Cape Breton Post

‘Old’ Almondo is back

Resurgent lineman Sewell to lead Eskimos against archrival Stampeders

- BY JOHN KOROBANIK

Defensive lineman Almondo Sewell had just one quarterbac­k sack for the Edmonton Eskimos through the first 11 games of the CFL season, and that came in the season opener.

A dramatic decline from 2016, when he recorded 11 sacks in 18 games.

Then, like a sleeping giant being awaken, the six-foot-four, 288-pound, seven-year veteran found his legs and his power and the “old’’ Almondo was back. He has recorded a sack in five straight games, a statistic he says is due mostly to being healthy.

The Eskimos Most Outstandin­g defensive player in 2016 and a West Division all-star for a fifth consecutiv­e season, the Jamaica native had trouble getting to quarterbac­ks through most of the year because he just wasn’t physically up to it.

“I’m a power guy so half my moves I couldn’t do,’’ he said

this week as the Eskimos prepared for Saturday’s game against the Calgary Stampeders. “Every time I used (a move) my ribs would start hurting so I was staying away from it. But I can finally do it all now, go full

speed all the time.’’

Which is great news for the Eskimos as they seek a fourth straight win to keep alive their hopes of finishing second in the West.

Sewell’s re-emergence as a serious pressure presence in the middle, along with linemate Euclid Cummings, has been a key factor to the Eskimos snapping their mid-season six-game losing streak.

“They’re both very physical, athletic big men and they complement each other very well,’’ head coach Jason Maas said. “That middle pressure, it’s extremely important. You have two guys who can race off the edge and do different things and people are always worried about that.

“But really it’s the two guys in the middle who can push the pocket so the quarterbac­k doesn’t feel comfortabl­e ? they can usually create a lot of havoc inside and let the two guys on the outside get the one-on-one matchups and win them.’’

That’s not such an easy task against the 13-2-1 Stampeders, who top the West Division standings again and are on track to allow the fewest sacks in the CFL (21) for the fifth straight season.

“Their offensive line and head coach, they work hand in hand, they do a bunch of play action, freezes everybody and the ball is gone in probably 1.5 seconds,’’ said Sewell.

“Soon as (quarterbac­k Bo Levi Mitchell) gets to throwing the ball everybody has to be in the right place at the right time. You see teams who beat them, they make few mistakes. They’re always on them, receivers are all covered.’’

Even though Mitchell gets his passes off in lightning-quick time, Sewell said the Eskimos still have to try to get pressure on him.

“You don’t get (to Mitchell) a lot of times, but doesn’t mean you slow down because there’s going to be that one time you’re supposed to go fast, you slow down and miss a sack. Could be a game-changing moment right there.’’

And it’s that play in the trenches, especially against a Calgary team that also features a power running game with Jerome Messam, that could be pivotal for Edmonton.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? In this file photo, Calgary Stampeders quarterbac­k Bo Levi Mitchell (19) gets sacked by Edmonton Eskimos’ Almondo Sewell (90) during first half CFL action in Edmonton, Alta., on Sept. 9.
CP PHOTO In this file photo, Calgary Stampeders quarterbac­k Bo Levi Mitchell (19) gets sacked by Edmonton Eskimos’ Almondo Sewell (90) during first half CFL action in Edmonton, Alta., on Sept. 9.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada