Tag Archives: jason armstead

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.  

Brown’s vision the Bombers future?

Winnipeg Blue Bombers’ defensive tackle Doug Brown has the complete scenario already fixed in his mind. He’s been thinking about his vision of the future for a few weeks now and as self-fulfilling prophecies go, he’s starting to believe it might actually come true. 

“Remember in 2001, when an 8-10 team from Calgary that didn’t even deserve to be on the same field as a 14-4 team from Winnipeg, went into Montreal and beat that Winnipeg team in the Grey Cup? Remember?” Brown says, raising his eyebrows.

 

“Well, this year, I have a funny feeling we might turn the table. An 8-10 team from Winnipeg, a team that started 2-8, goes all the way to Montreal to play a 13-5 Calgary team in the Grey Cup and beats them. It sure sounds good to me.”

 

Brown isn’t making any predictions. He’s been around too long and he’s obviously too smart for that, but a guy who made history this year by becoming the first Blue Bomber player ever nominated for three outstanding player awards – most outstanding defensive player, most outstanding player and most outstanding Canadian – has a funny feeling that this struggling Blue Bombers outfit might just have the talent and emotional wherewithal to win the Grey Cup. 

 

Last Saturday afternoon, the Bombers completed the CFL’s 2008 regular season with a 44-30 shellacking of the last-place 3-15 Hamilton Tiger-Cats. Bombers wideout Romby Bryant caught a couple of touchdown passes from Kevin Glenn, Casey McGahee ran back a punt 57 yards for another TD and Fred Reid carried 14 times for 160 yards. Of note, Casey Printers likely played his final game in Hamilton while Milt Stegall probably played his final regular season game for Winnipeg.

 

It could have easily been called a meaningless exercise, except for one not-so-little thing. It meant the Bombers finished the season 6-2 over their final eight games and because of that, there is now a firm belief within the confines of their own locker room that this Winnipeg team is good enough to win the Grey Cup. 

 

This Saturday, the Bombers will get a shot at the 10-8 Edmonton Eskimos in the Eastern semifinal at Canad Inns Stadium, a place where Winnipeg went 3-0 in the final seven weeks of the season. With the addition of Jason Armstead, Zeke Moreno, Willie Amos, Joe Smith and Kai Ellis the Bombers have improved dramatically in recent weeks and with injured players such as Ike Charlton, Joe Lobendahn and Barrin Simpson beginning to return to the lineup, this is not the same team that started the season 2-8.

 

“Kudos to our front office for pulling the trigger on some important moves in September,” Brown said, shortly after Saturday’s win. “We’re the hottest team in the CFL right now, 6-2 down the stretch. But to beat Edmonton next week – and don’t worry, we’re not looking past Edmonton — we’re going to have to play our best game of the year. They beat us in their place and we beat them in our place, but to beat them again, we’ll have to be very good.

 

“But if, somehow, we can get through these next two playoff games and run into Calgary and then beat them in the Grey Cup, you’ll be able to go to Wikipedia and look up the term ’What goes around comes around’ and our picture will be there.” 

 

Saturday, Winnipeg will play host to the Eskimos in the Eastern semifinal. Sure, an Eastern semi with teams from Edmonton and Winnipeg sounds ridiculous, but it’s not the first time West has gone East in the crossover. In four previous West-to-East crossovers, the East won all four.

 

And there’s another little bit of history that plays right into Doug Brown’s vision.

 

Week 19 in the CFL. The final week of 2008. Bring on the playoffs… please…

Thank goodness it’s over. After all, with the exception of the battle for playoff positions in the West, the CFL hasn’t been particularly interesting for the past three weeks.

Could it be that 18 games are too many?

 

This week, we will get to find out whether it will be Saskatchewan or B.C. playing host to the Western semifinal. And that’s it. On Pro Line, three of the four games are considered blowouts this week. Winnipeg will play host to Edmonton in the Eastern semifinal at Canad Inns Stadium in Winnipeg (1 p.m. CST on TSN) while Calgary and Montreal have each wrapped up first in the West and East respectively.

 

Other than that, the only worry this week is who or how many will be banged up and unable to perform in the playoffs.

 

In the meantime, let’s take as close a look as we possibly can at Week 18, a week that look an awful lot like pre-season…

 

Saskatchewan Roughriders (11-6) at Toronto Argonauts (4-13)

 

Thursday, 6:30 p.m. CT, TSN

 

Michael Bishop is back in Toronto for a rare end-of-season Thursday night game, even though there is a chance he might not play all that much. Riders head coach Ken Miller also has Derian Durant and Steven Jyles and who knows? All three of them could play. As Saskatchewan gets more of its players back from injury, the team just could be playing its best football of the year (judging from last week’s 55-9 demolition of Edmonton, they probably are). Kerry Joseph, meanwhile, has been a bust in Toronto, ever since he was dealt from Saskatchewan to the Boatmen before the season began. Last winter, GM Eric Tillman lost his Grey Cup-winning quarterback (Joseph just wanted too much money and was too old) and his Grey Cup-winning coach (not many people thought Ken Miller would be a significantly better coach than Kent Austin) and his team is even better than it was last year at this time. But who knows? Prhaps the Argos will win one for coach Don Matthews. Or, maybe not.

 

Pick: Saskatchewan

Montreal Alouettes (11-6) at Edmonton Eskimos (9-8)

Friday 8 p.m. CT, TSN

Hard to imagine what’s worse. Last week Montreal was beaten 24-23 at home by the then-6-10 Winnipeg Blue Bombers while Edmonton went on the road and lost 55-9 in Regina. In their own special ways, both games were lopsided upsets (Montreal should have won by three TDs) and both losing teams left the field embarrassed. The Eskimos have been blitzed in their last two games and have allowed 98 points. The Edmonton defence is ready for an overhaul except that there is only one game in which to do the overhauling before the Eskies haul ass to Winnipeg for the Eastern semi (isn’t there something odd about an Edmonton-Winnipeg Eastern semifinal?). Marcus Brady is set to start at quarterback for Montreal.

Pick: Edmonton (holding my nose)

Hamilton Tiger-Cats (3-14) at Winnipeg Blue Bombers (7-10) 

Saturday 1 p.m. CT, TSN

Wouldn’t you love to be Marcel Bellefeuille? He was the interim head coach of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, went 1-6 in the job and because of all that success, had the interim tag removed from his title. His record isn’t as good as the guy the ‘Cats fired, but Bellefeuille got the guy’s job anyway. Poor Charlie Taafe should sue for unlawful dismissal. The ‘Cats are awful and Bellefeuille hasn’t done much to make them any better. Winnipeg, meanwhile, has improved dramatically since the addition of Jason Armstead, Kai Ellis, Zeke Moreno and Joe Smith. Brendan Taman should be executive of the year. The Bombers have won five of their last seven and should win again this week.

 

Pick: Winnipeg

B.C. Lions (11-6) at Calgary Stampeders (12-5)

Saturday, 4 p.m., CT, TSN

If Calgary actually tries, the Stamps should blow away a B.C. Lions team that is pretty good, but not that good. If Toronto happens to upset Saskatchewan (which they won’t), the Lions could be playing for home-field advantage in the Western semifinal. As they probably won’t be playing for anything at all, this will simply be a battle of two of the league’s superstars: B.C. defensive lineman Cameron Wake and Calgary quarterback Henry Burris. I like Burris, if he plays more than a quarter.

Pick: Calgary

Last Week: 2-2

Season: 41-19

The CFL’s Week 15 is in the books. Have we learned anything yet?

I love that question. “Have we learned anything yet?” We’ve been chasing around the CFL for 15 weeks and after 15 weeks the only thing we’ve learned is that there are no guarantees.

 

Oh, don’t worry, we certainly  thought there were guarantees. After 14 weeks we thought we had the Conference champions figured out. I mean Montreal and Calgary were red-hot as we passed the midway point of the 2008 Canadian Football League season. Calgary in the West, Montreal in the East, let’s play the Grey Cup right now.

 

Then along came Week 15. Calgary goes on the road and loses 37-34 to Saskatchewan. Montreal goes on the road and loses 44-36 to Hamilton. Now I understand the Calgary loss. Regina is a tough place to play and the Calgary defence is not very good, but the Montreal loss to sad-sack Hamilton was a shocker.

 

Anthony Calvillo went an unbelievable 44-for-53 for 468 yards and four touchdowns  — three receivers had at least 100 yards and three had at least 10 catches — and the Als still lost as Quinton Porter went 27-for-32 for 429 yards and five touchdowns.

 

Montreal rushed for 10 yards in the game. That’s how you lose in the CFL, even when you put up 36 points.

 

Let’s take a look at the five things we learned in Week 15.

 

1. Home teams are still a safe bet. Western Conference teams are now 20-7 at home. In the East, teams are 13-16 (Toronto and hamilton are a combined 4-11), but that has more to do with the fact that the East is just plain lousy. Western teams are now 18-6 against the East. It doesn’t matter where they play.

 

2. The Calgary defence is the only thing that will keep the Stampeders out of the Grey Cup. It’s not that the Calgary defence is awful. The Stamps have allowed only 352 points in 14 games. It’s just that when they need it, they don’t get it. The Stamps have five losses. The defence collapsed in the final minute in a 32-28 loss to Winnipeg (and, don’t forget, the Bombers had Ryan Dinwiddie at quarterback), it collapsed late in a 34-31 loss in Edmonton and gave up 37 at home in another loss to Edmonton. In five losses, the Stampders have given up 162 points. In nine wins, only 190. There is a lesson in all that. 

 

3. The Bombers still aren’t a lock — although, they should be. Winnipeg added Jason Armstead, Kai Ellis, Zeke Moreno and Joe Smith and should be better. For three weeks, they were, with wins over 3-11 Hamilton and 4-10 Toronto on the road and 7-5 Edmonton at home. But on Friday night, the Bombers did the things they did when the team was 2-8: they didn’t run the ball enough, they were awful on special teams, they committed a couple of turnovers that led to 14 points and their kicking game — once again — was dreadful. Winnipeg should have second place in the Least Division locked up by now, but with games against Toronto and Hamilton at home and Calgary and Montreal on the road, anything can happen.

 

4. Saskatchewan isn’t going to roll over. Just when we thought the banged-up Roughriders were about to go down for a third and final time, they get a sensational effort from Michael Bishop and 128 yards receiving from Weston Dressler and beat Calgary 37-34. The Riders are 9-5, still tied for first and still in a legitimate race for first place. 

 

5. The B.C. Lions just might be the surprise of the West. They don’t do much of anything, at least not anything remarkable, (although DE Cameron Wake is pretty impressive) and yet, the Lions find ways to win. Friday night, they went into Toronto and should have blown the wonky Argos away. Instead, they were lucky to beat a team that hasn’t won since Week 10 — and hasn’t won at all for Don Matthews. But in B.C.’s case, the emphasis should be on the word “win.” They found a way and that’s what makes a champion (remember the 1988 Blue Bombers and the 2001 Calgary Stampeders and the 2007 Saskatchewan Roughriders?). There is a lot to be said for a team that can win a close game on the road. Of their nine wins this season, the Lions have won five games, each by less than a converted touchdown. That’s a team that will be tough in the playoffs. 

 

It’s Week 15 in the CFL and with Hamilton and Toronto done, the final six are jockeying for playoff position…

With only five weeks left in the CFL season, it’s apparent the Argos and  Ticats are done, the Als and Stamps are on a collision course to the Grey Cup and the Bombers and Eskimos are just trying to lock up playoff spots.

Last week we went 4-0. Need we say more?

Let’s take a closer look at Week 15…

B.C. Lions (8-5) at Toronto Argonauts (4-9) 

 

Friday, 6 p.m. CT, TSN

 

Toronto head coach Don Matthews is now 0-3 since his return to coaching with the Argos. He’ll be 0-4 after Friday night’s game at Rogers Centre.  The Argos have lost four in a row and six of their last seven and the Boatmen just might be the worst team in football (if not, it’s their neighbors down the QEW). Kerry Joseph will start at quarterback this week, but it won’t much matter. B.C. has won four straight and not only is the offence starting to click with Charles Roberts in the backfield but the defence, behind big Cameron Wake is playing as well it has in years.

Pick: B.C.

Calgary Stampeders (9-4) at Saskatchewan Roughriders (8-5) 

Friday, 9 p.m. CT, TSN

The Roughriders have lost three straight and are now tied for second in the West and, amazingly, they’re now only two points ahead of last-place Edmonton. The Riders are still banged up and now they can’t decide if Michael Bishop or Derian Durant is their quarterback. Calgary, meanwhile, is playing as well as it has in years. The Stamps have won four straight and scored 157 points in those four games. This might not be close.

Pick: Calgary

Montreal Alouettes (9-4) at Hamilton Tiger-Cats (2-11) 

Saturday, 3 p.m. CT, TSN

Montreal gets back-to-back games with the worst team in all of football (most high school leagues included). The Als have won seven of their last eight games. Their only loss came at the hands of the red-hot Stampeders. The Alouettes have already beaten Hamilton twice, 33-10 in Hamilton and 40-33 in Montreal. The Als will win again.

 

Pick: Montreal

Winnipeg Blue Bombers (5-8) at Edmonton Eskimos (7-6)    

Saturday, 6 p.m. CT, TSN

The re-match of last week’s 30-23 Bombers win in Winnipeg, this is a much bigger game than one might think. If the Bombers win, they almost lock down second place and leave Edmonton dead last in the West. If the Eskimos win, it’s likely they catch Saskatchewan and might not have to play in Winnipeg again in the first round of the playoffs. Of course, if the Eskimos don’t shut down punt/kick returner Jason Armstead, they’ll get thumped.

 

Pick: Edmonton

Last Week: 4-0

Season: 31-13