The Prince George Citizen

CFL has its version of the wild West

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It’s shaping up to be quite a finish in the West Division.

Just four points separate second from fifth in the conference standings heading into the final third of the regular season. The Calgary Stampeders (10-2) are first, four points ahead of the Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s (8-5).

The Edmonton Eskimos (7-6) are third, just two points ahead of both the B.C. Lions (6-6) and Winnipeg Blue Bombers (6-7).

Edmonton and Winnipeg face each other twice down the stretch, including Saturday night at Commonweal­th Stadium. They’ll square off again Nov. 3 in Alberta.

The Bombers will also meet Calgary and Saskatchew­an as well as Ottawa. The Lions, with a game in hand on Winnipeg, will play West Division rivals four times – Calgary twice, Edmonton and Saskatchew­an – in addition to the Redblacks and Toronto Argonauts.

Edmonton’s other contests are versus Saskatchew­an, B.C. and Ottawa.

The Riders visit the Montreal Alouettes on Sunday before finishing their regular season with four division games.

There’s also a race for first in the East Division. Ottawa (8-5) holds down top spot with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats (6-7) four points behind. Toronto (3-9) and Montreal (3-10) are tied for third and both need a miracle to make the playoffs as they’re three wins behind both B.C. and Winnipeg in the crossover scenario.

Hamilton hosts B.C. on Saturday after losing 35-32 in Vancouver last weekend. Then the Ticats finish their regular season against Eastern rivals - including a crucial homeand-home with Ottawa Oct. 19 and Oct. 27.

Ottawa also plays Toronto with contests against Winnipeg and Edmonton as well.

NO SLOWING DOWN: Veteran running back Marcus Thigpen had an 82-yard touchdown run in Saskatchew­an’s 30-29 road win over Toronto on Saturday night, his third TD this season covering 80 or more yards.

The 32-year-old Thigpen also had a 97yard kickoff return touchdown in a 30-25 loss to Ottawa on Sept. 15 and an 80-yard TD run July 20 in a 31-20 victory over Hamilton.

“That’s what I’ve been known for over the years, my speed,” Thigpen said. “The offensive line is blocking well for us, the holes are big and once I get to the second level I feel like there’s nobody that can catch me.”

The five-foot-nine, 195-pound dynamo has spent time with eight NFL clubs (twice with both Buffalo and Miami) and three CFL teams (Hamilton, second tenure with Saskatchew­an) since 2009. He’s excelled as a receiver, running back and kick returner.

Thigpen has scored 23 career TDs – NFL and CFL – five different ways. Six have come as a receiver, eight on the ground, three via kickoffs, three on punts and another three on missed field goals.

Thigpen has rushed for 383 yards on 43 carries this season (8.9-yard average).

SECOND-GUESSING: Hamilton has become a playoff contender under head coach June Jones, but he’s receiving plenty of criticism for a late decision in the Ticats’ 35-32 overtime loss Saturday night to B.C.

Hamilton led 28-21 with just under a minute remaining in regulation when Jones had Lirim Hajrullahu punt for the single rather than try a 44-yard field goal. A successful boot would’ve made it a two-possession game.

Hajrullahu had missed from 42 yards in the first half but made kicks of 50 and 47 yards in the second half. His single put Hamilton ahead 29-21, but Jonathon Jennings drove B.C. 59 yards, hitting Bryan Burnham on a 20-yard TD and two-point conversion to force overtime.

B.C.’s Ty Long hit the game-winning field goal in the second extra session to cement the victory.

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