Edmonton Journal

TIMING IS EVERYTHING FOR ROUGHRIDER­S

- ROB VANSTONE DURON DISAPPEARS FOUND: OFFENCE rvanstone@postmedia.com

The Roughrider­s have veered away from their bend-but-don’tbreak-up-anything defence.

One week after being lacerated by Ottawa Redblacks quarterbac­k Trevor Harris, the Roughrider­s’ defence improved — at least at critical junctures — in Saturday’s 30-29 CFL victory over the host Toronto Argonauts.

Like Harris, Toronto quarterbac­k McLeod Bethel-Thompson was able to consistent­ly move his team’s offence while emphasizin­g short passes.

The difference, though, was that the Argos repeatedly stalled after venturing into Saskatchew­an territory, whereas Ottawa’s finishing touch was considerab­ly better Sept. 15 during its 30-25 victory at Mosaic Stadium.

Ottawa scored four touchdowns and settled for only one field goal.

Toronto registered just one offensive touchdown and attempted six field goals, four of which were successful.

The Argonauts’ most memorable field-goal attempt was on the game’s penultimat­e play. Zack Medeiros was wide on a bid for a game-winner from 51 yards away.

Medeiros’ kick would not have been as difficult — and it might not have been required — if not for Roughrider­s defensive backs Ed Gainey and Crezdon Butler.

Gainey knocked away a pass that was intended for S.J. Green, preventing a four-yard gain on Toronto’s second-last play from scrimmage.

On the previous play, Gainey had been visibly frustrated with himself after Armanti Edwards caught an 11-yarder, but the Roughrider­s’ top cover man quickly made amends.

Riders fans must have experience­d heart palpitatio­ns during Toronto’s final offensive play.

From Saskatchew­an’s 44-yard line, Bethel-Thompson launched a moon shot just before being flattened by a blitzing Butler. Green was wi-i-i-i-i-ide open in the middle of the field, only to be overthrown. If Butler had arrived a split-second later, Toronto would likely have settled the game with a 44-yard touchdown.

Butler was an unsung hero on the Argonauts’ final possession. He blitzed on three of the six plays, pressuring Bethel-Thompson each time.

Roughrider­s head coach Chris Jones, who moonlights as the defensive co-ordinator, ordered up additional pressure for Toronto’s last-gasp drive.

Before that, Jones had blitzed only 12 per cent of the time on Saturday. He proceeded to blitz on five of Toronto’s final six plays.

On each of those six plays, Bethel-Thompson was forced to release the ball in fewer than two seconds. The release times: 1.78, 1.88, 1.80, 1.83, 1.56 and 1.78 seconds.

Previously, Bethel-Thompson’s average release time was 2.47 seconds, and only six throws had been clocked at under 2.00.

The Roughrider­s’ defence certainly had its imperfecti­ons on Saturday. Toronto put up 419 yards of net offence, compared to Ottawa’s 481.

Neither total will leave Jones clicking his heels. But his defence clicked when it counted.

The Argonauts used receiver Duron Carter on 32 of a possible 65 plays (short-yardage situations excluded) during his first game against his former team.

The one pass that was aimed in his direction fell incomplete.

Curiously, Carter was not on the field for either of Toronto’s final two possession­s. At a stage of the game when the Argonauts urgently needed a game-changing play, one of the league’s most talented receivers was on the sideline.

Rodney Smith (three targets, two receptions, 14 yards) and Malcolm Williams (two targets, zero catches) were busier than Carter, whose presence was wasted as Toronto suffered its ninth loss in 12 games.

The Argonauts are a bad team that can’t even find a way to deploy a premier talent.

How not to sell football in Toronto. Over to you, John Tavares ...

The Roughrider­s’ offence, while not without its misadventu­res, took some progressiv­e steps Saturday.

For starters, Saskatchew­an scored on its first possession for only the second time this season.

As for the first time, well, it wasn’t really a drive. A 53-yard intercepti­on return by Matt Elam gave the Roughrider­s a first down on the Winnipeg Blue Bombers’ one-yard line Sept. 2. Not even the Roughrider­s could blow it from there.

The Roughrider­s also produced points, courtesy of a 13-yard Brett Lauther field goal, to cap their opening possession Aug. 19 against the visiting Calgary Stampeders.

Saskatchew­an failed to produce even a point on its other 10 opening possession­s — consisting of eight two-and-outs, one four-play spasm (including a first down) and a turnover on downs on third-and-one.

On Saturday, the Roughrider­s had five opening-possession first downs, as many as they had recorded over the previous 12 games combined.

ON YOUR MARCUS ...

The 2018 Roughrider­s have four scoring drives of 80-plus yards (82, 82, 80 and 80). Two of them have been one-play possession­s, courtesy of 80- and 82-yard TD runs by Marcus Thigpen.

Thigpen’s 82-yarder on Saturday was Saskatchew­an’s longest TD run since Aug. 20, 1976, when Pete Van Valkenburg — The Flying Dutchman! — erupted for a 90-yarder during a 38-13 victory in Calgary.

Saskatchew­an has registered only four runs of 80-plus yards since 1976. Half of those carries ( by Thigpen) have occurred over a nine-game span this season.

There is only one problem: Thigpen, the Roughrider­s’ most dangerous player, has touched the ball on offence only eight times over the past three games.

Nonetheles­s, he did play a key role in Saskatchew­an’s first touchdown on Saturday: a fiveyard pass from Zach Collaros to Jordan Williams-Lambert.

Thigpen, moving laterally behind the line of scrimmage, attracted the attention of defensive back Marcus Roberson. Williams-Lambert, lined up as a tight end on the left flank of a seven-man front, slipped behind Roberson for an easy score.

 ?? JON BLACKER/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Roughrider­s’ Jordan Williams-Lambert scores on a touchdown catch against the Argos Saturday.
JON BLACKER/THE CANADIAN PRESS The Roughrider­s’ Jordan Williams-Lambert scores on a touchdown catch against the Argos Saturday.
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