The Province

Durant aims to get moving against Lions

Veteran QB and Alouettes’ anemic offence facing stiff test against aggressive B.C. defensive crew

- BILL BEACON THE CANADIAN PRESS

MONTREAL — Darian Durant is hoping for a breakout game for the Montreal Alouettes.

The 34-year-old quarterbac­k has had some promising moments in his first two games, which the Alouettes split, but the statistics are lagging and Montreal is second to last in the nine-team CFL with an average of only 18 points scored per game. Their defence, which has allowed a league low 39 points, has kept them in both of their games so far.

Durant hopes the attack gets on track when the Alouettes host the B.C. Lions (1-1) tonight at Percival Molson Stadium.

“We’re very close,” said the former Saskatchew­an stalwart, who was Montreal’s top off-season acquisitio­n.

“When we watched the film (of a 23-19 loss in Edmonton last week), we saw how many yards we left on the field, whether from penalties or mental errors, or you name it.

“This week has been all about execution, making sure we’re in the right places and execute. How you hurt yourself is if you get down to the red zone and you can’t score. Then you’re setting yourself up for disaster.”

It was expected that the Alouettes offence would take time to jell under a new quarterbac­k and a rebuilt offensive line and that’s what has happened.

Durant has passed for only 399 yards and the team ranks near the bottom in most offensive statistics, except rushing, where B.C. led by Jeremiah Johnson is first with 227 yards and Montreal, with Tyrell Sutton lugging the ball, is second with 205.

Now Durant will go up against a B.C. defence that stuffed Toronto’s Ricky Ray in a 28-15 win last Friday, a week after Ray threw for more than 500 yards against Hamilton.

Montreal coach Jacques Chapdelain­e, a former Lions offensive coordinato­r, gave much of the credit for that to B.C. coach Wally Buono and defensive coordinato­r Mark Washington.

“One thing they will do is come up with something specific to counter whatever you do offensivel­y,” said Chapdelain­e. “Against Toronto, they basically tripled (receiver) S.J. Green and they did a good job of it.

“They played a different kind of man coverage against Toronto than they did against (Edmonton). They’ve got to face Darian Durant and he’s a different quarterbac­k than Ricky is. And we also put more emphasis on the run game, so that will fall into the equation.”

One positive is that Montreal has yet to allow a sack. It’s the first time a CFL team has opened a season without giving up a sack in its first two games since Hamilton in 2001.

“We’re just playing well together,” said veteran tackle Jovan Olafioye. “We gelled well in camp and Durant is helping us too by getting the ball out and avoiding sacks, so he’s making us look good. We want to give up no sacks for the whole season.”

Buono, who had his team practice in Kingston, Ont., this week rather than return to Vancouver with only six days between games, wasn’t concerned with sacking Durant.

“I’m not big into sacks,” he told his team’s website. “I’m into affecting the quarterbac­k, whether it’s knocking balls down or putting pressure on him.

“How you affect the quarterbac­k has a bigger say in a game than the number of sacks.”

It will be a first game against B.C. for Olafioye and defensive back Ryan Phillips, two more of Montreal’s top acquisitio­ns.

Jabar Westerman, Seydou Haidara, Stefan Logan and Ernest Jackson are other former Lions.

“It’s just another game for us,” said Olafioye. “There’s more emphasis because we all came from there, but we’re just excited to get this win.”

 ?? — POSTMEDIA FILES ?? Jovan Olafioye faces his former team for the first time when the Als host the Lions on Friday night. Montreal’s offensive line has yet to give up a sack.
— POSTMEDIA FILES Jovan Olafioye faces his former team for the first time when the Als host the Lions on Friday night. Montreal’s offensive line has yet to give up a sack.

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