The Province

Cats scratch

Being in the East means one win and you’re back in a playoff position

- SCOTT STINSON sstinson@postmedia.com @scott_stinson

HAMILTON — Coming into the 2018 season, there were all kinds of reasons for optimism about the

Hamilton Tiger-Cats.

They had a new—well, newish — head coach who turned a winless team into an offensive powerhouse when he arrived last August. They had a quarterbac­k who posted Flutie-like numbers over that stretch. And they had another quarterbac­k who had not that long ago won the Heisman Trophy and is friends with Drake.

But it turned out the most important thing for the Ticats this season is something that hadn’t changed at all: Hamilton’s position on the map. Steeltown is very much still in the eastern part of Canada. And in the CFL, that makes all the difference. It means that, for example, the Tiger-Cats could have very many things go not exactly as planned over the first half of this season and yet they can still have Grey Cup aspiration­s. Living in the CFL’s East Division these days means never having to admit you are out of it.

Complete a comeback 25-24 win at home over the visitors from Edmonton for a fourth victory of the year? Boom, you are back in a playoff spot.

Things are, admittedly, a far sight better at this point than they were last year in late August. Then, Hamilton was 0-8 and coach Kent Austin, who had brought in June Jones to run the offence, essentiall­y fired himself and gave Jones the whole show.

One of Jones’ first moves was to bring his friend Art Briles to run the defence. It was not particular­ly wellreceiv­ed. A fan and media revolt led to Briles, who was the coach at Baylor

University amid a massive sexual assault scandal in the football program, being un-hired before he ever arrived in Hamilton.

This season has largely lacked such drama. Even the thing that looked most likely to blow up in the franchise’s face, the late-spring signing of Johnny Manziel, the talented and troubled quarterbac­k trying to resurrect his career after washing out of the NFL, ended with nary a peep of controvers­y. Manziel was traded to Montreal before he ever threw a pass that mattered in Hamilton. It was a curious move, given that Jones had said just last year that Johnny Football had the tools to be one of the CFL’s all-time greats, but the team even offered refunds to those who had hastily purchased Manziel jerseys. Such customer service should be saluted.

But if the off-field stuff has been mild in 2018, the on-field product has been also surprising­ly mild. Though the Ticats under Jones rolled up CFL highs in points, net offence, passing yards and rushing yards over the last half of 2017, the rest of the league has adjusted to his running-and-shooting ways, at least a little. Hamilton was fifth in the CFL in points per game entering Thursday night’s home date against Edmonton. Quarterbac­k Jeremiah Masoli, who became the fulltime starter last year under Jones and threw 13 touchdowns against five intercepti­ons down the stretch, had eight of each coming into Thursday, although he was still averaging a gaudy 308 yards pergame.

Masoli threw another two first-half intercepti­ons on Thursday night, as Edmonton roared back from that 10-point hole with 24 straight points in the second quarter to take a comfortabl­e lead into halftime. Mike Reilly, who came into the game having already thrown for more than 3,000 yards on the season, torched Hamilton for 182 yards in the second frame alone. That burst wasn’t enough, though, as the Ticats stopped drive after drive late to work themselves into position for a gamewinnin­g field goal that came as the clock expired.

Hamilton now heads into the Labour Day home-andhome against the Argonauts, knowing that a couple of strong performanc­es will give them the inside position on a playoff spot. The Argos have their own issues this season, with just three wins themselves, although a road date with the doormat Alouettes on Friday. Only Ottawa, with a 6-3 record, has been mostly competent in the East this year.

Not that this is a particular­ly new developmen­t. The East has not managed to produce a team that won more games than it lost over the course of the regular season in either of the past two years. It has, however, produced the past two Grey Cup champions with Ottawa and then

Toronto managing the improbable feat. The Calgary Stampeders have been all but unbeatable over the past twoplus years, except for when they play mediocre teams from Ontario in the last game of the season.

All of which means that Hamilton is, fairly, not without hope. There are many games yet to be played this season, but the possibilit­y of an East team with a sub-.500 record in the playoffs looms again.

Commission­er Randy Ambrosie, who was at Tim Hortons Field on Thursday, said this era of a power imbalance tilted to the West is part of the ebb and flow of sports. He said Ottawa has been good this year, and he wouldn’t count out the Argos just yet.

“This football team here in Hamilton can be special as well,” he said. “I think you just let it play out.”

It has worked out for the East also-rans before. As it did on Thursday night.

 ?? —CP ?? Eskimos’ Derel Walker goes up overMariel Cooper of the Ticats for a touchdown Thursday night at Tim Hortons Field.The Tabbies rallied to win by one.
—CP Eskimos’ Derel Walker goes up overMariel Cooper of the Ticats for a touchdown Thursday night at Tim Hortons Field.The Tabbies rallied to win by one.
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