Tag Archives: Alexis Serna

Bombers Lose Again … so is that a surprise? I mean, really?

I love reading the comments lists at both winnipegfreepress.com and winnipegsun.com. Everybody has an answer for what ails the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, but few want to admit that this re-building team (yes, rebuilding again) isn’t quite good enough yet.

Saturday night the Bombers lost 29-22 in Hamilton. The CFL, being what it is, the Bombers will likely beat Hamilton when the teams return to play in Winnipeg this Friday night (The Bombers and Ti-Cats play four times in the first seven weeks. If that’s not the worst schedule in the history of professional sports, I’d like to see what is.).

Seems folks really want to blame kicker Alexis Serna for the loss, but to his credit, head coach Paul LaPolice took the blame. The team’s offence isn’t much, but it did get the ball to the Hamilton three and did  have a chance in the dying seconds to tie the game at 29 thanks to Hamilton coach Marcel Bellefeuille’s boneheaded decision to go for two instead of kicking the extra point with an almost eternal seven minutes left to play.

That’s what I still don’t understand about CFL coaches. They all seem to panic (with perhaps the exception of Montreal’s Marc Tretsman or Calgary’s John Hufnagel) in the final eight or nine minutes, but the final eight or nine minutes can take hours of real time to play. The final three minutes, in which the clock stops after EVERY play, probably allows for six possession changes.

Oh well, Bellefeuille dodged a bullet and the Bombers gassed it on the Hamilton three-yard-line and now Winnipeg and Hamilton are both 2-4 and nobody should be surprised. After all, Winnipeg knew all week — hell, they talked about it all week — that they had to shut down Arland Bruce III and yet he still caught 11 passes for 197 yards and a touchdown. C’mon people.

Of course, that’s the price you pay when you re-build a franchise every year or so. It takes time to build a winner and the Bombers often find themselves using the first eight to 10 weeks of a season to get their personnel arranged and their act in gear.

The concern this year is a more simple one, however. It’s the lousy schedule. After playing the stinky Ti-Cats this Friday night, they go to Montreal and Regina, get the Roughriders back in Winnipeg on Sept. 12, go to Toronto on the 19th and then get Montreal — on a short week — back in Winnipeg on Sept. 24. It’s conceivable this Bomber team could head into October at 3-9 and that wouldn’t be good.

Bombers Lose Heartbreaker, Add Westwood to Roster

The Winnipeg Blue Bombers lost a 24-21 heartbreaker to the B.C. Lions on Sunday, but sadly, it was a heartbreaker of the Bombers own making. Once again, turnovers killed Winnipeg.

Michael Bishop went 13 for 32 – just awful – with one touchdown and three interceptions. He also lost a fumble. Four turnovers means one big loss. Bishop must learn to protect the football.

With two games coming up against Montreal, turnovers will end the playoff dream. The Bombers have a very good football team, but as soon as they start turning over the football, everything unravels.

Meanwhile, I just love how the largest local newspaper has now decided that Mike Kelly has had nothing to do with the resurgence of the suddenly solid 6-9 Winnipeg Blue Bombers and all the credit should go to Kelly’s pal, Manny Matsakis.

Cut the crap. Kelly has re-built the Blue Bombers and the fact the he hired Matsakis to work with Michael Bishop, and hopefully make Bishop better, is just another example of Kelly’s coaching prowess. The Bombers lost a heartbreaker on Sunday, but Kelly is still proving just how great a coach he is.

The Bombers will win one of two games against Montreal and finish up the season with a win over Hamilton. They will make the playoffs. And in the playoffs, as we all know, anything can happen.

I mean, what the hell, the Bombers have brought back Troy Westwood. Anything can happen.

Dumped by Doug Berry because Berry didn’t like Westwood’s haircut, or something like that, Kelly called Westwood on Monday, hoping to get a little help with the punting game. With a season-ending injury to Mike Renaud, Kelly needed a legitimate punter and who better than a full-time radio announcer who sings aboriginal country music in his spare time.

“This is not a condemnation at all of anything that Alexis Serna did (Sunday),” Kelly said on Monday. “I thought he did a fine job for us. But we also played a Canadian down and this gives us an opportunity to bring Troy in on the practice roster and take a look to see how he can do. If in fact, we feel he can help us, then we will activate him.”

Westwood, now 42, will punt on Saturday against Montreal.

“Someone asked me early in the day on Sunday about coming back to punt and I said there is absolutely no hope whatsoever of that,” he said. “So, I just about fell over when I checked my phone at the movie theatre. I was very surprised and I have more or less been trying to contain and control my emotions since that time.”

Westwood will wear No. 74 on Saturday. He spent 17 seasons with the Bombers before being released, in a nasty, personal move by Berry during training camp last June. In his first stint with the club, he played 278 games. He holds more than 35 club records and is the team’s all-time leading scorer with 2,741 points.

The Winnipeg Blue Bombers took a bold step into the past simply by calling Westwood. Frankly, it was a terrific decision by head coach Mike Kelly. This allows Alexis Serna to concentrate on his kicking duties and leaves Westwood, one of the best punters into the Canad Inns Stadium wind, to handle the important punting duties. It also shows that the Doug Berry Era is long gone and the Bombers are looking to rebuild their future by embracing their past.

Bombers fire Coach Berry. No surprise there.

The Winnipeg Blue Bombers have fired head coach Doug Berry. And they did it despite the fact he was in the first year of a new three-year deal. Good for Bomber CEO Lyle Bauer.

 

Berry has been the Bombers head coach since 2006 and while the team has reached the post-season in all three years, they simply aren’t getting better. They have an offence that struggles and they aren’t fun to watch.

 

After finishing 8-10 this season and after losing the Eastern Conference Semifinal, 29-21, at home to Edmonton, there was nothing else Bauer could do. Berry had to go.

 

So who could possibly be surprised? The fact is, Since training camp, this day was inevitable.

 

that’s because a week into training camp, Berry cut Troy Westwood for no good reason — and with no legitimate replacement — and that was the end. Nothing good was going to come of that decision because it was purely personal and not in any way professional.

 

Remember, this was a club had brought in nine kickers and four punters over the previous two seasons in an effort to find a replacement for Westwood and yet the weightlifter, ex-pro boxer and still successful singer and songwriter, had beaten out every one of them to keep his job. 

 

Still, Berry said early in camp that since last year’s Grey Cup, he thought Westwood had lost some leg strength. That comment planted the seed that eventually started a daily circus involving the kickers and ultimately led to a decision to dump Westwood and go with an unproven import named Alexis Serna. Serna was awful — he could barely punt, especially in a wind, and was a marginal field-goal kicker.

 

However, Serna wasn’t Westwood and that was all that mattered to  Berry.

 

Sadly, Berry tried to mask his decision by coming up with legitimate reasons for Westwood’s dismissal, but not a word passed the sniff test. Shortly after Berry talked nicely about his relationship with Westwood, the 41-year-old kicker went off.

 

“Just because words are spoken doesn’t mean they are truthful or from the heart,” Westwood said. “Last year I lost my job. When I got it back, I averaged 48.6 yards in 39 punts and went eight-for-nine in field goals down the stretch to the Grey Cup. 

 

“I can’t say that I’m surprised with what’s happened, but I don’t feel I was beaten out for this spot. I feel really good about my punting. There was no doubt that I was the best punter in camp.”

 

From that day forward, Berry’s fate was sealed. He had lost his locker room before the season started and as the campaign progressed, the situation got worse, not better.

 

After the team fell to 0-3 early back in July, everything publicly unravelled. I wrote the following in the National Post

 

It started with kind of an innocuous comment a week ago, after return-man Fred Reid, ran a punt out of the end zone that was probably best left as a single point.   

 

Head coach Doug Berry said, “Reid has the green light to do whatever he wants on returns,” but his teammates said in that situation, Reid looks to the sidelines to get a wave from the coaches. The wave was clear, Reid saw it and ran the ball out to the four-yard-line. Eventually, a safety was conceded and the Argos got good field position on the ensuing kick. This past week, Berry was looking at different returners and some of Reid’s teammates got all grumbly.

 

Then, last Monday, Berry dumped all over his long-snapper, Chris Cvetkovic because Berry’s hand-selected kicker/punter, Alexis Serna, dropped his second snap in two weeks – and both times it cost the Bombers a touchdown.

 

Berry however, told the local scribes that Cvetkovic was hired “to do one job,” and he has to “get it right.” The snap should be “between the waist and the shoulders,” and then let Serna off the hook.

 

Some veterans were displeased. Last year, when Cvetkovic was hurt, the Bombers struggled to replace him. In the end, they didn’t. It’s one of the toughest jobs in football and Cvetkovic’s “bad snap” was actually helmet-high to a kicker who is smaller than a Hobbit. Serna simply dropped the ball – for the second week in a row – and we now have the Curse of Troy Westwood.

 

Berry is a newspaper person’s delight. He’ll say all sorts of things. Mostly, he’ll just randomly – and publicly — dump on his players and obviously people with tape recorders love that. When the team is winning, most players just laugh at that stuff, but when a good team is 0-2 – now 0-3 — that kind of talk makes for a nasty atmosphere in the locker room.  

 

After last Friday night’s humiliating loss, Berry went off again, saying he’s not sure he has 42 guys who are “willing to compete, willing to play hard, willing to be the best.” 

 

He might be right about that. One wonders, however, if he knows the reason why.

 

By that point, I knew Berry had to get this team to the Grey Cup or his job was toast. However, little did any of us realize that at mid-season, GM Brendan Taman would re-build a 2-8 football team and make them a 6-2 force down the stretch.

 

However, as good as they’d become, they were beaten quite badly by the Eskimos in the Eastern semifinal as the Bombers offence struggled mightily. That was it. You knew Berry was done.

 

So on Wednesday, CEO Lyle Bauer pulled the plug. It was the right thing to do at the right time. the Bombers have a pretty solid core of players. Now the right coach can take them to where they should be.

Big changes on the way for Big Blue

It was all about the wind. And despite a week of guaranteed bluster, the Winnipeg Blue Bombers’ hopes for a 2008 Grey Cup appearance were blown right out of Canad Inns Stadium.

Blasting out of the north end zone at 30 kilometres per hour, accompanied by a deep grey sky and a bitter cold bite, a particularly nasty November prairie wind declared that the team with the ability to handle its gusts and subtle directional changes would get its ticket punched to the Eastern final. The Edmonton Eskimos got the job done, the Winnipeg Blue Bombers did not.

The Eskimos took full advantage of their time with the wind while Winnipeg, playing on its own frozen field, couldn’t muster enough offence with the wind at its back to win the Eastern semifinal. With 18 points in the second quarter and eight more in the third, the Eskimos put enough on the board to record a 29-21 victory. The Bombers, who had the wind in the first and fourth, put up only 14 points with the advantage. That wasn’t enough, even with a franchise-record 93-yard punt return from Jason Armstead — against the breeze.

For their efforts, the Eskimos became the CFL’s first last-place Western Conference team to win a crossover playoff and they also earned themselves a trip to Montreal for next weekend’s Eastern final.

However, while the Eskimos celebrated, the Blue Bombers sat quietly in their dressing room wondering what had happened.

“The wind was definitely a factor and if the offence can’t score with the wind at its back, there wasn’t a lot more the defence could do,” said Bombers defensive end Jerome Haywood. “You have to generate offence with the wind at your back. If you don’t, you aren’t going to win in those conditions.”

It was a bitter pill for the Bombers to swallow, especially after GM Brendan Taman had rebuilt the team at mid-season and turned a 2-8 mess into a solid 6-2 playoff contender down the stretch.

Still, on Saturday, the Bombers problems were obvious. 

The running game could have carried Winnipeg, even with the wind at its back, but head coach Doug Berry and offensive co-ordinator Kit Cartwright appeared to abandon the run just when Fred Reid and Joe Smith were gearing up.

The passing game was dreadful. Quarterback Kevin Glenn went 15-for-34 for 233 yards, a touchdown and an interception. The touchdown came early in the first quarter – a 78-yard bomb to Romby Bryant. Eliminate that one play and Glenn was 14-for-33 for 155 yards and a pick.

“We just didn’t get the job done on offence,” admitted wideout Arjei Franklin. “The guys played hard, but we didn’t take advantage of the wind. We didn’t do what we had to do.”

Sitting in his usual spot in the northeast corner of the locker room, Milt Stegall – who had five catches for 56 yards – didn’t want to think about next week, let alone next season. The 38-year-old lock for the Hall of Fame, and the man who had guaranteed a Bomber win as long as there was a sellout, got neither. At the end, he had no desire to discuss his future.

“I haven’t made a decision and I won’t make a decision for awhile,” he said. “To be honest, I haven’t even thought about it.”

This off-season, the Bomber brass has to make a lot of decisions. Stegall will likely call it a career and veteran players such as Matt Sheridan, Barrin Simpson and Jamie Stoddard have likely played their final games in Winnipeg.

In the meantime, will Glenn, who did not have a particularly good season, be in coach Berry’s plans and will Cartwright return in 2009? The Bombers offence struggled mightily and, no doubt, big changes will be made.

The Bomber team that lost on Saturday will look considerably different in 2009. However, like the outcome of Saturday’s Eastern semifinal, how it will look is written on the wind.  

The CFL’s finished with the first eight weeks. So what do we know?

Here’s what we learned after Week 8 in the Canadian Football League:

 

1. The Winnipeg Blue Bombers should probably fire head coach Doug Berry right now (And yeah, despite Thursday night’s win).

 

2. The Hamilton Tiger-Cats are a sad football team.

 

3. The Toronto Argonauts are sadder and it’s probably time to replace Rich Stubler as head coach.

 

4. Barring injury, the Montreal Alouettes should cruise to the Grey Cup.

 

And… 

 

5. Could we change the rule and have three Eastern Conference teams eliminated from the post-season? You could always give the Vanier Cup champs the final spot. No?

 

Let’s take a deeper look at our five Eastern issues…

 

1. On Thursday night at Winnipeg’s Canad Inns Stadium, the Winnipeg Blue Bombers drilled the sad-sack Hamilton Tiger-Cats 37-24. Everything Doug Berry told Blue Bombers’ fans for the first seven weeks of the season was a lie and it’s time Berry was removed as head coach. Nothing he believes in works and the things he was being told by frustrated fans and bloggers for the first seven weeks of the season all turned out to be so obviously true that it’s impossible to imagine that this guy really has any idea what he’s doing. On Thursday night, with a 1-6 record going in, Berry threw out his entire philosophy, made Kevin Glenn his No. 1 quarterback again and told Glenn to call his own plays. Glenn immediately started giving the ball to runningback Charles Roberts — who had been ignored by Berry and offensive co-ordinator Kit Cartwright all year — and Roberts carried 23 times for 145 yards and two touchdowns and caught seven passes for 37 more yards. In the meantime, Berry continued to scream at, swear at and embarrass professional athletes on national TV. His dressing-down, in front of the cameras, of Jason Nugent after a marginal blocking-from-behind call on a punt return was an outrage. Meanwhile, the release of kicker/punter Troy Westwood is now, officially, the dumbest thing Berry has ever done. Berry’s replacement for Westwood, Alexis Serna, is now 16-for-26 in field goals (61 per cent) and is dead last in net punting yards with 33. The Bomber players proved on Thursday night that they can run this team without a coach. The Bombers have 17 days before they play again. A smart owner would have a new coach in 17 days. 

 

2.  Doug Berry’s destruction of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers is one thing. The incredible ineptness of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats is another thing altogether. Thursday night in Winnipeg, when the game was on the line, Hamilton pissed it away — a fumble, an interception return for a touchdown by Winnipeg’s Tom Canada, and a loss of ball on downs. The Tiger-Cats did a lot of good things for three quarters, but when it mattered, this team disappeared. Speaking of disappearing, whatever happened to that guy who doesn’t like to be called fragile? You know the guy. What’s his name? Lumsden, right? Great football player, never healthy enough to play.

 

3. So who to blame in Toronto? Is it head coach Rich Stubler for running a horrible offence and creating a quarterback controversy that nobody needs? Or is president Michael Clemons and his lieutenants for actually believing that acquiring Kerry Joseph was a smart thing to do? Joseph proved in last year’s Grey Cup win (an unimpressive 23-19 victory over a mediocre Winnipeg team that was very lucky to be there), that he was done. And still, the Argos made a deal to get him from Saskatchewan, pay him $450,000 a year and anoint him the starter. However, when you get blitzed 32-14 in your own building, fall to 3-5 on the season and have to relieve your $450,000 quarterback, you’re screwed up. Blame Clemons. And then make him coach the mess he’s created.

 

4. Calvillo! There is not much more you can say about this year’s first-half most outstanding player. On Friday night in Toronto, quarterback Anthony Calvillo of the Montreal Alouettes completed 27 of 41 passes for 379 yards, three touchdowns and no interceptions. Calvillo, who turns 36 next week, now has a 109.4 passer’s rating with 20 touchdown passes and only five interceptions. He’s completed 67.8 per cent of pass attempts. The Als are now 5-3 on the season and 5-0 within the conference. There’s your most outstanding player.

 

5. As they head into the bye week, the Eastern teams look like this: Montreal, 5-3, Toronto 3-5, Hamilton 2-6, Winnipeg 2-6. Only Montreal deserves to be in the playoffs. Toronto is simply dreadful, Hamilton makes too many mistakes and Winnipeg is badly coached. Oh yeah, and for those Bomber fans who think the team has turned the season around, consider this: With 10 games left, the Bombers, who are 0-3 on the road this season, play six of the final 10 in somebody else’s house. They have 6-1 Saskatchewan back-to-back, home-and-away, and have to go into Calgary and Edmonton. They also play a game each in Montreal, Toronto and Hamilton. They get Saskatchewan, Edmonton, Toronto and Hamilton at home. If they play well, it’s likely they go no better than 5-5 down the stretch and, yet, in the East, 7-11 might make the playoffs. Gawd, Montreal is the only Eastern team that should be allowed in the post-season.

Time for a major overhaul for Winnipeg’s beloved CFL franchise.

Even the most rabid Winnipeg Blue Bomber fans are starting to think there might be a problem with their beloved football team.

 

This past week, as the Bombers prepared for Friday night’s home game against the Montreal Alouettes, head coach Doug Berry talked about the fact that at 1-5, his team still had a chance in the Eastern Conference playoff hunt. 

 

The latest Bomber cheer from that randy Blue Lightning outfit was a hearty, “Still alive at 1-5!”

 

Little did Berry know at the time that the only thing that was still alive was The Curse of Troy Westwood.

 

Friday night, the Bombers were drilled 39-11 by the Als at Winnipeg’s 54-year-old Canad Inns Stadium and for Berry, the story was getting as old as the ball yard.

 

A team that went to the 2007 Grey Cup game was suddenly 1-6 and the head coach had pretty much run out of answers. In the post-game interview Berry was so flustered, he blamed his field goal kicker, Alexis Serna, for the loss. The coach had just watched his team lose by four touchdowns and when it was over, all he had in his quiver was an arrow for a kid who made a field goal from 27 yards and missed once from 40 and twice from 49.

 

But while Berry continues to blame everyone but himself, he’s now in a heap of trouble.

 

Refusing to use his all-Canadian runningback Charles Roberts to any great extent, the Bombers had virtually no ground game – again. Roberts carried a mere 11 times for 61 yards, but as Hamilton, Montreal, Calgary and Saskatchewan proved this week, if you run the football in the CFL, you’ll control the clock and you’ll have a chance to win games.

 

Meanwhile, by replacing quarterback Ryan Dinwiddie with original starter, Kevin Glenn, late in Friday’s game, Berry opened the door to a distracting quarterback controversy. Coming off the bench, Glenn put up Winnipeg’s only touchdown on Friday and until the Bombers win again, River City will talk about little else than who should play quarterback for the Bombers.

 

Then there is the shaky defensive secondary. Berry and his GM Brendan Taman, didn’t re-sign safety Kyries Hebert (he jumped to the NFL) and cornerback Juran Bolden (he was released) and they’ve paid dearly for the loss of their two biggest, fastest, hardest hitters.

 

And, just in case all that wasn’t enough, there is the bad karma that’s wafting through a stadium that just might be in the final months of its existence. From the day Berry publicly humiliated 17-year veteran Troy Westwood, the Bombers’ karma (chemistry, for those who believe in such things) has been lost. Worse yet, Berry has also lost his locker room — despite what the players like to say publicly.

 

Meanwhile, the coach’s hand-picked successor to Westwood, young Alexis Serna is a mess. But, then again, putting Serna in that situation wasn’t fair either. Serna should be the kicker, not the punter, but he’s now 14-for-22 (63 per cent) in field goals and is dead last in punting at 32 yards net. It’s apparent the kid has lost his confidence so, on Saturday, Berry added Warren Kean, an Edmonton Eskimos cut, to the practice roster. That should save the season.

 

Although Berry said on Saturday that he just might let his quarterback, Kevin Glenn — again! — call his own plays against Hamilton this Thursday night, here in 1-6 country, it might be time to make some changes that are substantive. And perhaps this time, CEO Lyle Bauer, might want to orchestrate those changes.

 

Because with the right moves and with way things are in the CFL East, even at 1-6, this team still has a chance.

The end of Week 7 in the CFL: Changes must be made in Winnipeg, Saskatchewan no longer undefeated and a great running game means big wins.

This week home teams split with visiting teams, the Saskatchewan Roughriders finally lost and the Winnipeg Blue Bombers are so bad, it’s now time for a complete overhaul — at the top, not the bottom.

 

Because there are no crossover games again until Labour Day Weekend, the West continues to dominate the East, 10-2. In terms of home teams, however, it was a split this week. Hamilton and B.C. won at home, Saskatchewan lost and Winnipeg got its collective butt handed to it. The season total is now 17-11 in favour of home teams (17-7 if you remove the West’s victories in Eastern buildings).

 

Now to the trends. Hamilton is not as bad as we think, but Toronto could be as bad as we thought. At 36, Anthony Calvillo is the best quarterback in the CFL. No team will go 18-0, but you have to give that banged-up Roughriders side some credit (Five starters have broken legs for gawd’s sake!). They don’t quit and they are very well coached. And finally, with all the injuries in Regina, it’s very likely the West will not be settled until the final week of the season. 

 

Let’s look a little more closely at what we saw in Week 7…

 

1. Call it the Curse of Troy Westwood. The bad karma in Winnipeg is wafting through a stadium that just might be in the final months of its existence. From the day Doug Berry humiliated Troy Westwood in public, the Bombers’ karma has been lost. So, too, has Barry’s locker room — despite what the players like to tell the local papers. When Berry went public in order to make Westwood look like a fool and cut him at 10 p.m. on a Saturday, the gods of football looked down on Berry and said, “Enough already!.” Berry’s hand-picked successor to Westwood, young Alexis Serna is not very good, but putting him in that situation wasn’t fair either (even Westwood conceded the kid was a good kicker, but Westwood should have been kept around to punt). Sadly, Berry’s constant berating (OK, swearing at on national TV) of the kid has made him worse. Serna is now 14-for-22 (63 per cent) in field goals and is dead last in punting at 32 yards net (the first Bomber in 35 years to be last in punting). It’s sad, but on Friday night, you could see the rest of the Bombers hang their heads every time he missed a  field goal. Meanwhile, it doesn’t help that the offence is a joke. If you don’t run the football in the CFL, you can’t win and the coach’s pal, Kit Cartwright, won’t run the football. In Winnipeg, it’s time to make substantive changes or this team has no chance. Amazingly, even at 1-6, this team still has a chance if those substantive changes are made now.

 

2. Not to belabour the Winnipeg issue, but It would also help if the Bombers hired Mike McCarthy (whom the National Post reports is selling cars in Hamilton) to assist GM Brendan Taman. His expertise is more important to the future of this team than an airlift of expensive NFL cuts. Mike McCarthy is the best unemployed CFL GM in the country. Since the Ticats gassed him, they’ve been pretty lousy. 

3. You have to love what Marc Trestman, with no CFL experience, has done with the Montreal Alouettes. The Als are 4-3 and in first place in the East. However, one thing is troubling. All four of their wins have come against Winnipeg and Hamilton. The Als have beaten 2-5 Hamilton 33-10 and 40-33 and have beaten 1-6 Winnipeg 38-24 and 39-11. The Als have lost 23-19 at home to Calgary, 41-33 in Saskatchewan and 36-34 in B.C. the first-place Als are the statistical reason why four teams from the West and only two teams from the East will make the playoffs.

4. Although Anthony Calvillo has been damn good, it’s pretty tough to think of anyone other than Saskatchewan’s Wes Cates as the CFL’s most outstanding player. In seven weeks — the seven weeks in which the Roughriders have gone 6-1 with three different starting quarterbacks — Cates has carried 110 times for 652 yards and seven touchdowns (tops in the CFL). He’s caught 24 passes for 274 yards and another touchdown. And he’s second in the league in total yards from scrimmage (behind Montreal’s Avon Cobourne) with 924. He — along with Cobourne, and Calgary’s Joffrey Reynolds — is proof that if you get the ball to your No. 1 runningback on a regular basis, you will win more often than you lose.

5. Need proof that the CFL’s offences woke up after a wonky Week 1? How ’bout this? Late Friday night, the 28-27 first-half Lions advantage over Edmonton was the highest halftime score in any Lions game since 1994. This week, the CFL office in Toronto proudly released the following numbers: Heading into Week 7, touchdowns were up 19.2 per cent from the end of Week 6 in 2007; overall scoring was up 9.8 per cent (Whatever that means?)  and total penalties are down from 542 last year to 425 this year. Now, if the league can just make challenges move faster and then find a way cut out all the four-minute commercial breaks on TSN, this game would be perfect.

After the latest mess in Toronto, the Winnipeg Blue Bombers are getting closer to requiring a new head coach.

After Friday night’s game at Rogers Centre in Toronto, Winnipeg Blue Bombers head coach Doug Berry told reporters: “If you’ve got any good ideas, I’ll listen to you.”

 

No he won’t.

 

People around town have been giving Doug Berry advice for weeks and while he seems to be listening to some of it, he isn’t listening to the good stuff. 

 

Oh, sure, he listened to people who have never played a down of football in their lives and yet were thrilled that Troy Westwood was publicly humiliated. And he listened to the whining masses who wanted Kevin Glenn removed and then chirped like The Joker when Ryan Dinwiddie’s lame ducks found their intended targets against Calgary’s rotten defensive secondary a week ago.

 

But on Friday, as he asked for advice following a 19-11 loss to an equally-as-inept Toronto Argos outfit (two teams needed a single on the final play of the game to put up a total of 30 points in a CFL game), he continued to forget the most important piece of advice of all: “Give Charles Roberts the damn football.”

 

There will be some who will suggest that Roberts had “another lousy game” against the Argos and will say “he is still struggling.” But let’s put our thinking caps on and look closely at what Roberts did on Friday. 

 

Charles Roberts carried the ball 11 times for 66 yards. The National Post reported that “the Argos shut down Roberts.” Held him, they did. In fact, the Post wrote: “From the opening whistle the Argos focused their attention on stopping Winnipeg’s all-star running back, Charles Roberts. Toronto’s defence — the worst against the run in the Canadian Football League coming into the game — loaded up on bodies on the line of scrimmage and gave Roberts little room to operate.”

 

Trouble is the Argos didn’t shut down Roberts at all. Doug Berry and offensive co-ordinator Kit Cartwright shut down Roberts.

 

Charlie Roberts gained 66 yards on 11 carries. That’s 6.0 yards per carry. Roberts was averaging 3.7 yards per carry heading into the game. It was his best game of the year. At 6.0 yards per carry, two carries per set of downs is 12 yards. That averages out to an unstoppable march down the field. Had the Bombers given the ball to Roberts 30 times, he’d have rushed for about 180 yards.

 

Of course, TSN’s on-line headline was “Argonauts Defence Steps Up To Stymie Blue Bombers.” The only people stymied were the head coach, the offensive co-ordinator and the quarterback.

 

Certainly Toronto’s front seven did a good job harassing Dinwiddie (much better than Calgary’s worthless three-man rush a week earlier) and the defensive secondary, as we suspected, was significantly better than that awful group the Stamps trot out every week. But to suggest the Argos shut down Roberts is to have missed the game entirely.

 

“If you know Charlie, you know he gets stronger as the game goes on,” said his former quarterback Khari Jones, as we did Mike Richards’ radio program on the FAN 960 in Calgary together the other day. “The more you give Charlie the ball, the better he gets.”

 

Giving Charlie the ball 11 times a game is NOT enough. In fact, Roberts also caught one pass for 14 yards, so in total, he picked up 80 yards on 12 touches. 12 lousy touches? No wonder the Bombers are 1-5. 

 

Dinwiddie, meanwhile, went 16-for-28 for 224 yards with one touchdown (and 85-yarder to Romby Bryant) and two interceptions. The Bombers had a grand total of just 13 first downs. On Friday night, Kevin Glenn’s replacement made last week’s win over Calgary look Troy Kopp-esque.

 

The Bombers problem is clearly coaching. The coach humiliated his veteran kicker publicly and half of his locker room lost faith. His new kicker is now 14-for-20 (70 per cent) in field goals and is the first Bomber punter in 35 years to be dead last in the league in punting average after the first six games of the season and now the rest of the room is starting to wonder about the decision to chase Westwood out of the game.

 

What could be worse, however, is that in a panic — or in an effort to find someone else to blame — the coach dumped his veteran starting quarterback and replaced him with a guy who admitted on Tom and Joe’s Show on 92-CITI-FM this week that he had trouble reading the extra man on defence in the Canadian game.

 

Oh, oh.

 

Doug Berry was a great assistant in Montreal. He could be a great assistant in Winnipeg. His 10-7-1 trip to last year’s Grey Cup notwithstanding, he has appeared to have lost his touch as a head coach. 

 

Working in Berry’s favour is the fact his Bombers now play two straight games at home against Montreal and Hamilton. If Winnipeg doesn’t win both, it will be the bye-week and it will be time to make a coaching change.    

 

Won’t wait for the Riders and Hamilton. I’ll do some “splainin’” now…

Saturday, July 12, 2008, 10:15 a.m.

 

I was wrong about Montreal and I was wrong about Winnipeg, but one thing I won’t allow myself to do: Be wrong about the West.

 

Clearly — and we’re only three weeks into the CFL season — the West is a dominant force and might just make the Eastern champion look pretty mediocre when Grey Cup time rolls around.

 

It became quite obvious on Thursday night, when the Calgary Stampeders went on the road, fell behind 11-0 after the first quarter, and then quietly and methodically altered their game plan and came back to beat what most people thought was a pretty good Montreal Alouettes team, 23-19.

 

Later on Thursday, the new-look Edmonton Eskimos, a team that improved dramatically in the off-season, eviscerated the Toronto Argos 47-28 and left the bumbling Argos stumbling out of Northern Alberta.

 

Friday night, came the old coup de grace. The B.C. Lions arrived at Canad Inns Stadium in Winnipeg and demolished the Winnipeg Blue Bombers 42-24. It was actually 42-8 before B.C. went into prevent and let Ryan Dinwiddie come off the bench to fool the Winnipeg fans into thinking he was some kind of saviour (Troy Kopp did that once, too). 

 

Evidently, Winnipeg is awful. Who knew? It’s a team that didn’t get better in the off-season, made some bad decisions in the pre-season (Where are you now, Troy Westwood?) and has a head coach who believes it’s everybody else’s fault but his own. Doug Berry has lost his room and after Frday night’s debacle, it doesn’t look like he’s getting it back.

 

Of course, it hasn’t helped that he ignores Charles Roberts in the offensive scheme, allows Kit Cartwright to call the plays and couldn’t replace Juran Bolden on the corner or Kyries Hebert at safety. Forget the punting game (Serna had a shaky 36.1 yard average), that horse has left the barn. Two things have contributed to Winnipeg’s 0-3 start — the team did not get better in the off-season and the head coach tends to throw the people who work for him under the bus — with far too much ease.

 

Let’s be honest, people are generally horrible to each other and coaches of sports teams tend to be more horrible than most, but when you need somebody to go to war for you, respect is a much better motivator than blame. 

 

In the meantime, the West is quite superior to the East in the CFL and only Hamilton, at home this afternoon, has a chance to stop what could be a most impressive Week 3 sweep. 

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.