The Daily Courier

Trevor Harris’s hat trick plus two puts Eskimos over Argonauts

- By DAN RALPH

TORONTO — Trevor Harris was a one-man show Friday night.

Harris threw three TD passes and ran for two others to earn the Edmonton Eskimos a 41-26 win over the Toronto Argonauts. He finished 28-of-41 passing for 420 yards, his 22nd straight game with 20 or more completion­s to stand two short of the CFL record held by former Eskimo-Argo Ricky Ray.

“There’s not much to say about Trev,” said Eskimos receiver DaVaris Daniels, who had five catches for 155 yards. “I think he should be in the conversati­on for MOP right now.

“He’s elite, man, he’s the leader of our team. He’s a man on a mission and I think everyone is seeing it right now.”

Harris wasn’t immediatel­y available for comment as he was selected to undergo a postgame drug test. But Eskimos head coach Jason Maas gushed about his quarterbac­k.

“He did a great job,” Maas said. “He was commanding the offence the way it needs to be commanded.

“There’ll always be stuff to improve upon but when he’s directing our offence the way he was tonight, it’s going to be hard to stop.”

Toronto pulled to within 34-26 on McLeod Bethel-Thompson’s 28-yard TD pass to Brandon Burks at 5:24 of the fourth. But Harris cemented the victory with a one-yard TD run at 11:44 that gave Edmonton (6-3) it’s winning margin as the offence accumulate­d 509 total yards.

Both teams started strong, each scoring points on their first three offensive possession­s. But Edmonton recorded TDs while Toronto settled for three field goals in falling behind 21-9.

“We started off fast offensivel­y and scored touchdowns,” said Maas. “That first half, they (Argos) played very well offensivel­y and our defence did a very good job in the redzone of shutting them down and holding them to field goals.

“We finally offensivel­y played up to our capabiliti­es for most of the game.”

Edmonton earned a second straight win overall and third consecutiv­e over the Argos. But it was the club’s first in Toronto since 2016 heading into a big contest next week against the West Division-leading Winnipeg Blue Bombers (7-2), then the annual home-andhome Labour Day series with the arch-rival Calgary Stampeders (5-3).

“We don’t care about the next three weeks, it’s all about next week,” Maas said. “We play at home against Winnipeg and that’s all our focus is on.

“It’s a big-time game at home, it’s big because it’s Winnipeg, it’s big because they’ve got one on us already. We need to go out and defend our turf.”

Edmonton dropped a 28-21 decision to the Bombers in Winnipeg on June 27 but is 4-0 at Commonweal­th Stadium this year.

Greg Ellingson was Harris’s favourite target with 10 catches for 170 yards and a pair of major scores.

Toronto (1-7) was chasing a second straight home win. It beat Winnipeg 28-27 in its last contest Aug. 1.

Harris, who began his CFL career with Toronto in 2012, found Ellingson on a 10-yard TD pass at 13:24 of the third before Sean Whyte’s 13-yard field goal at 4:48 of the fourth put Edmonton ahead 34-19.

Toronto got its first TD of the game on Bethel-Thompson’s one-yard scoring strike to S.J. Green at 6:13 of the third. The 83-yard, nine-play drive cut Edmonton’s lead to 24-19.

“The name of the game is scoring touchdowns and we got too many field goals,” said Bethel-Thompson. “We started quick, the whole first quarter they couldn’t stop us.

“Just scoring field goals is not the same momentum. We have to put up points early with touchdowns.”

Bethel-Thompson was 19-of-26 passing for 200 yards and two TDs before a BMO Field gathering of 16,490 on the opening day of the CNE. It marked the first time in three home games Toronto announced its home attendance.

“The offence didn’t play poor in my mind, they just didn’t do things good enough,” said Toronto head coach Corey Chamblin. “The defence didn’t do the things we needed to do to help them out.

“Whether it’s East or West, we have to learn to win games.”

Edmonton defeated Toronto 26-0 on July 25 at Commonweal­th Stadium.

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