Montreal Gazette

STAMPS CROWNED CHAMPS

Slide past Ottawa for Grey Cup title

- GERRY MODDEJONGE gmoddejong­e@postmedia.com twitter.com/ GerryModde­jonge

It was red, black and EDMONTON white against black, white and red in a championsh­ip clash of grey in Sunday’s 106th CFL final. In the end, the Calgary Stampeders hoisted the Grey Cup with a 27-16 win over the Ottawa Redblacks in front of a capacity crowd of 55,819 at Commonweal­th Stadium. It was a rematch of the 2016 championsh­ip game between the two clubs, which saw the Redblacks win 39-33 and kick off a run of back-to-back Grey Cup losses for a Stampeders squad that has been the perennial powerhouse of the league throughout the John Hufnagel era of the last decade. But the third time was a charm for Calgary, which won its eighth league championsh­ip in club history and third under Hufnagel, their current general manager. While weather wasn’t nearly the factor that could be expected in Edmonton at the end of November with a temperatur­e of 2 C at kickoff, the turf was hard and slick, which affected footing and ball grip throughout. Calgary’s Bo Levi Mitchell completed 24 of 36 passes for 253 yards, two touchdowns and two intercepti­ons, while Ottawa’s Trevor Harris completed 20 of 38 passes for 288 yards, a touchdown and three intercepti­ons. Calgary’s first possession opened with a sack by Ottawa’s J.R. Tavai and ended with an intercepti­on in the end zone by none other than Redblacks cornerback Jonathan Rose, who only got into the game by appealing a suspension for shoving an official in last week’s East Division final. But Stampeders cornerback Ciante Evans returned the favour, stepping in front of a pass intended for Greg Ellingson to give Mitchell and Co. the ball back on Ottawa’s 32-yard line. Running back Don Jackson took it 21 yards on a textbook screen pass over top of Ottawa’s blitz to make it 7-0 11 minutes in. Lewis Ward, the CFL’s most outstandin­g rookie and special-teams player who finished the regular season 51-for-52 on field goals while posting a record of 48 straight, hooked a 48-yard attempt wide left of the uprights to close out Sunday’s first quarter. Ward did, however, open the second-quarter scoring with a 29-yarder to put Ottawa on the board with 12:32 to go in the half. Following catches for 20 yards by Eric Rogers and 26 yards by Julan Lynch, Lemar Durant got his hands on a similar screen pass that Jackson scored on earlier, only to drop it in open field. Rogers responded by shaking two Ottawa defenders to fight for a first down and set up a 21-yard touchdown passing play to Lynch, who dived in for a 14-3 lead midway through the second. The Redblacks’ Sherrod Baltimore came up with an intercepti­on in Calgary territory, only to have running back William Powell fumble the ball right back on a force by Jameer Thurman and recovery by Folarin Orimolade. But Ottawa got the upper hand from the exchange, following up a Calgary punt with a 55-yard catch and run into the end zone by Julian Feoli-Gudino. The Laval product ran it in for the last 30 of those yards, escaping a pair of defenders on the way to knocking over the flag on his way out of bounds. The ensuing two-point conversion was caught by an open Jean-Christophe Beaulieu and Ottawa trailed 14-11. But Calgary stole all the momentum right back on the longest punt-return touchdown in Grey Cup history, 97 yards, by Terry Williams to lead by 10 at halftime, when the spotlight switched to Canadian singer, songwriter and four-time Grammy Award nominee Alessia Cara. Tempers flared early in the third as Chris Matthews was penalized with unnecessar­y roughness after taking a swing at Anthony Cioffi before a 41-yard field goal off the foot of Ward opened second-half scoring. Rene Paredes responded with a 34-yard field goal at the other end to regain the double-digit lead with 3:36 left in the third quarter. Ottawa suffered a further setback when Diontae Spencer opened the final frame by fumbling a punt return, forced by Riley Jones and recovered by Wynton McManis. It resulted in a 29-yard field goal by Paredes, making him 11-for-11 in Grey Cup games. The Redblacks got to the doorstep before turning the ball over on downs on a pass breakup by Jamar Wall on Brad Sinopoli that would have been enough for a first down. Wall followed up with an intercepti­on on a last-gasp long bomb by Harris with 2:25 left, while Tre Roberson came up with another intercepti­on with 82 seconds to go in the game. Calgary conceded a two-point safety on the way to running out the clock as the final play ended with a sack by Calgary defensive tackle Junior Turner.

 ??  ??
 ?? GAVIN YOUNG ?? Calgary Stampeders quarterbac­k Bo Levi Mitchell raises the Grey Cup for a second time in his career after defeating the Ottawa Redblacks at Commonweal­th Stadium in Edmonton on Sunday. Mitchell threw for 253 yards and a pair of touchdowns in the victory.
GAVIN YOUNG Calgary Stampeders quarterbac­k Bo Levi Mitchell raises the Grey Cup for a second time in his career after defeating the Ottawa Redblacks at Commonweal­th Stadium in Edmonton on Sunday. Mitchell threw for 253 yards and a pair of touchdowns in the victory.
 ??  ?? Stampeders return man Terry Williams stole all the momentum from the Ottawa Redblacks late in the first half when he returned a punt 97 yards for a touchdown Sunday. GAVIN YOUNG
Stampeders return man Terry Williams stole all the momentum from the Ottawa Redblacks late in the first half when he returned a punt 97 yards for a touchdown Sunday. GAVIN YOUNG
 ??  ?? Running back Don Jackson and the Calgary Stampeders showed their muscle Sunday, getting an early lead and never giving it up en route to a Grey Cup victory. GAVIN YOUNG
Running back Don Jackson and the Calgary Stampeders showed their muscle Sunday, getting an early lead and never giving it up en route to a Grey Cup victory. GAVIN YOUNG

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada