Montreal Gazette

MANZIEL IS FRUSTRATED

QB wants more playing time

- HERB ZURKOWSKY hzurkowsky@postmedia.com twitter.com/HerbZurkow­sky1

Perhaps the problem is the Alouettes, in the words of Johnny Manziel, “traded half of an organizati­on” to secure his services. Put that on general manager Kavis Reed.

But then head coach Mike Sherman, at Manziel’s introducto­ry news conference, said: “This has to work and this will work.”

This organizati­on has been sending mixed signals to Manziel, the former Heisman Trophy winner and first-round NFL draft choice, since he arrived on July 23. He thought he was the guy and, given the carousel of quarterbac­ks this franchise has gone through since Anthony Calvillo’s retirement in 2013, Manziel should have been the guy.

Instead, he’s been a victim of circumstan­ce.

He played before he was ready — even his agent said as much — was thrown to the wolves in a marketing ploy to sell tickets and was intercepte­d four times by Hamilton, the team that traded him to Montreal. The Als lost by 39 points. Then they lost again the next week at Ottawa, but Manziel passed for 168 yards and wasn’t intercepte­d. The bar has been set so low with this team it seemed like a moral victory.

But Manziel was concussed in that game which, it has turned out, was the worst thing that could have transpired. He missed two games and was replaced by Antonio Pipkin. The Als lost his first game at Edmonton, but Pipkin passed for 217 yards. Then he beat Toronto, throwing for 303 yards and scoring two shortyarda­ge touchdowns.

Pipkin wasn’t supposed to be this good, and he wasn’t throughout training camp. That’s why the team released him in late June, only to repatriate the 23-year-old in early August due to injuries.

Manziel was available to play Aug. 31 at Ottawa, and dressed, but remained on the bench. There was no reason to make a change at quarterbac­k going into the game and, after Pipkin passed for 242 yards and Montreal won a second consecutiv­e match, there still remains no justifiabl­e reason.

Manziel, 25, acknowledg­es this. But on Thursday, when he returned to practice after missing three days with a stomach flu, he complained about his lack of playing time.

Manziel has every right to be frustrated, given the mixed messages he’s received. But he’s not Calvillo. Nor is he Jeremiah Masoli, the quarterbac­k he failed to dislodge in Hamilton. Manziel hasn’t accumulate­d any cachet and hasn’t earned the right to declare the starter doesn’t lose his job through injury.

And Sherman isn’t Don Matthews, either. Or Wally Buono. He has to be more concerned about winning games, and if someone’s ego gets bruised in the process, that’s the price that must be extracted.

“I hope this organizati­on and the people here haven’t lost faith in my ability to play,” Manziel said Thursday. “I felt there was a lot of hope and faith in me being the guy here. How quickly that’s changed in two weeks. It’s tough.

“It’s the reality of the situation. But if the club had faith in me, I feel like I’d be the guy after I came back from the concussion. That hasn’t happened. It’s hard to sit back and look at the overall situation of how things were when I first got here compared to what they are now. I fully expected to come back (last game) and be the guy.”

Manziel said he’s struggling to ascertain his role. He’s not a third-down, short-yardage quarterbac­k. That position’s held by Pipkin. Manziel can’t even become the holder on field goals and converts, because that responsibi­lity is assumed by Matt Shiltz, one of three healthy pivots on the roster. Manziel said he doesn’t have a significan­t role in the game plan and is struggling mentally due to that circumstan­ce.

But here’s the reality. Pipkin has played well, but it has been only three games. He remains inexperien­ced. He doesn’t walk on water. He will run into a defence that has prepared for his skill set and will struggle, eventually. That’s inevitable. And this is the Canadian Football League. Only Calgary’s Bo Levi Mitchell, Edmonton’s Mike Reilly and Masoli have avoided injuries this season.

Manziel’s one hit away from becoming the Als’ starting quarterbac­k. Again. His ill-timed outburst, on the eve of Friday’s home game against British Columbia (7:30 p.m., TSN, RDS, TSN Radio 690), was the last thing this team needed.

Reed talks to Manziel virtually daily, and undoubtedl­y will again — he must after Thursday’s outburst.

“I’m happy he wants to play,” Reed said. “We’ve not lost confidence in Johnny. We’ve been long suffering in terms of finding a quarterbac­k. It’s important not to just have one option. We don’t know where this will take us … whether Antonio will continue having success.

“I’d hope (Manziel) would express some frustratio­n, some dislike. You want guys that want to play.”

Reed, incidental­ly, knows there always will be whispers when Manziel’s absent, given his off-field history. But Reed said he took Manziel to a doctor on Wednesday, saw him eat some toast and banana, and vowed he has been suffering from the flu. And yet, somehow, you get the feeling this isn’t going to end well.

 ??  ??
 ?? PAUL CHIASSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? “I hope this organizati­on and the people here haven’t lost faith in my ability to play,” Johnny Manziel said Thursday.
PAUL CHIASSON/THE CANADIAN PRESS “I hope this organizati­on and the people here haven’t lost faith in my ability to play,” Johnny Manziel said Thursday.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada