The Niagara Falls Review

Manziel takes it on chin in loss to Ottawa

- ADAM STANLEY

OTTAWA — This time, Johnny Manziel went down fighting.

The Montreal Alouettes quarterbac­k had a big welt on his chin after a tough 24-17 loss to the Ottawa Redblacks in his second Canadian Football League start Saturday night, but he said it was a sign he was back in the trenches after a disastrous debut.

“I want to be fighting with these guys. I want to be their quarterbac­k and the quarterbac­k of this team in this city. I’ve been sitting out for a long time and waiting for another opportunit­y,” said Manziel, a former Heisman Trophy winner.

“It sucks when you don’t see results ... . But at the end of the day when you have faith in the guy to the left or right of you, your brothers on this team, we’ll be OK.”

Manziel went 16-for-26 passing for 168 yards with no touchdowns and no intercepti­ons, far better than the week before when he had four passes picked off by the Hamilton Ticats who traded him.

But Manziel was outdueled at quarterbac­k by Ottawa’s Trevor Harris, who threw for 487 yards as the East Division-leading Redblacks (5-3) rallied in the fourth quarter. William Powell’s 10-yard touchdown run with 15 seconds left broke the tie.

Manziel nearly ran for a 17yard touchdown, but fumbled and it was recovered by centre Kristian Matte for the major to give the Alouettes (1-7) a 16-11 lead in the third quarter.

The welt on his chin came from that forced fumble, when Manziel felt like he “ran into a brick wall.”

“That defence was fast, that defence was big and aggressive. … They hit hard, they’re quick. But like I told these guys, you’re not going to take me out like that,” Manziel said.

Alouettes coach Mike Sherman said Manziel made a “drastic” improvemen­t from his last game.

“I thought he came in and threw the ball well, made some really good decisions. I thought he did a good job and he’d just be better and better,” said Sherman.

With a smile, Manziel was quick to admit “anything” was better than his last outing.

He preached the team isn’t focusing on wins and losses right now, but instead on the process.

“It sucks to lose the game, and I’m not sitting here saying I’m happy with the outcome of the game. … But as far as improvemen­t, we’re close,” he said. “We’re a lot closer than we were a week ago, and if we continue to make those strides, we’ll be OK.”

Harris hit on 44-of-54 passes in front of a crowd of 25,161. The 44 completion­s tied for second most in CFL history, one behind Henry Burris with Ottawa in 2015.

Harris also eclipsed the 15,000yard mark for his career.

“It’s a big win...,” said Redblacks coach Rick Campbell, whose team is the only squad in the East with a winning record. “I view us as a 5-3 team that has work to do.”

Harris threw his first touchdown of the game in the third quarter, a 14-yard strike to R.J. Harris, which put Ottawa ahead 11-5 — its first lead of the game.

Redblacks rookie Lewis Ward broke Luca Congi’s CFL record for most consecutiv­e field goals made by a first-year player after booting his 22nd straight score.

The record-breaker, a 15-yard attempt, tied the game at 17-17 in the fourth quarter. He made a 33-yarder earlier in the quarter to cut Montreal’s lead to 17-14.

The lone point scored in a turnover-filled first quarter came after Boris Bede put a 57-yard punt into Ottawa’s end zone for a single. The Als led 9-5 at the half.

The Redblacks are in Winnipeg (5-3) Friday, while the Alouettes are in Edmonton (5-3) Saturday.

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