Lethbridge Herald

Reilly captures CFL outstandin­g player honour

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Mike Reilly is the CFL’s outstandin­g player. The Edmonton Eskimos quarterbac­k received the honour Thursday night at the CFL’s annual awards banquet. Toronto Argonauts quarterbac­k Ricky Ray was the finalist.

Reilly, 32, started all 18 regular-season games and led Edmonton (12-6) to five straight wins to end the regular season and clinch third in the West Division despite a plethora of injuries. The six-foot-three, 230-pound Reilly led the CFL in passing (5,830 yards) and tied Ottawa’s Trevor Harris for the league lead in TDs (30).

Reilly also ran for 12 TDs and had 39 completion­s of 30-plus yards, both leaguebest marks. Edmonton led the CFL in net offence (406.8 yards), offensive points (27.2 per game) and offensive touchdowns (52) while allowing a league-low 29 sacks.

Ray, 38, enjoyed a resurgence with Toronto, starting 17 regular-season games after appearing in just 12 the past two seasons due to various injuries. Ray led the CFL in pass attempts (668) and completion­s (442) and finished tied with Reilly for most 300-yard games (12) and second in passing yards (5,546).

Also winning awards were running back Andrew Harris (Canadian) and Stanley Bryant (lineman) of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, linebacker Alex Singleton and kick-returner Roy Finch (special-teams) of the Calgary Stampeders as well as running back James Wilder Jr. (rookie) and Marc Trestman (coach) of Toronto.

Harris had a CFL-best 105 catches, the most ever by a running back. He also led the league in rushing (1,035 yards) as Winnipeg (12-6) earned its first home playoff game since 2011.

The six-foot-five, 308pound Bryant anchored a Winnipeg offensive line that created holes for Harris and protected quarterbac­k Matt Nichols (4,472 yards, 28 TDs). The Bombers led the CFL in rushing (101.3 yards per game) and were second in offensive points (26.7 per game).

Singleton, 24, recorded 123 tackles — most by a Canadian — in his first full season as a starter. Calgary’s defence allowed a league-low 349 points (19.4 per game) while recording 50 sacks and 45 turnovers.

The five-foot-seven, 165pound Finch had a club record-tying three punt return TDs while amassing a league-high 1,200 yards. Finch’s 16.4-yard average was third-best in CFL history and he added 696 kickoff-return yards.

The six-foot-three, 232pound Wilder Jr. had 872 yards rushing (7.2-yard average) and five TDs in 17 games — 10 starts — while adding 51 catches for 533 yards.

Calgary receiver Marken Michel was the finalist, registerin­g 41 catches for 780 yards (19-yard average) and three TDs.

Trestman, 61, was also the CFL’s top coach in ’09 with Montreal. In his first year with Toronto, Trestman guided the Argos (9-9) to a Grey Cup berth following last year’s 5-13 mark.

Calgary’s Dave Dickenson, last year’s winner, was the finalist.

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 ?? Canadian Press photo ?? Edmonton Eskimos quarterbac­k Mike Reilly, recipient of the Most Outstandin­g Player award, poses backstage at the CFL awards in Ottawa on Thursday.
Canadian Press photo Edmonton Eskimos quarterbac­k Mike Reilly, recipient of the Most Outstandin­g Player award, poses backstage at the CFL awards in Ottawa on Thursday.

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