National Post

Reilly likely to raise bar in CFL free agency

Talent pool includes Harris, Mitchell

- Dan ralph

Mike Reilly is expected to significan­tly raise the bar in the quarterbac­k-driven open market when CFL free agency begins Tuesday.

The Edmonton Eskimos passer is regarded as the best player available in a deep talent pool that’s top-heavy with quality starting quarterbac­ks. Also poised to become free agents at noon ET are Bo Levi Mitchell — who led the Calgary Stampeders to last year’s Grey Cup title — and Trevor Harris of the East Divisionch­ampion Ottawa Redblacks.

The expectatio­n is Reilly, 34, will be the first of the Big Three to sign. For weeks, the overwhelmi­ng sentiment has been that Reilly, the CFL’s highest-paid player last year at over $500,000, would sign a multi-year deal with the B.C. Lions worth about $700,000 annually.

And with good reason. Reilly hasn’t missed a game the past three years and thrown for over 5,500 yards each season. After guiding Edmonton to a Grey Cup in 2015, Reilly was the league’s outstandin­g player in 2017 and has thrown a combined 88 TD passes the past three campaigns.

But the six-foot-three, 230-pound Reilly is a dual threat, having rushed for a combined 1,311 yards on 319 carries (4.2-yard average) and 34 TDs the past three seasons. In 2018, Edmonton was first in CFL passing (311.14 yards per game), second in net offence (399 yards), third in offensive points (26.1 per game) and fourth in rushing (103.6 yards per game).

By comparison, the Lions were seventh in passing (220.6 yards per game) and offensive scoring (23.5 points) and eighth in both rushing (94.4 yards) and net offence (316.8 yards).

What’s more, Reilly is a native of Kennewick, Wash., and relocating to Vancouver would move him closer to family. And he’s certainly familiar with the Lions, spending his first two CFL seasons in B.C. before heading to Edmonton in 2013.

There was a flurry of action Monday as teams locked up pending free agents. Most notable were cornerback Delvin Breaux and linebacker Simoni Lawrence re-signing with the Hamilton TigerCats while receiver Bryan Burnham and Canadian offensive lineman Hunter Steward remained with B.C.

Only Hamilton (Jeremiah Masoli) and Winnipeg Blue Bombers (Matt Nichols) head into free agency with establishe­d starters under contract. That should leave no shortage of suitors for both Mitchell and Harris once Reilly goes off the market.

Mitchell, 28, has led Calgary to four Grey Cup appearance­s (winning two) and captured the CFL’s outstandin­g player award twice (2016, ’18) since becoming the club’s starter in 2014 while amassing a 69-15-2 record. The native of Katy, Tex., worked out for seven NFL teams this winter but hasn’t signed a contract and the talk is if Mitchell decides to remain in Canada he’ll consider all offers.

On Monday, Calgary president/GM John Hufnagel said he’s optimistic about resigning Mitchell. If Hufnagel does, though, the question becomes at what cost. The Stampeders’ list of pending free agents includes stalwart defensive linemen Micah Johnson and Ja’Gared Davis, young receiver DaVaris Daniels and offensive lineman Spencer Wilson.

“I’ve given a lot of players what I think are fair offers,” Hufnagel said on Monday. “Sometimes I’ve thought I’ve had a deal and the player has gone AWOL.

“It’s been a very confusing, stressful type of couple weeks. You just have to deal with it. That’s the way the game is now.”

Harris is coming off his best CFL season. The 32-year-old establishe­d career highs in pass attempts (615), completion­s (431) and yards (5,116) while sporting an impressive 70-per-cent completion percentage.

Harris threw a CFL-record six TD passes in Ottawa’s 4627 East Division final win over Hamilton. But he and the Redblacks fell short in the Grey Cup 27-16 to Calgary.

Teams missing out on Reilly, Mitchell or Harris would be left to consider a second tier of available freeagent quarterbac­ks. That group would include Zach Collaros (Saskatchew­an), Travis Lulay and Jonathon Jennings (both B.C.). Kevin Glenn, 39, is a longtime CFL starter who didn’t throw a pass last year backing up Reilly while Brandon Bridge, 26, of Mississaug­a, Ont., started some games the past two seasons with the Riders.

But there’s more than just quarterbac­ks. Derel Walker (28, two-time CFL all-star coming off knee injury) and Greg Ellingson (four 1,000-yard seasons, three straight with Ottawa) top the list of eligible receivers while the defensive lineman pool includes Willie Jefferson (28, 10 sacks last year with Saskatchew­an), Shawn Lemon (30, 11 sacks last year with B.C.) and Odell Willis (34, 11 sacks with Edmonton).

Also expected to garner attention are linebacker Larry Dean (29, 96 tackles, East Division’s top defensive player last year with Hamilton) and offensive linemen SirVincent Rogers (32, right tackle in Ottawa) and Sukh Chungh (26, missed just three starts in four years with Winnipeg).

 ?? MARK TAYLOR / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Mike Reilly is expected to earn around $700,000 annually in his next contract, rumoured to be with the Lions.
MARK TAYLOR / THE CANADIAN PRESS Mike Reilly is expected to earn around $700,000 annually in his next contract, rumoured to be with the Lions.
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