The Niagara Falls Review

Reilly expected to return to B.C., Lions president LeLacheur says

QB has filed grievance against team over nonpayment of money

- GEMMA KARSTENS-SMITH

VANCOUVER — When the B.C. Lions return to training camp, club president Rick LeLacheur expects star quarterbac­k Mike Reilly to be tossing the football with his teammates.

LeLacheur told a virtual town hall for season-ticket holders he’s “confident” Reilly will be back with the Lions when the Canadian Football League returns sometime in 2021.

His comments come after a league source confirmed last week the 35-year-old QB has filed a grievance against the Lions, reportedly over the nonpayment of guaranteed money.

LeLacheur said he will not discuss specific details of a player’s contract, but noted Reilly is “an integral member of the B.C. Lions football club.”

“In 2019, we signed Mike to a four-year contract because we believed in him not only as a winning quarterbac­k but also an outstandin­g leader in the locker room and his desire to support our community programs. That belief has not changed,” the president said.

Reilly was a free agent in February 2019 when he signed a four-year, $2.9-million deal with B.C. following six seasons with the Edmonton Eskimos. The deal brought the native of Kennewick, Wash., back to the team where he started his CFL career in 2010.

The contract reportedly included $250,000 fully guaranteed and Reilly still expected to receive the money after the league cancelled the 2020 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Ed Hervey, who brought Reilly back to B.C., resigned as the club’s GM on Oct. 16, citing personal reasons. Just 10 days later,

“In 2019, we signed Mike to a four-year contract because we believed in him ... That belief has not changed.” RICK LELACHEUR B.C. LIONS PRESIDENT

franchise owner David Braley passed away at the age of 79.

LeLacheur said the club is working with Braley’s estate to “determine the path of a new owner.”

Reilly has become a face of the CFL over his decade-long career. He earned MVP honours in 2015 after helping Edmonton to a Grey Cup title, and led the league in passing yards three years in a row, from 2016 through ’18.

In 2019, he threw for 3,897 yards with 20 TDs and 15 intercepti­ons in 16 regular-season games as B.C. (5-13) finished last in the West Division standings.

The season was “a huge dis

appointmen­t to us,” LeLacheur said Tuesday.

“We did not expect to end up with such a losing record,” he said.

The dismal results led to the firing of rookie head coach DeVone Claybrooks. Former Ottawa Redblacks bench boss Rick Campbell was hired to replaced Claybrooks in December 2019.

“I stood on the other sideline playing against B.C. in 2019 and I saw it as a (team that) lost a couple of tough games early in the season,” Campbell said Tuesday. “You’re not dealing with bad football players. I think it was a really good core group.”

The team has brought in “a few more pieces of the puzzle” who will complement the players remaining from the 2019 squad, the coach added.

“Even though we didn’t play this year, there’s a group of guys that understand what it’s like to be a B.C. Lion — and the coaches as well — and I think that’s invaluable,” Campbell said.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Mike Reilly signed a four-year, $2.9-million deal with B.C. in February 2019. The contract reportedly included $250,000 fully guaranteed and Reilly still expected to receive the money after the CFL cancelled the 2020 season due to the pandemic.
DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Mike Reilly signed a four-year, $2.9-million deal with B.C. in February 2019. The contract reportedly included $250,000 fully guaranteed and Reilly still expected to receive the money after the CFL cancelled the 2020 season due to the pandemic.

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