Montreal Gazette

POWER RANKINGS

6 WEEK

- Rob Vanstone

1 (1) EDMONTON

The Eskimos (4-0) are not overwhelmi­ng, but their record cannot be ignored. Edmonton is the CFL’s only undefeated team despite having outscored its opposition by only 12 points over four games (107-95). The key for Edmonton is making plays when it counts. Nobody does that better than quarterbac­k Mike Reilly.

2 (2) B.C.

The Lions have won four in a row since losing their season opener. A quarterbac­k change, the result of a shoulder injury to Jonathon Jennings, has improved the offence. Travis Lulay has thrown for 436 and 404 yards in place of Jennings, looking very much like the 2011 most outstandin­g player version. If the CFL had a most outstandin­g person award, Lulay would win that, too.

3 (3) CALGARY

The Stampeders reasserted their dominance Saturday by defeating the visiting Roughrider­s 27-10. The score actually flattered the losing side. Calgary flattened Saskatchew­an, which registered only three first downs and allowed five sacks in the first half, after which the Stampeders led 17-0. Jerome Messam looked like he did last season while rushing for 135 yards.

4 (5) TORONTO

The Argonauts are a surprising 3-2, which is good for first in the East Division, after edging the visitors from Ottawa 27-24 on Monday. The West is still the far stronger division, as evidenced by the first three picks, but Toronto is enjoying a solid season thanks to the presence of 37-year-old quarterbac­k Ricky Ray and learned head coach Marc Trestman. Defensive co-ordinator Corey Chamblin has been a huge addition.

5 (4) WINNIPEG

The Blue Bombers were the Blow Bombers on Friday, squanderin­g a 42-25 fourth-quarter lead and losing 45-42 to B.C. in a game that was a classic advertisem­ent for the CFL. It was also a showcase for the flawed decision-making of Bombers head coach Mike O’Shea, who OK’d an ultimately unsuccessf­ul fake punt that gave the Lions a gift-wrapped touchdown in the fourth quarter.

6 (6) MONTREAL

The Alouettes’ offence is a puzzle. Montreal is averaging only 20.2 points per game and is coming off a 24-19 loss in Ottawa. Montreal quarterbac­k Darian Durant piled up the passing yards (452) in that game. Near the goal-line, however, the Als are a different team.

7 (8) OTTAWA

The defending Grey Cup champions simply cannot buy a break. The Redblacks’ four losses have been by a combined 10 points. A treacherou­s schedule — Monday’s game against Toronto was Ottawa’s third in 11 games — hasn’t helped, either.

8 (7) SASKATCHEW­AN

A 37-20 win over Hamilton on July 8 buoyed optimism that the Chris Jones-led Roughrider­s were poised for a breakthrou­gh. Then came Saturday’s repeated breakdowns against Calgary. The Riders were barely conscious in the first half, a sign that the visitors weren’t prepared.

9 (9) HAMILTON

The Tiger-Cats were impressive for a considerab­le portion of Thursday’s home game against Edmonton. Hamilton carried a 25-13 lead into the fourth before being outscored 18-3. Worse yet, the Ticats are facing back-to-back road games in Calgary (gulp) and Edmonton (eek).

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