The Niagara Falls Review

Late touchdowns lift Stamps to 28-14 win over Tiger-Cats

Manziel’s CFL debut will have to wait for Hamilton

- DONNA SPENCER

CALGARY — After settling for field goals, the Calgary Stampeders finally broke through with two fourth-quarter touchdowns in a 28-14 win over the Hamilton Tiger-Cats on Saturday.

Calgary’s first five trips to the red zone — within 20 yards of the goal-line — yielded four field goals and an intercepti­on.

But quarterbac­k Bo Levi Mitchell threw a 15-yard touchdown pass to Kamar Jorden and Don Jackson rushed for a 44-yard touchdown in the final quarter.

Terry Williams and Jackson both ran for two-point converts for the hosts in the season-opener for both Canadian Football League teams.

“When you settle for field goals, you get a little nervous,” Calgary head coach Dave Dickenson said. “You really do, because you’re missing opportunit­ies to really put a gap between you and the opponent.

“It was a grind. It’s early season. I don’t think it’s always going to be pretty.

“The team we played is a good football team and it’s going to be a team that’s going to win a lot of games, so for us to grind it out at home in a hard-fought game, that says a lot about our guys.”

Rene Paredes kicked field goals from 22, 17, 29 and 19 yards in front of an announced 23,717 at McMahon Stadium.

Cats quarterbac­k Jeremiah Masoli rushed for a touchdown.

Lirim Hajrullahu kicked field goals from 41 and 43 yards for the Tiger-Cats, who have lost 13 in a row to the Stampeders. Hamilton’s last win at McMahon was in 2004.

Former Heisman winner Johnny Manziel did not see action as Masoli’s backup, so Manziel’s CFL debut will have to wait.

Masoli moved the Ticat offence efficientl­y with an 82 per cent completion rate in the first half and 69 per cent overall. But the Ticats struggled to finish drives.

“We just had a bunch of missed opportunit­ies,” Masoli said. “We just kept shooting ourselves in the foot. Against a team like this, you can’t do that.”

Trailing by a touchdown with less than two minutes remaining in the game, the Ticats were on the march to Calgary’s end zone when veteran Calgary defensive back Brandon Smith intercepte­d Masoli.

“We had the ball with a chance to score at the end to win,” Masoli said. “You can’t throw a pick like that. That’s on me.”

Masoli completed 25 of 36 passes for 344 yards. Mitchell was 17-for-32 for 297 yards and was intercepte­d once.

“Ultimately it’s a Week 1 win that we grinded away and made the plays when we had to,” Mitchell said.

“We understand what it is and the monster we are in, which is an 18-game season, so we have time to put it together.”

Kickoff was under cloudy skies and a temperatur­e of 12 degrees with a shower moving through late in the third quarter.

When reporters scrummed Calgary receiver Juwan Brescacin after, his teammates roared their approval. Brescacin’s onehanded catch in the air for a 42yard-play in the second quarter was a highlight-reel grab.

“It should be in the top-10 catches of the year,” Smith said.

Emanuel Davis, who spent the last five seasons in Hamilton, and middle linebacker Alex Singleton, the CFL’s defensive player of the year in 2017, led Calgary in tackles with eight apiece.

Cornerback Patrick Levels had three knock-downs.

Hamilton (41) and Calgary (40) rank first and second in the CFL in the number of returning players from last season.

Hamilton is in Edmonton to take on the Eskimos on Friday. The Stampeders go east to Toronto to play the Argos Saturday.

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Hamilton Tiger-Cats quarterbac­k Jeremiah Masoli, left, scrambles away from the Stampeders’ Micah Johnson during second-half CFL action in Calgary on Saturday.
JEFF MCINTOSH THE CANADIAN PRESS Hamilton Tiger-Cats quarterbac­k Jeremiah Masoli, left, scrambles away from the Stampeders’ Micah Johnson during second-half CFL action in Calgary on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada