Edmonton Journal

Lions vs Eskimos: the unstoppabl­e force meets the immovable object

- GERRY MODDEJONGE gmoddejong­e@postmedia.com Twitter: @GerryModde­jonge

Yes, it’s a battle between two teams with four-game win streaks vying for first place early on in the Canadian Football League season.

But if you look past the standings to the reasons why they’ve reached the top, a picture begins to get painted that pits the league’s top offence of the B.C. Lions against the Edmonton Eskimos stingiest yard-allowing defence in the CFL.

That’s not to take anything away from Edmonton’s offence and the trio of fourth-quarter comebacks where quarterbac­k Mike Reilly has engineered game-winning drives.

But when you talk about offence, the Lions have been consistent­ly setting the bar across the league with 32.8 points per game and 405.4 yards of net offence.

“Travis Lulay’s doing a fantastic job,” Eskimos defensive co-ordinator Mike Benevides said, noting that figure jumps to 43 points per game their last two outings with Lulay, a former CFL most outstandin­g player, playing in place of the injured Jonathon Jennings. “Of all the offences we’ve gameplanne­d so far, this is the most powerful offence, when you take a look at their receivers and the way Jeremiah (Johnson) is running the ball.

“And then they’ve got a guy with No. 2 that’s pretty good (return man Chris Rainey), and they’ve got the MOP 2011 quarterbac­k. I think he’s their best quarterbac­k, I think games are panning out that way. We have a monster-type challenge and the guys are excited and these are the games you play for: Season series, the opponent, in front of our crowd, all that stuff.”

After all, the unstoppabl­e force meets the immovable object in an Eskimos defence that has allowed a league-low eight touchdowns in total and 307.5 yards of net offence per game.

“This is a good defensive unit and they’re led by the front,” said Lulay. “When they can messy up the pocket with four guys and play zone with a bunch of guys on the back end, it can make for a tough night.

“We know we have to be very good on first down, if we’re stuck in second-and-10 a lot, you’re playing a new team with a good pass rush in hand.”

B.C. is the West Division’s best passing team with 338.6 yards per game, while the Eskimos boast the fewest passing yards allowed in the league at 240.8 yards per game.

And as much as Edmonton’s secondary has done what’s required of them, the driving force of the defence, if not the team, has been the pressure generated by the defensive line, which will once again give the Eskimos the edge Friday.

They’ve been quietly going about their business while Reilly and the offence take up the spotlight.

“Fine by me,” Benevides said. “At the end of the day, our goal is to affect the quarterbac­k, we’ve pressured them more than anybody else. That keeps their passing yards down and gives us a chance to win the football game.

“We’ve had some turnovers, at the end of it, I really don’t care about that and neither do the guys. ”

On the league’s top defence? Facing the top offence?

“I just look at it as the two best teams in the league going at it for first place,” said Eskimos defensive end Odell Willis, who leads the Eskimos with three sacks and 10 more QB pressures.

 ?? PETER POWER/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? B.C. Lions QB Travis Lulay brings the top-ranked offence in the CFL into Commonweal­th Stadium Friday to take on the league’s best defence in the undefeated Eskimos.
PETER POWER/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES B.C. Lions QB Travis Lulay brings the top-ranked offence in the CFL into Commonweal­th Stadium Friday to take on the league’s best defence in the undefeated Eskimos.

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