The News (New Glasgow)

Loney Bowl between SMU, Acadia back on

Court orders Atlantic championsh­ip game to be played by Tuesday

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A Nova Scotia judge has ruled that the Atlantic university football championsh­ip should proceed.

Justice Deborah Smith’s ruling yesterday gives Saint Mary’s University a chance to take on the Acadia Axemen in the Loney Bowl.

An issue over the eligibilit­y of one of the Halifax university’s players prompted the governing body for university athletics in the region to cancel the game and award the title to Acadia.

However, Saint Mary’s challenged the decision in the courts and Smith’s ruling followed two days of arguments this weekend.

It was planned to have the game played Tuesday to determine which team will take on Ontario’s Western University at the Uteck Bowl next Saturday.

Acadia lawyer John Keith told reporters outside the courtroom that the university is an “innocent party” in the complex legal dispute, which has spanned two provinces.

Keith said if Tuesday’s game would be played in a “haphazard” manner if it were to go forward, and wouldn’t give players adequate time to recover before the Uteck Bowl.

“It would be a game that would do a disservice to the town, to the university, to the fans of Acadia,” he said. “The asterisk in the footnotes of history should not be beside Acadia’s name.”

Saint Mary’s Associate VicePresid­ent Margaret Murphy said the university is pleased the court has dealt with the issue in such a timely manner.

“We can certainly see that our coaches and our players are ready to play,” Murphy said.

“It would be very safe to assume that the other coaches players have the same attitude and determinat­ion to take the field as well.”

Court heard that the player at the centre of the bid is Archelaus Jack, a wide receiver with Saint Mary’s.

The receiver hauled in a 22yard pass from quarterbac­k Kaleb Scott in the final game that qualified the team for the match against Acadia.

In its notice of motion brought before the Ontario Superior Court of Justice, the lawyers argued that U Sports — which oversees Canadian university sport — had determined the men’s football eligibilit­y policies in questions “were ambiguous.

The national title game will be played Nov. 25 in Hamilton.

In other regional finals on Saturday, the defending Vanier Cup champion Laval Rouge et Or got past the Montreal Carabins 25-22 for the RSEQ’s Dunsmore Cup; Western routed the Laurier Golden Hawks 75-32 in the OUA’s Yates Cup; and the Calgary Dinos used a 59-yard record field goal with no time left in the fourth quarter to edge the UBC Thunderbir­ds 44-43 in the Canada West’s Hardy Cup.

Calgary welcomes Laval in the Mitchell Bowl next Saturday.

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