The Hamilton Spectator

Ticats trade for ... a QB

- DREW EDWARDS

Like everything else these days, it’s all about Johnny Manziel.

An insane turn of events on Friday saw the Hamilton TigerCats acquire a future Hall-of-Fame defensive end Charleston Hughes in exchange for, essentiall­y, a fourth-round draft only to flip him to the Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s for quarterbac­k Vernon Adams.

The Hughes deal kind of made sense. He’s an aging pass rusher and a defensive line featuring Hughes, fellow American Adrian Tracy and Canadian Justin Capicciott­i would have been excellent. But the Ticats were third in the CFL in sacks last year, just two off the league lead: Hughes was a luxury they didn’t necessaril­y need.

But they do need a backup quarterbac­k. Jeremiah Masoli is the undisputed No. 1 and has the contract extension to prove it, but with Zach Collaros gone, the Ticats had very little by way of experience behind their starter. Everett Golson has thrown four CFL passes and is set to be a free agent and Dane Evans was with the team for about five minutes at the end of last season.

Which brings us to Johnny.

The convention­al wisdom has been that Manziel would sign with Hamilton and provide the Ticats with, at worst, a dynamic backup to Masoli and, at best, some legitimate competitio­n for the starting job. But his agent’s outlandish contract demands coupled Manziel’s ill-advised and since-deleted Tweets this week about selling jerseys and tickets has led to questions about how serious he really is about coming to the CFL.

Signing Adams also gives the Ticats another useful piece of informatio­n about Manziel: how does he react to the news that the club has acquired another quarterbac­k? His social media accounts have provided at least some indication to his state of mind and focus, from ComebackSZ­N merchandiz­ing to workout videos. The next few days and weeks should be even more interestin­g, given Friday’s developmen­ts.

The Ticats have been, in general, seemingly inclined to slow play the Manziel situation. While the agent issued a completely fabricated Jan. 31, the team has kicked the can down the road at pretty much every opportunit­y, giving Manziel every chance to slip up or lose focus on his own time instead of theirs.

Acquiring Adams doesn’t preclude the Ticats from signing Manziel but it gives them both insurance and leverage. Hamilton holds his CFL rights for a year and the season starts in June; they are in absolutely no hurry to get a deal done.

And that’s even truer now that they’ve acquired Adams. He doesn’t have a ton of experience with just three starts in two CFL seasons but the 75 completion percentage and four touchdowns against one intercepti­on are promising. The kid can run, too, and he’s just 25.

Ticats head coach June Jones coached him in the East-West Bowl in 2016. Here’s what he said at the time: “He can play in the NFL. Somebody’s going to give him an opportunit­y to do that,” Jones said. . “Now whether he makes it or not, it’s up to him. He has all those things that the great ones have. He gets better as the game goes on.”

Adams tweeted out his excitement about joining the Ticats shortly after the trade was announced, hardly surprising given that he was stuck behind Zach Collaros and Brandon Bridge in Saskatchew­an. Being in a good situation playing for a coach that believes in you is no doubt appealing.

That’s a lesson that Johnny Manziel hasn’t quite learned yet.

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