The Standard (St. Catharines)

Is time on Johnny Football’s side?

Success in Montreal is achievable but it won’t come easy for Als’ CFL rookie

- DAN RALPH

The result was predictabl­e.

Johnny Manziel’s much-anticipate­d Canadian Football League debut fizzled quickly Friday night.

The rookie quarterbac­k threw an intercepti­on on his first downfield throw and finished with four overall in the Montreal Alouettes’ lopsided 50-11 home loss to the Hamilton Tiger-Cats before 18,576 spectators at Molson Stadium.

Manziel, 25, finished 11-of-20 passing for just 104 yards against his former team.

Hamilton dealt Manziel to Montreal on July 22 when it became apparent he wasn’t going to dislodge incumbent Jeremiah Masoli as the Ticats starter.

Manziel drew the start after just four practices in Montreal’s offence, a huge ask considerin­g he hadn’t played a regular-season game since Dec. 27, 2015 — 950 days ago — with the National Football League’s Cleveland Browns.

And Manziel was under centre for a club that entered Friday’s game 1-5 and had started three other quarterbac­ks.

Sure, Manziel is the first freshman to win the Heisman Trophy and sure, he was a former firstround pick of the Browns.

But he’s still a CFL rookie, learning a new game and now, with a second team in roughly two months after coming to Canada and signing with Hamilton.

He showed glimpses Friday of his athleticis­m, of being able to escape pressure and ad-lib on the run. However, there’s no escaping the fact Montreal’s offence is last in the CFL in so very many categories.

Prior to Friday’s game, Erik Burkhardt, Manziel’s agent, said the Alouettes were “insane” to start his client so quickly.

Let’s face it, if Manziel is going to be part of the solution in Montreal, it’s going to take time. A lot of time.

“This game is humbling,” Manziel said afterwards. “This is a humbling experience.

“I’ve had this experience in the past. You can let this get you down and sulk or take it on the chin like a man and never allow this taste to come back into your mouth again and never let this happen again. Moving forward, this is only going to motivate me. This is a test of my will and my drive.”

Montreal visits Ottawa next Saturday.

CARTER RETURNS: Duron Carter had three catches for 59 yards and a TD in his return to the Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s receiving corps.

Carter, the Riders’ leading receiver last season, lined up on offence after playing four games at cornerback when Nick Marshall suffered a finger injury. Marshall was activated last week and played in Saskatchew­an’s 26-16 loss to the Edmonton Eskimos on Thursday night.

Riders quarterbac­k Zach Collaros, back under centre after missing four games due to a concussion, was 22-of-34 passing for 261 yards and a TD while adding an 11-yard run.

But Saskatchew­an played the game one man short after listing an ineligible player as part of their 44-man active roster.

Linebacker Derrick Moncrief, on the six-game injured list, was listed as one of the team’s 44 active players for the game. Matt Elam replaced Moncrief last week and was supposed to play.

But as a result of the miscue, Saskatchew­an had to scratch and face the Eskimos with 43 players. The Riders shuffled safety

Mike Edem to strong-side linebacker and started Marc-Oliver Brouillett­e at safety.

But Brouillett­e was hurt early in the contest so defensive end Tobi Antigha shifted to the secondary.

COMEBACK WIN: As thrilling as Toronto’s 42-41 last-second win over the Ottawa Redblacks was Thursday night, it wasn’t the biggest comeback victory in Argonauts history.

McLeod Bethel-Thompson’s 23-yard TD strike to Armanti Edwards with one second remaining capped a stirring rally from a 38-14 deficit for Toronto. But on Oct. 2, 1994, Marvin Graves came off the bench in the second half and the Argos trailing Hamilton 36-11 and carried the club to a stirring

39-36 victory.

 ?? PAUL CHIASSON THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Alouettes quarterbac­k Johnny Manziel pauses during third-quarter CFL action against the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in Montreal on Friday night. Manziel's much-anticipate­d CFL debut fizzled quickly.
PAUL CHIASSON THE CANADIAN PRESS Alouettes quarterbac­k Johnny Manziel pauses during third-quarter CFL action against the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in Montreal on Friday night. Manziel's much-anticipate­d CFL debut fizzled quickly.

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