Tag Archives: Brendan Taman

Outdoorsman Canada needs to be at his best this Thursday.

Without any hesitation, Tom Canada will call himself an outdoorsman.

 

The Winnipeg Blue Bombers’ defensive end is a surfer, whitewater rafter and committed hiker. In fact, when Bombers general manager, Brendan Taman, went looking for Canada, trying to offer him a new contract this past February, his best pass rusher was in Honduras working as a guide and rafting instructor for an American company called Omega Tours.

 

And while Canada loved his job, Honduras itself was a bit of an eye-opener.

 

“It was the guns,” said the 28-year-old Cal-Berkeley grad. “It was just a little too wild west for me. Everybody in Honduras carried a concealed weapon. I know, I’m an American and there lots of guns in the United States, but this, well, this was just out there.”

 

Canada is about as tough as they come. At 6-foot-2, 260 pounds, he’s not only quick and athletic, but he’s also mean. He loves the chase, as in chasing down quarterbacks, and making them pay for taking too long to release the football. With 12 sacks in 2007, he was No. 1 in Winnipeg and No. 3 in the CFL. He’s now third all-time on the Bombers sack list behind only Tyrone Jones (98) and Tony Norman (69). 

 

And Thursday night, when 0-4 Winnipeg meets 3-1 Calgary at Canad Inns Stadium, the Bombers will need Canada more than they ever have before. With Barrin Simpson out of the lineup, possibly for the rest of the season, due to a painful pectoral muscle tear and with Kelly Malveaux, a defensive back, taking over for the banged-up Ike Charlton at outside linebacker, Canada’s ability to rush the quarterback will be acutely required as the Bombers front seven tries to overcome two devastating injuries. 

 

If anyone, it’s Canada, with its get-to-the-quarterback-at-all-costs approach, who will be called upon to help his team turn around the prospect of falling to 0-5.

 

And, of course, it’s this never-stop-chasing-the-quarterback attitude that Taman and head coach Doug Berry love. That’s why, even though Montreal offered the free-agent lineman more money to head east this season, Canada signed in Winnipeg because, “I love the fans and I think we can win a Cup or two with this team.”

 

Still, as tough as he is, he also understands the concept of the great equalizer. He found out this winter that while offensive linemen are big and scary, they’re no match for a 45-calibre pistol.

 

“It all kind of crystallized for me when we went to the airport to get on a flight to go to these outlying islands,” Canada said. “I’m kind of sitting there, waiting to board the plane and all around me there are these well-dressed Honduran guys, just normal, business-type guys – I didn’t see any law-enforcement badges or anything like that — and they were all in a line in front of a table with a couple of security guys at it.

 

“Every one of them reached behind his back and pulled a .45 out of his belt. The security guy would remove the clip, put it in a plastic bag and then put a name-tag on it. Then, the security guys would take the gun and put it into a paper bag and staple all around the gun and hand the paper bag back to its owner and he’d walk on the plane. I’d never seen anything like it.

 

“Then, when we reached the little airport at this island, the guys would all line up and get their clips back. The security guys would take their paper bags, open them, put the clips in and hand them back their guns. Man, it was the wildest thing I ever saw.”

 

Guns aside, he enjoyed Honduras, but he always kept an eye out for the guy who just might pull a piece.

 

“This one night, we went into the town near us, Lacieba, to go to a bar,” Canada said. “There was a nice little bed and breakfast beside our tour operation that was run by a lady from Saskatchewan. She was married to a Honduran and this night, he drove us into Lacieba. 

 

“Well, we got talking about all the guns in Honduras and he reached down and pulled a Glock out from under his seat and just fired it into the jungle. Could have hit anybody or anything. He didn’t care. He was just laughin’ and firing his weapon. 

 

“All that night I kept looking over my shoulder to see if someone had pulled a gun, but everybody in Honduras has one so there was no problem. Still, playing professional football is a lot less scary than going to a bar in Honduras.” 

Troy Westwood is gone: Don’t cut somebody unless you have someone around who can replace him.

Wearing a black, Little Hawk T-shirt, Troy Westwood met the media on Sunday afternoon. And although he was quiet and diplomatic, he was not a happy man.

 

Westwood, who was released late Saturday night by the Bombers after 17 seasons with the team, faced the cameras and reporters AFTER head coach Doug Berry had addressed the same cameras and reporters.

 

And Berry had made some surprising comments.

 

“We’ve had some great moments from Troy, but over the last two years, the consistency hasn’t been there,” Berry said. “We’ve been evaluating his performance, both punting and kicking, and we continued to see those inconsistencies and we decided that this was the time to release him.

 

“I know what he’s done for this organization and I enjoyed having Troy Westwood on this team. I’ve enjoyed having his leadership in the locker room and if we could spend more time together at the lake or something, I’d enjoy being friends with Troy.”

 

Huh?

 

When asked about those comments, Westwood chose his words very carefully.

 

“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.

 

“I will admit that I should have kicked at a more consistent rate, but punting? If you measure me up against the people I punted against, I think you’ll find that I did measure up.”

 

After 17 years and a remarkable career with the Blue Bombers, Westwood was given his outright release in a shocking development at Bomber camp on Sunday. It’s shocking because what’s left in camp isn’t very good and has already proven that it isn’t very good.

 

Even though the team will have to use two imports to handle the kicking and punting (and drop at least one import from the offence or defence), Taman said he’s trying to sign two non-imports, Duncan O’Mahoney and Rob Pikula. However, Pikula, who is now selling orthopaedic products and says he’s quit football, and O’Mahoney are two marginal punters and weak kickers who have been asked to take Westwood’s job before and failed miserably. O’Mahoney, who was signed in 2007, didn’t even show up in Winnipeg for training camp last year. 

 

Still, Berry, who has long hated Westwood, decided now was the time to cut one of the greatest players in Blue Bombers’ history.

 

Oh, oh.

 

With two imports who have never kicked in a Canad Inns Stadium wind, dorking around at Bomber camp, Doug Berry has taken a team that had a chance to go 13-5 and given them a real good chance to go 5-13.

 

O’Mahoney was supposed to show up from B.C. last year, but got off the plane in Calgary and disappeared. Pikula is now in sales and says football is behind him. There are a couple of Canadian kids in other camps, and if they get cut they’ll be brought to Winnipeg, but we are now at a point in the rebuilding of the Blue Bombers (remember, the club still as to replace Juran Bolden and Kyries Hebert in the defensive secondary) in which the team will now accept other teams’ castoffs if he (or she) can kick a reasonably attractive 30-yard field goal.

 

In a game like Canadian football, where kicking is so, so important, it’s hard to believe that any coach would cut a known commodity before he has anyone who can actually do the job.

 

Unless Brendan Taman finds a miracle kicker soon, this 2008 Bombers season could become a debacle.  

 

I have no problem with Doug Berry cutting Troy Westwood. It’s just you would think he’d find a replacement first.