Lethbridge Herald

Nichols, Blue Bombers beat Alouettes

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Matt Nichols had almost forgotten what it felt like to win. It was good.

The Winnipeg quarterbac­k threw one touchdown pass and no intercepti­ons as the Blue Bombers halted a four-game losing streak with a 31-14 victory over the Montreal Alouettes Friday.

“Any time you go through a stretch like that without getting a win, you almost forget what that feeling feels like, celebratin­g with your teammates in the locker-room after a good win and a muchneeded win,” said Nichols, who was playing his 100th CFL career game.

“Obviously, it was an incredible feeling. I’m proud of how the whole team responded this week and we came out and it felt like we were flying around in all phases.”

Nichols, who was pulled at halftime in Winnipeg’s previous game after throwing three picks, completed 18-of25 pass attempts for 256 yards and threw a touchdown toss to running back Andrew Harris.

Montreal quarterbac­k Johnny Manziel, making his third CFL start, was sacked five times. The former Heisman Trophy winner went 18 for 25 for 212 yards with no touchdowns and one intercepti­on.

Bombers defensive lineman Craig Roh pulled Manziel down three times and also had seven defensive tackles.

“Sacking quarterbac­ks is already fun, but when they have a million Instagram followers it’s even more fun,” Roh said, referring to Manziel’s social media popularity.

The victory in front of 24,349 fans at Investors Group Field upped Winnipeg’s record to 67, while the Alouettes moved into double digits for losses at 3-10.

Manziel was intercepte­d by defensive back Marcus Sayles with less than three minutes left in the game. Winnipeg used the turnover to score on a one-yard quarterbac­k sneak by backup Chris Streveler with 31 seconds remaining.

After going around the locker-room shaking his teammates’ hands, a disappoint­ed Manziel told reporters he thought he knew the coverage the Bombers would present, but it didn’t work out and the intercepti­on hurt.

“It’s hard,” Manziel said. “It’s hard, you know, how hard these guys are working just to come up short like that in the end. Like I said, I’m sick to my stomach.”

Sayles, a rookie out of the University of West Georgia, was thrilled with his contributi­on.

“It was just crazy. We knew we had to seal the deal,” Sayles said. “I feel like our momentum was going a little bit down towards the end of the third so we made a team decision to come back together. We made a play and everybody did their job.”

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