National Post

Burris bows out as a champion

CFL great announcing retirement at 41

- Don Brennan dbrennan@postmedia.com

OTTAWA• Henry Burr is is taking the term “going out on top” to another level.

Never before has a 41-yearold quarterbac­k won a Grey Cup, while few players of any age have delivered a comparable performanc­e in a championsh­ip game to the one he gave — against one of the best single season teams in CFL history — on Nov. 27 at BMO Field in Toronto.

Yet Burris will walk away from it all when he announces his retirement Tuesday, with Redblacks teammates, coaches and staff in attendance at a news conference.

And it will feel like he’s doing it too soon.

If old Hank doesn’t have a tear in his eye, it will be a surprise. Burris isn’t hanging them up because he wants to. He isn’t saying goodbye to the game he loves because he feels it’s time, or that he can’t do it anymore. He just has no other choice.

What led him to his status as the No. 3 passer in CFL history is his fierce competitiv­eness, and that trait will simply not allow him to stand on the sidelines as the backup to Trevor Harris next season, unable to have a direct hand in the outcome of a game.

It has never permitted him to be content playing behind anybody. But you really can’t blame the Redblacks for this predicamen­t, either. To seal the deal for Harris’ signing in Ottawa last winter, they had to give him starter’s money for 2017. They also had to get Burris to agree to a pay cut, just to make it work under the salary cap.

How did they know Burris would still be at the top of his game? And even if they had a hunch, how could they pass up a chance for a QB tandem of the league’s most outstandin­g player in 2015 and the CFL leader in touchdown passes that year?

The Redblacks had no interest in a long, slow growth. After making it to the Grey Cup in 2015, they wanted a championsh­ip team pronto. They did what was necessary, and now they have to pay one of the consequenc­es.

Burris, meanwhile, leaves a league he joined in 1997 when, after a record- setting four years at Temple University in Philadelph­ia, he went undrafted by the NFL. He paid his dues for one season on Calgary’s practice roster, finally getting some playing time in 1998 as a third stringer behind Jeff Garcia and Dave Dickenson as the Stampeders went on to win the Grey Cup.

Not satisfied to wait his turn in Calgary, Burris signed with t he Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s, where he started 16 games while throwing for 4,647 yards and 30 touchdowns.

When the Green Bay Packers expressed interest in him the next season, that drive to be the best led him to a better league. But in Green Bay, he never made it above third string status before he was released later that season. He signed with the Chicago Bears the following year and played six games for them, but after being assigned to NFL Europe for a stint with the Berlin Thunder — and being none too happy about it — he returned to the CFL.

Burris spent the 2004 campaign with Saskatchew­an, l eading the Roughrider­s to the Western final, then signed with Calgary, where he spent the next seven seasons, winning a Grey Cup (2008) and a most outstandin­g player award ( 2010) before the Stamps decided to go with the younger Drew Tate.

Hence, Burris welcomed a trade to Hamilton, where he could again take over a starter’s role. He posted big numbers in his first season as a Ticat, and brought the team to the Grey Cup in his second.

But t hat wasn’t good enough for Hamilton GM/ coach Kent Austin, who signed free agent Zach Collaros. Feeling “disrespect­ed,” Burris signed with the expansion Redblacks.

In just three years, the very proud product of Spiro, Okla., will be quick to remind you, he has guided Ottawa from the outhouse to the penthouse, giving the nation’s capital its first Grey Cup in four decades.

In three years as a Redblack, he has brought his career passing totals to 63,227 yards and 374 TDs, third behind only Anthony Calvillo and Damon Allen in both categories. In three years, he has increased his collection of hardware to three Grey Cup rings and two Most Outstandin­g Player awards.

And he was the best/most valuable player in the last game he ever played.

 ?? FRANK GUNN / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Henry Burris led the Ottawa Redblacks to a Grey Cup in the expansion club’s third season, and he did it at the age of 41. Now the CFL quarterbac­k who sits third all-time in passing yards and touchdowns is ready to call it a career.
FRANK GUNN / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Henry Burris led the Ottawa Redblacks to a Grey Cup in the expansion club’s third season, and he did it at the age of 41. Now the CFL quarterbac­k who sits third all-time in passing yards and touchdowns is ready to call it a career.

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