Penticton Herald

B.C. Lions score road win against Montreal Alouettes

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B.C. breaks through, pulls away to prevail over Als in Montreal

MONTREAL (CP) — T.J. Lee and Anthony Orange had intercepti­ons for fourth-quarter touchdowns to lift the B.C. Lions to their first road victory of the season, a 32-14 win over the Montreal Alouettes. But the night wasn’t all good new for the Lions, who lost quarterbac­k Travis Lulay to a separated left shoulder.

The game was still either team’s for the taking when Lee picked off Antonio Pipkin with three minutes left and ran 37 yards for a touchdown. Orange then sent the Molson Percival Stadium crowd of 15,346 streaming toward the exits when he picked off the struggling Als quarterbac­k for a 54-yard touchdown return a minute later.

Bryan Burnham scored B.C.’s other TD, while Trevaughn Campbell’s thrilling 87yard run was Montreal’s only major on the night.

Lulay’s replacemen­t Jonathon Jennings completed 19-of-30 passes for 180 yards with one touchdown and one intercepti­on. Burnham had five catches for 104 yards. Pipkin was 11-for-22 for 95 yards, with four intercepti­ons. He was sacked six times.

The Lions improved to 5-6, while the Als, who lost for the first time in three games, dropped to 3-9.

Friday’s storyline was almost as much about the quarterbac­ks who weren’t on the field as the ones who were.

Lulay was knocked out of the game for the second straight week. After taking a huge hit on the chin in last week’s 26-14 home win over Ottawa, Lulay was injured again on the Lions’ first drive of the game Friday when he was hit by John Bowman. Lulay headed to the locker-room clutching his left shoulder. It was the unlucky quarterbac­k’s fourth injury in five starts against the Alouettes.

Lulay was replaced by Jennings, and the backup’s first play from scrimmage was a 16-yard pass that found Burnham in the end zone for a 7-0 lead at 3:33 of the first quarter.

Pipkin’s shaky performanc­e had to have stung for Johnny Manziel. A day earlier, a healthy Manziel had wondered aloud whether the club had lost faith in him. The Heisman Trophy-winning QB said he was fully recovered from a concussion for the previous two games, and thought he’d “be the guy.”

Manziel sat for the third straight game, and a handful of fans above the Als’ bench voiced their displeasur­e after a couple of Pipkin sacks by chanting “We want Johnny!”

Ty Long made it 10-0 B.C. early in the second quarter with a 25-year-field goal.

Montreal finally got on the board at 7:16 of the second, with a 46-yard field goal from Boris Bede, and his 29-yarder five minutes later cut the Lions’ lead to 10-6 heading into the halftime break.

After the Als got a point on Bede’s 59-yard punt into the end zone, Long connected from 30 yards to make it 13-7 for B.C.

Campbell injected some life into what had been a dreary game when he pounced on a field-goal attempt that was blocked by Chip Cox and ran 87 yards with nothing but open field in front of him late in the third to put Montreal up 14-13 with one quarter left.

Long made sure the Als’ lead was shortlived, connecting on a 45-yard field goal to put the Lions back up by two points and B.C. never looked back in a dominant fourth.

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 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Bo Lokombo of the B.C. Lions, right, sacks Montreal Alouettes quarterbac­k Antonio Pipkin during first-half CFL action in Montreal on Friday evening.The Lions won 32-14.
The Canadian Press Bo Lokombo of the B.C. Lions, right, sacks Montreal Alouettes quarterbac­k Antonio Pipkin during first-half CFL action in Montreal on Friday evening.The Lions won 32-14.
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