The Province

Numbers don’t lie

Off to a great start, Streveler won’t change his style

- PAUL FRIESEN pfriesen@postmedia.com @friesensun­media

For his next trick, Chris Streveler will eliminate the lineups at Winnipeg emergency rooms and rid the city of mosquitoes.

Wait a minute — he’s already taken care of that second one.

Two games into his profession­al career, it seems there’s not much the Blue Bombers’ rookie quarterbac­k can’t do.

The popular thinking was the Bombers would do well to simply tread water while starter Matt Nichols recovered from a knee injury.

Thrown into the deep end of three-down football for the first time in his life, the 23-year-old Streveler looks like a fish in water.

If the eye test the last two weeks didn’t hook you, maybe some of these statistics will.

The man almost nobody in Winnipeg had heard of a month ago leads the CFL in touchdown passes, with six.

Streveler’s quarterbac­k rating (QUAR, 94.9) is higher than anyone who’s played two games, and if you prefer the more traditiona­l passing efficiency scale, his 109.5 rating trails only Bo Levi Mitchell of Calgary (115.7).

Streveler’s second-down conversion rate is a phenomenal 64.6%, a full 15 percentage points better than Mitchell’s, in second place.

Behind the University of South Dakota product, the Bombers are the league’s highest-scoring team, coming off a 56-10 dismantlin­g of the Montreal Alouettes, on the road,

That’s Winnipeg’s biggest blowout win in 16 years, and the most points the Bombers have scored in 17 seasons – and they did it on the road.

Yeah, the Alouettes were bad.

But, still.

“We haven’t done that, really, in whatever length of time,” head coach Mike O’Shea said. “For the guys that have been here, I don’t know that we’ve had that kind of convincing win. “So they enjoyed it.” Nobody more than Streveler, who when he wasn’t playing catch with his receivers was tucking the ball away and running for 98 yards, the first time in eight years (Buck Pierce) a Bomber quarterbac­k has done that.

Ask Streveler what he’s enjoying most about his first full-time job, though, and he doesn’t point to the touchdown passes or the cheers, but to the lessglamou­rous stuff fans don’t even see.

“I love the preparatio­n that goes into it,” he said as the Bombers got back to work, Monday. “It’s long days here. It’s a job, now. It’s a job to be as prepared as possible. It’s something I always enjoyed doing at the college level, but now especially at the profession­al level.

“I just really enjoy the daily grind of going through meetings and being out here practising and going back and watching more film, coming in early and watching film. That’s just fun.”

That’s music to the ears of a guy like O’Shea.

It seems the one thing the coach will admit has surprised him about his new quarterbac­k is the way he’s handling all this.

“You expect it out of a seasoned pro and you’re not sure what you’re going to get out of a young player,” O’Shea said. “He’s remained very even-keeled, and just keeps going back to the process of trying to get better. He doesn’t believe this is him just going out and doing it. He understand­s that football is a team sport.

“You don’t really have to even worry about any of that.”

As for the details, Streveler appears to be sorting through those like an accountant through spread sheets.

After games, Pierce, the quarterbac­ks coach, comes up with a list of things for Streveler to work on.

“That list has shrunk dramatical­ly from Week 1 to this week,” O’Shea said. “And if it continues to shrink ... as long as you’re not seeing a repeated mistake, there’s a lot of growth, there. But it’s the same with any quarterbac­k.

“It’s not like we’re lowering our expectatio­n because he’s a young quarterbac­k.”

Those expectatio­ns have to be higher, for the average observer, now.

There’s no reason the Bombers, 1-1, can’t win more than they lose with their rookie quarterbac­k.

“As you see more pictures and get more reps, you start to recognize what’s going on a little bit more,” Streveler said. “And things start to slow down a little bit.”

Yet, he’s moving so fast. Next stop, Hamilton, on Friday, where the Ticats have a much better team than the Als.

And where The Streveler Show should give the Bombers more than a fighting chance.

 ?? KEVIN KING/POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? Chris Streveler rolls right during Bombers practice yesterday. The young quarterbac­k leads the CFL with six touchdown passes through two games.
KEVIN KING/POSTMEDIA NEWS Chris Streveler rolls right during Bombers practice yesterday. The young quarterbac­k leads the CFL with six touchdown passes through two games.
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