The Hamilton Spectator

Lions have Canadian will at skill positions

- BOB DUFF

ALLEN PARK, MICH. — Luke Willson grew up in one of the few Canadian regions where the Canadian Football League held little relevance.

T.J. Jones grew up Canadian entirely because of the CFL.

Together, these two unique Canucks provide the Canadian content in training camp with a National Football League team right across the border from Ontario — the Detroit Lions.

For Willson, it is the culminatio­n of a boyhood dream.

“Everyone knows now I was a Lions fan,” the 28-year-old tight end from nearby LaSalle, Ont., said. “Back in the Herman Moore-Robert Porcher-Barry Sanders days, that was kind of my childhood.”

Signed by the Lions as a free agent in March after spending his first five NFL seasons with the Seattle Seahawks, Willson has been able to make his childhood dream a reality.

“It is very cool,” Willson said. “I was signing a few autographs (following a training-camp workout) and heard a bunch of people shouting that they were from LaSalle. Pretty neat.”

As a kid one Halloween, Willson went out trick-or-treating suited up as Sanders.

“When I was younger, it was all about Barry Sanders,” Willson said.

Among those able to see Willson at work with what is basically his hometown NFL team has been his dad Mike, who didn’t share his son’s Lions pride.

“It’s actually kind a funny story,” Luke Willson explained. “My whole family were (Green Bay) Packers fans except for me. I was a big Lions fan growing up, so as you can imagine, it was a struggle for a long time for me.”

The Lions have won one playoff game since 1957.

But Luke’s move to Motown won over his father.

“He just left,” Willson said after a recent workout. “He had on a Lions hat and a Lions Tshirt.”

Jones is a Canadian more by happenstan­ce. The fifth-year Lions wide receiver was born in

Winnipeg in 1992 while his dad Andre was playing for the CFL Blue Bombers, but moved back to the U.S. as a young boy. However, Jones considers himself to be every bit as Canadian as back bacon or a Coffee Crisp bar.

“I take it to heart,” Jones, 26, said of his Canadian status. “I wasn’t an American citizen technicall­y until I was 17. Growing up, definitely I identified (as a Canadian) and tried to learn as

much as I could about the culture and what being a Canadian really means, without actually living there.

“I really try to stay on top of little things that can kind of set you apart as a Canadian.”

That includes keeping tabs on his dad’s old squad.

“I definitely follow the Blue Bombers,” Jones said. “I follow a couple of other teams because I have friends playing there.”

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Detroit Lions tight end Luke Willson grew up in LaSalle, Ont., as the lone Lions fans in his family, but that is changing now that he plays for them.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Detroit Lions tight end Luke Willson grew up in LaSalle, Ont., as the lone Lions fans in his family, but that is changing now that he plays for them.

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