The Niagara Falls Review

Two QBs with something to prove will face off when Bombers host Alouettes

- JUDY OWEN

WINNIPEG — Quarterbac­ks Matt Nichols and Johnny Manziel have a lot to prove on Friday.

Nichols wants to help end the Winnipeg Blue Bombers’ fourgame losing skid with a victory over Manziel and his Montreal Alouettes, and ensure he doesn’t get pulled at halftime like he did in a 32-27 loss to Saskatchew­an on Sept. 8.

Manziel will try to show that he deserves to play more as he gets his third CFL start after recovering from a concussion in August and the flu last week.

Nichols threw three intercepti­ons in the loss to the Roughrider­s, with two more not counting because of penalties.

Getting yanked was an experience the veteran pivot doesn’t want to repeat and he had a “great” week of practice.

“I don’t know if it lit extra fire, but obviously it was a feeling that I hadn’t had in a long, long time, and one that I definitely don’t want again,” Nichols said after Thursday’s walk-through.

“I’ve always said the past is the past. Sometimes it’s easier to say it and harder to actually have your mind believe it.”

Manziel was traded to Montreal from Hamilton on July 22. He last played on Aug. 11 when he suffered a concussion in a game against Ottawa. The former Heisman Trophy winner backed up Antonio Pipkin the past two weeks, but said last week that he could have played.

“Obviously, I might have let my frustratio­n get the better of me,” Manziel said after arriving in Winnipeg.

“I could have kept that in and kept that as a private matter, but neverthele­ss I want to play and (am) here to play and I came up here to play. “

Manziel is 0-2 in his starts, completing a total of 27 of 46 pass attempts for 272 yards and four intercepti­ons.

The picks were all thrown in his CFL debut, a 50-11 loss to the Tiger-Cats.

Pipkin is 2-2 as a starter. Montreal (3-9) is coming off a loss to the B.C. Lions, a game in which Pipkin threw four intercepti­ons.

Even though Manziel’s NFL career with the Cleveland Browns flamed out and his offfield troubles kept making headlines, he’s feeling pretty good about his comeback.

“Personally, on and off the field, I’ve come a long way from December of 2015 and the last time I was on a football team and walking onto a football field,” he said.

“It’s been an interestin­g journey. It’s taken a lot to get here, a lot of people here on the outside. Life’s changed a lot for me, but I’m happy with where I’m at and glad to be back to football.”

His reputation of being a talented, mobile quarterbac­k who can burn defences has stuck with the former Texas A&M star, even though his body of CFL work is small.

“There isn’t a lot of film out there, but his reputation precedes himself,” Bombers linebacker Adam Bighill said.

“We know he’s capable of extending plays and doing a lot of things with his legs.”

The outcome of Friday’s game could have big implicatio­ns on Winnipeg’s quest to make the playoffs. The Bombers (5-7) are in fifth place in the West Division behind the B.C. Lions (5-6).

Winnipeg head coach Mike O’Shea acknowledg­ed a loss might make it “a little more difficult” to qualify for the post-season.

“In all these games we’ve had very good opportunit­ies to change the outcome, but we maybe haven’t made the most of those opportunit­ies,” O’Shea said of the losing streak.

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