The Niagara Falls Review

Williams won’t be a slotback in the saddle

Won’t use Quick Six in a TD celebratio­n

- DAN RALPH

Quick Six will be safe Monday.

Edmonton slotback D’haquille (Duke) Williams has been very innovative this year regarding his post-touchdown celebratio­ns. But should he score in the Eskimos’ contest against Calgary on Monday, he won’t be incorporat­ing the Stampeders’ mascot in an elaborate end-zone skit.

Quick Six, a horse ridden by Chelsea Drake, charges down the sideline at McMahon Stadium after every Stampeders touchdown.

“That’s over the line,” Williams said Thursday during a CFL conference call. “I don’t know how to ride the horse.”

The colourful Williams received an objectiona­ble conduct flag after he and two teammates crawled through an end zone advertisin­g placard in Edmonton’s 40-24 home win against the Montreal Alouettes on Aug. 18.

The night before, Winnipeg receiver Darvin Adams celebrated after a 72-yard TD grab in the Bombers’ 44-21 home loss against Ottawa by taking a TV camera from a cameraman and filming his teammates as they came to congratula­te him. There was no penalty on the play despite the CFL having a rule at the time that prohibited the use of props in touchdown celebratio­ns.

The CFL quickly amended its TD celebratio­n policy, allowing players to use props after scoring touchdowns so long as they weren’t hidden in their uniforms or the goalposts. The props also couldn’t be considered demeaning or discrimina­tory or simulate the firing of a weapon.

Under the new guidelines, Williams wouldn’t have been penalized for his actions against Montreal.

The game Monday is a big one for both teams. Calgary (8-1) sits atop the West Division, four points ahead of second-place Edmonton (6-4). But the Eskimos are just two points behind the Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s (5-4) and Winnipeg Blue Bombers (5-5), who square off Sunday in Regina.

Calgary defensive back Jamar Wall offered a simple solution regarding Williams’ end-zone celebratio­ns: Stop him from getting there in the first place.

“We’ve got to prevent him from getting there, I guess, right,” Wall said during the call. “We don’t want see it then we’ve got to keep him out of the end zone, it is what it is.

“I mean if he wants to go for (Quick Six), go for it. That’s a big animal, man.”

Williams has had plenty of opportunit­y to refine his TD celebratio­ns. He’s the CFL’s leading receiver with 51 catches for 947 yards and seven touchdown passes from Edmonton starter Mike Reilly.

The six-foot-three, 225-pound Williams said he has nothing specific in mind should he score against Calgary. But if he does, Williams added he’ll react accordingl­y.

“I’m just ready to play, honestly,” he said. “It’s a big game and a lot of emotions are going to be flying.

“We’re going to have fun in the end zone, it’s a party in the end zone everywhere we play.”

Williams, an Auburn graduate, said his celebratio­ns aren’t meant to demean or make fun of opposing defences.

“We’re just trying to have fun in the end zone because nobody sees what we do in practice, nobody watches us practise all the time and the hard work we put in,” he said. “The game is supposed to be fun.

“Whenever I score I just let all of my emotions out and just come up with stuff off the top of my head to try to get the fans into it as well. That’s all it is, it’s entertainm­ent and just having fun with it. Once you stop having fun with it, then you start questionin­g yourself and start questionin­g if you even want to play ball anymore.”

 ?? DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Edmonton Eskimos receivers Derel Walker, left, and D’haquille Williams celebrate a touchdown in a game last month. Williams said Thursday it would be “over the line” to co-opt the Calgary Stampeders’ horse mascot Quick Six in an end-zone celebratio­n. “I don’t know how to ride the horse,” he added.
DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS Edmonton Eskimos receivers Derel Walker, left, and D’haquille Williams celebrate a touchdown in a game last month. Williams said Thursday it would be “over the line” to co-opt the Calgary Stampeders’ horse mascot Quick Six in an end-zone celebratio­n. “I don’t know how to ride the horse,” he added.

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