Edmonton Journal

HE’S NO SAVIOUR, BUT MANZIEL GIVES FANS SOME HOPE

- HERB ZURKOWSKY Montreal hzurkowsky@postmedia.com

The head coach and general manager of the Montreal Alouettes walked into Olympic Stadium late Monday afternoon and announced to the assembled masses gathered that quarterbac­k Johnny Manziel wouldn’t be the saviour of this beleaguere­d Alouettes franchise.

“We didn’t trade for Johnny to be the saviour,” general manager Kavis Reed said. “We traded for him to be a part of this.”

Quite frankly, it doesn’t matter if Manziel, the first freshman to win the Heisman Trophy in 2012, can walk on water. This is a franchise that’s sinking fast and requires a shot of adrenalin.

Manziel, the former first-round (22nd overall) draft choice of the Cleveland Browns in 2014, will provide that once he becomes the 14th starting quarterbac­k Montreal has used since Anthony Calvillo was concussed, never to return, in 2013.

It also shouldn’t be overlooked that the Als acquired two legitimate offensive linemen from Hamilton in Tony Washington and Landon Rice.

As for rush end Jamaal Westerman and wide receiver Chris Williams — the two players Montreal relinquish­ed — they can be replaced, although Williams’ speed and Westerman’s disruptive­ness will be missed.

The first-round draft choices in 2020 and ’21 the Als no longer possess? If Montreal doesn’t start winning games — and soon — that will become another dilemma for the GM.

In the span of 24 hours — the Als also acquired slotback Adarius Bowman from Winnipeg for a conditiona­l eighth-round draft pick in 2019 — Reed has swung for the fences.

Many have criticized Reed for failing to address the team’s biggest need: a legitimate starting quarterbac­k.

The Als, who ended last season on an 11-game losing streak, now sit at 1-4. That means they have lost 15 of their last 16 games. The offence remains on life support, having scored 69 points so far this season, 10 or fewer in three games. That works out to an average of 13.8 points per game.

There’s no excitement and little interest around this team. Manziel will change that immediatel­y, whether he plays or not.

He’ll sell merchandis­e and help promote and market this team. There were 10 television cameras and numerous photograph­ers on site Monday, including many members of the media who never cover this team. A team official said that, following Sunday’s trade announceme­nt until Monday afternoon, three times as many tickets were sold over a similar correspond­ing period. That should continue between now and Thursday’s home game against Edmonton.

Manziel won’t start against the Eskimos; that honour should go to Matt Shiltz. But, with Drew Willy injured and Jeff Mathews previously sidelined, Manziel should dress. Perhaps head coach Mike Sherman might even have a package of plays available for him.

Let’s see what happens on Aug. 3, when the Als host the TigerCats.

“One of the first things I said to him was, this has to work and this will work,” said Sherman, who recruited Manziel to Texas A&M. “I’m anxious and excited to move forward and get him involved in our team.

“We didn’t bring him here to have him sit on the bench. It depends on his assimilati­on of our playbook. We’ll see how the week plays out. I don’t want to put added pressure on him.”

Ticats head coach June Jones said much the same thing after Manziel signed his two-year contract. Then Jeremiah Masoli went out and had four consecutiv­e games of at least 300 yards passing.

Sherman won’t have any trouble or reluctance handing the reins to the 25-year-old Canadian Football League rookie. Even Manziel, who didn’t request a trade, must realize he’s closer to getting on the field in Montreal than he has been since March 2016, following his release by Cleveland.

“I think this is a situation for me that can absolutely work,” said Manziel, engaging and refreshed despite having been awake since 5 a.m. “I walked in and saw coach Sherman with a smile on my face. I trust these gentlemen will put me in a position to succeed. I believe ... when I’m ready, they’ll give me the chance, ( but) I’ve tempered my expectatio­ns to not reach too high. I realize there’s going to be some growing pains. It’s a process.

“This organizati­on obviously put a lot on the line to get me here. There are expectatio­ns behind that.”

It takes years for the merits of any trade to be dissected. Should Manziel return to the NFL after his contract concludes in 2020 — or sign with another CFL team — this won’t look good.

Should the Als continue losing with Manziel? Well, that’s a trend fans have grown accustomed to in Montreal.

Besides, the Canadiens report to training camp in less than two months. The Als and Impact simply serve as appetizers over the summer until the main course arrives.

 ?? JOHN MAHONEY ?? Als head coach Mike Sherman, left, says he’s eager to get QB Johnny Manziel up to speed after GM Kavis Reed acquired the former Heisman Trophy winner from the Ticats.
JOHN MAHONEY Als head coach Mike Sherman, left, says he’s eager to get QB Johnny Manziel up to speed after GM Kavis Reed acquired the former Heisman Trophy winner from the Ticats.
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