Lethbridge Herald

Riders face tough task against Stamps

- THE CANADIAN PRESS

On Friday, the focus turns to football for Duron Carter and the Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s. Carter was at the centre of some drama this week when he and Sam Williams, a defensive back on Saskatchew­an’s practice roster, were involved in an altercatio­n during practice. When people stepped in to break up the melee, there were reports at least one coach was urging the players to continue fighting.

On Tuesday, head coach/GM Chris Jones predictabl­y downplayed the incident and didn’t divulge potential discipline for Williams or Carter. Williams won’t play but Carter will see action on both sides of the ball when Saskatchew­an visits the Calgary Stampeders.

Carter is Saskatchew­an’s receiving leader and a big part of the club’s offence. But with an abundance of injuries in the secondary, Jones said Carter will also see action on defence against Calgary.

Carter has never started a game on defence but played defence twice earlier this season.

The contest is an important one for both teams. Calgary (13-1-1) needs a win to clinch top spot in the West Division while Saskatchew­an (8-7) stands fourth, two points behind thirdplace Edmonton (9-6) needing a victory to cement a post-season berth.

The Stampeders have won 11 straight and are 2-0 this season versus Saskatchew­an. But the Stampeders looked mortal in Friday night’s 28-25 road win over Hamilton, needing a 62yard pass interferen­ce penalty to set up Rene Paredes’ 17-yard field goal on the game’s final play.

Saskatchew­an is 4-4 on the road but 3-5 against West Division competitio­n. The Riders also surrendere­d a 12-point lead in last weekend’s 33-32 home loss to the Ottawa Redblacks.

Calgary nipped Saskatchew­an 15-9 in Regina on Sept. 24. Bo Levi Mitchell, last year’s CFL MVP, was 24-of-32 passing for 222 yards but Jerome Messam ran for 127 yards on 23 carries.

Saskatchew­an’s Kevin Glenn was 12of-19 passing for 127 yards and an intercepti­on before giving way to Canadian Brandon Bridge, who completed six-of-seven attempts for 91 yards and a TD. Glenn finished 29-of-39 for 387 yards with two touchdowns and two intercepti­ons versus Ottawa.

But the story against Ottawa — outside of Saskatchew­an not protecting its lead — was Carter, who had 11 catches for 231 yards. That gave him 72 catches for 1,037 yards, his first-ever 1,000-yard campaign.

And with Naaman Roosevelt (75 catches, 1,035 yards, eight TDs) recovering from a head injury suffered against Ottawa, Carter could become an even more pivotal offensive figure against Calgary. If Roosevelt can’t play, veteran slotback Chad Owens could make his ’17 debut.

Running back Cameron Marshall is also scheduled to come off the six-game injured list for Saskatchew­an. He ran for 490 yards on 87 carries (5.6yard average) with two TDs while adding 29 catches for 278 yards and two touchdowns over the Riders’ first nine games.

Prediction: Winnipeg Blue Bombers versus Toronto Argonauts (Saturday afternoon)

Calgary.

Winnipeg (11-4) clinched a postseason berth with last weekend’s 26-20 win over B.C. But the offence didn’t score a touchdown and has just one offensive TD in the last two games. The Bombers will be minus their top receiver (Darvin Adams) and defensive leader (Maurice Leggett) due to injury. Toronto (7-9) has lost two straight but would move atop the East with a win. Running back James Wilder Jr. could return after missing last weekend’s loss to Edmonton with head/chest injuries.

Toronto.

Prediction: Edmonton Eskimos versus B.C. Lions (Saturday night)

Edmonton (9-6) has been streaky all year. It opened the year with seven straight wins, then dropped six consecutiv­e contests before winning its last two. Brandon Zylstra is now the CFL’s leading receiver and newly acquired running back CJ Gable has three straight 100-yard games, the last two with the Eskimos. B.C. (6-9) has dropped seven of eight games. Edmonton.

Prediction: Hamilton Tiger-Cats versus Montreal Alouettes (Sunday afternoon)

This is a pride game as Hamilton (411) and Montreal (3-12) will both miss the playoffs. After starting the season 08, the Ticats are 4-3 under interim coach June Jones and Jeremiah Masoli as the starter. Masoli sports a 60.7 completion average with eight TDs and five intercepti­ons while registerin­g three 300-yard games. Darian Durant is expected to start for Montreal, which has lost eight straight and hasn’t won since a 21-9 decision over Toronto on Aug. 11.

Prediction: Last week:

Hamilton. 2-2.

Overall:

47-21-1.

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