Veteran receivers among final CFL cuts
Roughriders drop Bagg, Grant, Owens, while Hec Crighton winner fails to make Redblacks
It seems veteran receivers Rob Bagg, Bakari Grant and Chad Owens won’t be with the Saskatchewan Roughriders this season.
The three were reportedly among Saskatchewan’s final cuts Saturday. CFL teams have until 10 a.m. ET on Sunday to reduce their rosters to 46 active players.
Saskatchewan didn’t divulge its final moves but both Bagg and Grant took to social media to say goodbye to Riders fans while a CFL source said Owens was released.
“THANK YOU RIDER NATION,” Bagg tweeted.
Grant said on his official Twitter account: “Thank you for one of the Most fun years of football Rider Nation! Every good thing must come to an end ...#calilife.”
Teams must identify three quarterbacks and carry at least 21 Canadians. Clubs can also have up to 10 players on their practice rosters.
The six-foot, 192-pound Bagg, a native of Kingston, Ont., spent nine seasons with Saskatchewan, earning a Grey Cup ring in 2013. Bagg had 364 career catches for 4,705 yards with 24 TDs in 139 career regular season games.
Grant, 30, registered career highs in catches (84) and yards (1,033) last year, his first with Saskatchewan. The sixfoot-four, 205-pound Oakland native also spent time with Hamilton and Calgary.
Owens, 36, played just three games last season, recording 17 catches for 235 yards and a TD. He started training camp well but suffered a shoulder injury and didn’t play in Saskatchewan’s 39-12 exhibition loss to the Calgary Stampeders on Friday night.
Owens, a nine-year CFL veteran, also spent time with Toronto and Hamilton. He helped the Argos win the Grey Cup in 2012 and was the league’s outstanding player that season after amassing a record 3,863 all-purpose yards.
In 2010, Owens claimed the John Agro Trophy as the CFL’s top special-teams performer.
Running back Ed Ilnicki, the 2017 Hec Crighton Trophy winner, was among nine players released by the Ottawa Redblacks.
“Back to Edmonton. Thankful for what I learned through Ottawa’s training camp and how I grew as a player. Journey continues,” Ilnicki tweeted Saturday.
Ilnicki ran for 31 yards on eight carries in Ottawa’s 32-15 exhibition win over Toronto Thursday in Guelph, Ont.
The five-foot-10, 220-pound Ilnicki, a native of Spruce Grove, Alta., was attending Ottawa’s training camp for the second straight year. The Redblacks selected the 22-yearold in the seventh round, No. 63 overall, and after being released last year, Ilnicki returned to Alberta to rush for 1,468 yards, setting a Canada West single-season rushing record while leading Canadian university football in rushing touchdowns (11) and carries (196).
He helped Alberta (3-5) earn the fourth and final Canada West post-season berth before the Golden Bears dropped a 39-22 first-round decision to eventual division champion Calgary (7-1).
Running back Cedric O’Neal (who looked good against Toronto Thursday with 15 carries for 78 yards, but also fumbled) was another casualty, likely beaten out for a job by veteran Mossis Madu.
Receiver Jonathan Epps was among 12 players released by Toronto. He had two catches for nine yards Thursday night.
The Bombers released 28 players on Saturday, with eight more accepting practice roster assignments. The most notable cut was 2017 first overall draft pick Faith Ekakitie. The big defensive lineman struggled to adjust to the Canadian game in his first season and didn’t show much improvement in this year’s training camp.
The Bombers gave him a three-year contract last year and had already paid him $23,000 of his roughly $90,000 salary for this season.
Also sent packing was defensive back Brian Walker, a regular for the Bombers last season, and former NFL receiver Rueben Randle, who caught a touchdown Friday.