the drop. In Winnipeg these days, it’s the catch.

But the coaches won’t admit it. They’ve decided that Cvetkovic’s snap was the problem. They also won’t admit that giving Charles Roberts the ball a mere six times (for 11 yards and a touchdown) is a gigantic mistake, even IF you fall behind early.

Fact: When Charles Roberts rushes for 100 yards, the Bombers almost ALWAYS win. Does no one down on Maroons Road know that?

Blaming the long-snapper is one thing. Forgetting about No. 1 is another thing altogether. It appears the problems in Winnipeg could be easily repaired. Just gotta stop throwing people under the bus and start doing the things that got the Big Blue to last year’s Grey Cup.

Week 2 in the CFL: Now that the old four-game pre-season is over, do the offences start to pick it up?

Back in the day, long before TSN saved the Canadian Football League with its slick, entertaining Friday Night Football package, a package that made the league young and hip (like that word, kids?) again, each CFL team played four pre-season games. Just like the NFL.

 

By the end of this four-week stretch, teams were pretty good. Especially the offences. Granted, it didn’t do the clubs much good at the gate and ultimately, that’s why the final two exhibition games were eliminated and the schedule went from four pre-season and 16 regular season games to two pre-season and 18 regular season games. Teams still lost money. Just not as much.

 

So Week 2 in the 2008 CFL schedule ended Friday night and what we got for the first two weeks of the schedule was, pretty much, two extra pre-season games.

 

So if you were coaching, what did you learn?

 

1. Toronto is still trying to figure out who its No. 1 quarterback is. After losing 32-13 at home to Hamilton, a team that lost 33-10 to Montreal at  Ivor Wynne Stadium a week earlier, one wonders if Kerry Joseph is the answer. Interestingly, a day after the loss, the National Post reported that head coach Rich Stubler kind of laid the blame at the feet of offensive co-ordinator Steve Buratto. The Argos have scored 36 points in their first two games and that’s not much considering all the offensive weapons they possess. Maybe Joseph is done and its time to get serious about Michael Bishop again.

 

2. The Hamilton Tiger-Cats are probably better than anyone — including themselves — thought. If Jesse Lumsden stays healthy and the offensive line continues to run-block the way it did in that 32-13 win over Toronto on Thursday, the Ti-Cats should be a threat in the East. 

 

3.  Montreal is clearly the best team in the East, Anthony Calvillo is obviously healthy again and head coach Marc Trestman is not having any problem with the Canadian game. The Alouettes two-touchdown blistering of Winnipeg on Friday night was testimony to a great offence, a pretty fair defence and sharp special teams.

 

4. The Blue Bomber offence isn’t very good. Although the scoreboard will tell the Bombers they lost 38-24 in Montreal, Winnipeg did get an outstanding 80-yard interception return for a touchdown by Javon Johnson. That means the Bombers put up only 17 points on offence. That’s six consecutive games (including two pre-season and two regular season games this year) in which the Bomber offence has not scored 20 points. Of course, this little nugget might have something to do with Winnipeg’s woes: Charles Roberts, six carries, 11 yards, one touchdown. Six carries? No wonder they can’t score. So do you blame Kevin Glenn or Kit Cartwright? We know who Rich Stubler would blame. With back-to-back games against B.C., then Calgary, Toronto and Montreal on the schedule, the Bombers had better pick it up on offence. Of course, in the CFL of 2008, allowing 38 points in a single game is pretty worrisome, too.

 

5. Despite all the gnashing of teeth, despite all the people who worried about the things GM Eric Tillman was doing in the off-season, the Saskatchewan Roughriders have now started with a 34-14 home win over Edmonton and a 26-16 road win in B.C. The Riders lost Kerry Joseph and Kent Austin and they still have a legitimate Grey Cup contender. It’s called defence. No team has yet to score 20 points against them.

 

6. The combination of Buck Pierce and Jarious Jackson in B.C. is not as good as the mainstream media might have you believe. The Lions have yet to score 20 points in a game this season.

 

7. The best game of the week was that 34-31 seesaw battle in Edmonton between the Eskimos and Calgary Stampeders. One senses it won’t be that close when the two teams return to Calgary, but nonethless, Thursday night’s matchup was a dandy. 

 

8. There are still too many teams in the CFL that can’t put up 20 points in a game. There are too many weak, unimaginative offences. Of course, the final “pre-season” game was this past weak. The 16-game schedule starts this coming Thursday night. One would expect the offences are now ready to go

NHL free agency 2008: Perhaps this will end all the talk about Winnipeg and Quebec City. Of course, it might also ring the death knell for South Florida, Atlanta, Nashville and Phoenix.

It’s free agent time in the NHL and the money spent this week bordered on the obscene. On Day 1, Tuesday  — Canada Day in Canada — the NHL spent about $400 million. On Day 2, it was closer to $150 million, but then, some of the signings were downright crazy.  If anybody continues to believe that Winnipeg or even Quebec City can play in this game, I would think they’re delusional. Even marginal players are getting gigantic contracts now that teams have a $56.7 million salary cap (and a $40.1 million floor).

Let’s look at some highlights: 

Marian Hossa signed with the Stanley Cup champion Detroit Red Wings. One year $7.4 million. And apparently, he turned down larger offers from other teams.

 

The Pittsburgh Penguins signed Evgeni Malkin to a five-year contract extension worth $43.5 million. The Pens also signed Brooks Orpik (Brooks freakin’ Orpik) to a six-year deal worth $22.5 million.

 

Dallas signed forward Sean Avery to a four-year, $15.5 million deal. Was that for the hockey skill or the comic relief.

 

Atlanta signed free agent defenceman Ron Hainsey — who!? — to a five year $22.5 million deal.

 

The Columbus Blue Jackets signed Kristian Huselius away from Calgary. Four years, $19 million.

 

Defenceman Brian Campbell signed an eight-year deal with the Chicago Blackhawks which will pay him $7.1 million per season.

 

Anaheim signed restricted free agent Corey Perry to a five-year, $26.625 million deal and the Brian Burke blamed Edmonton GM Kevin Lowe for making the Ducks pay Perry that much money.

 

Washington re-signed star defenceman Mike Green, four years, $21 million.

 

Colorado signed unrestricted free agent forward Darcy Tucker to a two-year $4.2 million contract;

 

The Leafs signed Colorado free-agent defenceman Jeff Finger, four years $14 million and Dallas Stars’ free-agent defenecman Niklas Hagman, four-years $12 million. 

 

The Boston Bruins signed Michael Ryder and his 12 goals to a three year, $12 million contract.

 

New Jersey got Brian Rolston, four-years, $20.25 million.

 

The New York Islanders paid Montreal Canadiens unrestricted free agent Mark Streit, $20.5 million for five years. Huh???

 

And the New York Rangers signed defenceman Wade Redden away from Ottawa, six years, $39 million.

 

It was also reported that the Vancouver Canucks have free agent, ex-Leafs captain, Mats Sundin, a two-year contract worth $20 million. He turned it down. If he did, he’s completely insane so that offer probably wasn’t really on the table.

 

Some of these guys deserve big money. Ron Hainsey? Jeff Finger? Michael Ryder? My goodness gracious.

 

Hockey’s true financial armageddon is right around the corner. We should start a pool as to when the next team slips into bankruptcy. It hasn’t been that long since Pittsburgh was in court in 1998. 

 

This week’s spending spree made the lockout season look like one giant lie. You have to hope that after the sub-prime mortgage crisis, the rising food and gas prices, the War in Iraq and the slow, ugly death — read: outsourcing — of the U.S. industrial and manufacturing sectors, there will be money left to buy hockey tickets.

 

Funny, but I wouldn’t necessarily count on it.  

Winnipeg’s new football stadium: Why are we starting over to build consensus when everyone already agreed?

The following letter arrived on Canada Day. Fred Morris has been a longtime letter writer in my hometown of River City, Man., and while we’ve often disagreed, we’ve often agreed, as well. Fred tends to start intelligent debates exactly at about the time we need an intelligent debate. 

 

To the Sun, the Free Press, Canstar and Scott Taylor:

 

As a proud Blue Bomber season ticket holder, it has been a difficult week. 

The head coach needlessly conceded the winning points. Certain politicians conceded our chance for a new state of the art stadium. 

After  years of debate, we seemed to have chosen the Polo Park site. Every other serious proposal involved the use of vacant land. Suddenly, the complex Point Douglas proposal emerged. 

Expropriations, bridge construction, and road relocations would delay this project for years. IS THERE A DESIRE TO USE THESE DELAYS TO KILL THE ENTIRE PROJECT?  

The Federal Conservatives do not seem to understand that urban renewal consists  of new construction and the preservation of functional existing buildings. It makes no sense to evict people from their homes to build a football stadium. It is no wonder that the Conservatives do so poorly in the inner city.

Winnipeg has a chance  to build a modern stadium that will be the envy of the entire country. We should quickly proceed with the Polo Park proposal. 

Fred Morris, Winnipeg

Fred’s beloved football team lost its season opener, not so much because Doug Berry conceded the eventual winning points, but because the offence couldn’t score in a women’s prison with a handful of pardons and if Berry and Co. don’t get that offence fixed this week, they’ll get blown out of Montreal on Friday night. 

By the way, the Bombers haven’t scored 20 points in a game since they beat Montreal 24-22 in the Eastern semifinal. In the last three games that mattered — with almost the same lineup — they beat Toronto 19-9 in last year’s Eastern semi, lost 23-19 to Saskatchewan in the Grey Cup and lost 23-16 to Toronto in this year’s season opener. Throw in two 2008 pre-season games that they lost 12-10 and won 19-16 and they haven’t scored 20 points in five straight games.

As for the Point Douglas Stadium Project? Well, that’s a whole new pigskin right there.

For those from outside Manitoba, here’s the deal. David Asper, our resident billionaire, philanthropist, newspaper chairman, hail fellow well met and Bomber fan, brought an idea to the Bomber board in January of 2007, saying he would build a new stadium and take over ownership of the financially-troubled football club (and despite what some mainstream media outlets will try to tell you, it’s still financially troubled). He would build the new stadium on its current site at a commercial hub known as Polo Park. 

Now since David delivered his original plan, back in January of 2007, it took him almost 18 months to convince a city of skeptics — and a city filled with people who don’t want Winnipeg to do anything at all to change or improve — that a stadium built on the same land where the current stadium now sits, was not only appropriate, but also a financially feasible thing to do. Even people who didn’t want a new stadium (even though the existing stadium is 54 years old and crumbling), seemed to agree that a stadium at Polo Park seemed reasonable and intelligent.

Now, I must admit, I talked with David more than 20 months ago and he very much wanted to take a shot at Point Douglas. There was a certain Pittsburgh/Baltimore riverfront-type renewal synergy there that didn’t exist at Polo Park, but David also knew that Polo Park was an easier sell.

So he sold it. If you go to blueandgold.ca, you’ll see that David has discussed, in one form or another, the Polo Park project with nearly 10,000 people. He sold the concept and most Manitobans had bought in. 

But then, almost immediately after a meeting with Premier Gary Doer and Mayor Sam Katz (I say “almost immediately” because almost immediately after the meeting, someone — and it wasn’t likely Katz or Asper — had leaked the information to the Free Press), the Point Douglas concept was back in play. There is nothing inherently wrong with the idea, it’s just that it will take years to raise the money to pay for the land and buildings in the area, then more years to assemble the land and then even more years to convince the people who think Point Douglas is a crazy place to put a football stadium (and most people who have approached me about it think it’s crazy), to accept that it’s a good place to build a football stadium.

Frankly, I don’t care where it goes. There are good and bad points to both sites. I actually think it should be built in the Kenaston-Taylor-Sterling Lyon Parkway area so the rich folks in town won’t be far from their new stadium. My problem with all of it, however, is how suddenly political it has become.

Because the idea was leaked to the media, it instantly made it almost impossible to acquire the land. At least, at a price that’s reasonable. Suddenly, broken down old warehouses and one-time factories became extremely expensive and then the word, “expropriation,” was uttered.

Because it was leaked to the media — a potentially nasty group of people who are always looking for someone to blame if something they like fails — the success of the concept was almost instantly dropped in the lap of the mayor, a guy who thought it might be feasible, but knew he had to sell it to his councillors and the people of Point Douglas first. The media ran around calling it the mayor’s idea and the mayor HAD to do this and he HAD to do that, and suddenly it was his project, not David’s.

And then the media dumped all over anybody who didn’t like the idea, which quite frankly, is absolutely everyone who ever talked to me about it and that list is long considering I meet with Winnipeg Goldeyes patrons every night on the concourse at Canwest Park (it’s my National Post promotion) before almost every game. And don’t think for a second that Goldeyes fans aren’t Bomber fans. They are and they all have opinions.

This whole Point Douglas argument is a mess. If Mayor Katz makes it happen, he’ll be the greatest politician this province has seen since Duff Roblin. If he fails, well, so what? Nobody seems to want it there anyway. 

The trouble is, if he fails (and here I am suggesting the failure or success of the project is up to Mayor Katz and that’s neither fair nor correct), the current stadium becomes the future stadium and that’s not good. We’ve already had a sink hole and a sewer break this year and at some point, the upper deck is going to fall on the lower deck. I don’t think I’d want to be mayor or premier when that happens.