The Province

Rainey soaks up recent criticism

Lions’ special teams ace eyes return to form after coach calls him out in radio appearance

- JJ ADAMS jadams@postmedia.com

Chris Rainey is on the north side of 30 now, so he can be forgiven the occasional “senior” moment.

“I feel like I forgot I’m fast,” said the B.C. Lions’ kick returner and running back.

Ironically, the league hasn’t. Hamilton coach June Jones cited Rainey’s big-play speed as the reason he elected to punt instead of kick a field goal late in their meeting at B.C. Place Stadium two weeks ago — a gut call that cost them the game — and teams consistent­ly plan their coverage to limit Rainey’s effectiven­ess.

But that reputation did little to help him this week as Wally Buono singled out Rainey’s body of kick-return work for harsh criticism on TSN radio — again — a public rebuke the team doubled down on Wednesday by signing Hamilton Tiger-Cats returner Shakeir Ryan to the practice squad.

On first blush, the comments and transactio­n seem like a car owner being concerned about a leaking tire after their engine threw a rod. Other issues, particular­ly the offence’s dismal showing in the 40-10 loss to the host Ticats last Saturday, would seem to be of higher priority.

But the Lions lack real options at quarterbac­k, so squeezing more out of Rainey and Co. is a more achievable goal and one that would pay immediate dividends.

Giving quarterbac­k Jonathon Jennings a short field to work with, you relieve the pressure on a quarterbac­k struggling to find his rhythm and confidence.

They could use a boost at B.C. Place Saturday afternoon. The Lions (6-7), who dropped to last in the West Division, host the Toronto Argonauts (3-10) — the CFL’s only winless road team (0-6).

Rainey is leading the league in kickoff-return yards (1,579) for the third consecutiv­e season and the same is true of his combined yardage (2,119). B.C. has the longest kickoff-return average (24.5 yards) and is tied for third in punt returns (11 yards), but has just one touchdown, coming against the Edmonton Eskimos on Aug. 9.

“What we haven’t done is finish the play,” said special-teams co-ordinator Jeff Reinebold. “I think that’s where we’re at in terms of our punt-return game. We’re leaving yards on the field.

“If we work a little harder, a little smarter with a little more attention to detail — all 12 of us — then we’re going to make some game-changing plays. And what we have to understand is … our football team is one that’s reliant on field position.

“When Chris can create field position for us, that is a huge advantage because it takes so much pressure off of the offence. You have to realize net punting is what matters.

“What we look at is how many times we can give the offence back the ball across the midfield marker. Last week against Hamilton, we did it once when we ran a punt pressure and (Lirim Hajrullahu) shanked the kick.”

The 5-foot-8, 180-pound Rainey took the latest criticism in stride. The Florida native was benched for the Sept. 7 game against the Ottawa Redblacks — the first healthy scratch in the impending free agent’s four seasons with the Lions — and has averaged just 8.8 yards per punt return since then and 25.6 yards per kickoff return.

Rainey has admitted to a little paralysis by analysis, overthinki­ng the process of the returns instead of reacting instinctiv­ely.

“You can put it all in perspectiv­e. I know where he’s coming from,” Rainey said of Buono’s comments.

“I could play way better. It’s just go out there and run — that’s it. Somebody’s coming towards me? Just outrun them. Turn on the jets. Just hit (the hole). That’s it. Don’t hesitate, don’t pause. Just hit it like I used to do.”

And while Buono has been the bad cop, the affable Reinebold has been the good one. He’s been playing part-time psychologi­st in several sitdowns with his returner this week and sends Rainey YouTube clips of big returns to watch.

“I send (the clips) to him every night and say, ‘Before you go to bed at night,

imagine yourself making these big plays,’” he said. “When you’re a return guy and you’re going good, it’s like everything slows down.

“I remember with (former NFL star) Dante Hall there were times when it didn’t matter. You could put 11 guys out there and not block anybody and he was going to score because he was in the zone. When Chris is in the zone, that’s the same thing that happens.

“All he needs to do is hit a big one and he’ll jump back into it.”

 ?? —CP ?? Lions kick returner Chris Rainey leads the league in kickoff-return yards and combined yardage, but has struggled of late and was benched last month by Wally Buono.
—CP Lions kick returner Chris Rainey leads the league in kickoff-return yards and combined yardage, but has struggled of late and was benched last month by Wally Buono.
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