Edmonton Journal

Lack of discipline grounds Bombers

Penalties and an ineffectiv­e defence hurt against Redblacks, Paul Friesen writes.

- pfriesen@postmedia.com

Some thought-to-be-buried problems resurfaced for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers in a 4421 home loss to Ottawa on Friday.

A lack of discipline and a porous defence were evident before a season-high 27,602 fans looking for a fourth straight win on home turf.

“Not good,” head coach Mike O’Shea said. “Undiscipli­ned play leads to a lot of points ... they capitalize­d and really generated a lot of points after we made mistakes and kept them on the field.

“The game looks different if we’re more discipline­d and we get off the field. The defence is then more rested and our offence has more opportunit­ies to drive the ball and battle a good Ottawa defence.”

The Bombers took 11 penalties for 80 yards, seven of them on defence.

Two of them gave the Redblacks a second shot at two-point convert attempts, which they made.

Winnipeg had entered the game as one of the three leastpenal­ized teams in the CFL.

“But as a defence early on in the season we struggled with penalties,” linebacker Adam Bighill said. “We’d kind of moved past that, and it crept back in tonight.”

The tendency to self-destruct ruined the Bombers’ plan of winning the ball-control battle and keeping Ottawa’s high-powered offence off the field.

The Redblacks had nearly seven more minutes of possession time.

“It’s unfortunat­e, but the time of possession and the lack of ball control was more self-inflicted than anything,” O’Shea said. “We all know (quarterbac­k) Trevor Harris and that offence is going to complete a high percentage of passes. So when you can get off the field, you have to.”

SEASON HIGH A NEW LOW

As bad as Winnipeg ’s defence has been at times this season, it reached a new low in giving up 500 yards total offence: 361 through the air, 139 along the ground.

“Honestly, it didn’t feel like that,” corner Chris Randle said. “It felt like we were in a position to get off the field and we didn’t. They did a good job of running their schemes.”

Second down, in particular, was a killer for the Bomber defence.

Ottawa produced 324 yards on 27 plays — an average of 12 yards per play.

“Obviously they have a great offence, a great scheme,” Bighill said. “I knew they were going to try to drive the field, dink and dunk — that’s their style of offence. So they’re going to amass yards. If they get three first downs and we get them off the field and get the ball back for the offence, it doesn’t matter.” Trouble is, they didn’t.

And the Winnipeg offence wasn’t exactly on fire.

Of its 420 total yards, more than 100 came on two long bombs from Matt Nichols to Darvin Adams.

“We just didn’t show up,” is how running back Andrew Harris put it. “Against a team that can put up points like that and is that productive, we’ve got to be better offensivel­y.”

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