The Hamilton Spectator

CLASSIC LETDOWNS FOLLOW LABOUR DAY GLORY Tiger-Cats have lost 24 of last 30 games the week after Labour Day

- TERI PECOSKIE

It turns out fans aren’t the only ones who suffer from Labour Day hangovers.

Over the past three decades or so, the Hamilton Tiger-Cats have lost the vast majority of their games immediatel­y following the Classic — even in their best seasons — and their record is especially bad when they’re up against the same team back to back. The proof is in the numbers. Not counting this year’s win over Toronto or the two years (2013 and 1995) in which they didn’t play on Labour Day, the Tiger-Cats are 19-10-1 in their past 30 Classic appearance­s. The next week, they’re 6-24.

“I’m not even stressing about it,” said cornerback Delvin Breaux, who had a season-high five tackles against the Argonauts on Monday. “That’s in the past. It’s a whole new week, a whole new team, and we just have to come out with the same intensity we did this past game.”

The Tiger-Cats almost always host the Classic, for instance, and almost always play their next game on the road. On top of that, they’re usually coming off a short week and often facing the same opponent, usually Toronto.

Since 1986, Hamilton has been up against the same team the week of and the week after Labour Day 10 times. On nine occasions, it’s been the Argonauts, who also host the Tiger-Cats in the rematch Saturday.

Just once — in 2015 — have the Tiger-Cats won both matchups.

“I’ve been saying for years now, it’s hard to win back to back in this league,” centre Mike Filer said.

Courtney Stephen, coming off his fifth straight Classic appearance, agreed. “It’s pro football,” said the safety. “You’ve got to give credit to different teams and the staffs for being able to adjust and fix the holes in the game plan from week to week.”

For Toronto, that means finding a way to rein in Jeremiah Masoli and his core of runners and receivers, who punished the Argonauts with 543 yards of offence on Monday. It also means getting its own ground game going — despite having the worst numbers in the league against the rush, the Hamilton defence held Toronto to 55 yards on 15 carries.

Even though history isn’t on their side in the wake of Labour Day, there is nonetheles­s a deep-seated belief in the

Hamilton locker-room that this year is different.

“We can’t look at that (historic trends),” Filer said, echoing Breaux. “We need to focus on making correction­s to mistakes we made in the game. Every year is a new year, every week is a new week and every game is a new game.” NOTES: The season could be over for receiver Jalen Saunders, who went down with an apparent knee injury Monday. “I’m not sure exactly what it all entails, but it sounds like he’s out for the year,” head coach June Jones said.

 ??  ?? Danny McManus and the rest of the Hamilton Tiger Cats bench weren’t in a happy place after getting blasted 48-18 by the Toronto Argonauts on Sept. 10, 2005.
Danny McManus and the rest of the Hamilton Tiger Cats bench weren’t in a happy place after getting blasted 48-18 by the Toronto Argonauts on Sept. 10, 2005.
 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Tiger-Cats receiver Darren Flutie has the ball knocked out of his hands during a week-after-Labour-Day game in Montreal in 1999, where the Alouettes laid a 52-19 drubbing on the Ticats. That came after a Labour Day win against Toronto.
CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Tiger-Cats receiver Darren Flutie has the ball knocked out of his hands during a week-after-Labour-Day game in Montreal in 1999, where the Alouettes laid a 52-19 drubbing on the Ticats. That came after a Labour Day win against Toronto.
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