The Telegram (St. John's)

‘You can sense the hunger’

Revamped Alouettes look to break playoff drought

- BY BILL BEACON

His first year as general manager of the Montreal Alouettes was a disaster, but Kavis Reed certainly made enough offseason moves to try to fix the trouble.

He hired former Green Bay Packers boss Mike Sherman to head a revamped coaching staff, improved the squad’s Canadian content and picked up Chris Williams to add speed to the receiving corps on a team that finished last at 3-15 and lost the last 11 games of the 2017 campaign.

But the same old problem that has gnawed at the club since all-time passing leader Anthony Calvillo retired after the 2013 season remains — finding a steady and effective starting quarterbac­k.

Returning veteran Drew Willy is likely to get the ball for the season opener on Saturday in British Columbia, with secondyear man Matt Shiltz waiting to take over. So far, neither is a proven winner, although Shiltz had only one start last season in the final regular-season game.

That didn’t dampen pre-season optimism, however.

“Whichever of those guys they put out there, I feel we’ll be just fine,” receiver B.J. Cunningham said. “We’ve got to make their jobs easier by catching every ball that’s thrown.”

Two years ago, former general manager Jim Popp brought in veteran Kevin Glenn, but he didn’t finish the season. Last year, it was Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s stalwart Darian Durant, who was eventually let go.

It didn’t help that the squad was plagued with injuries on the offensive line and didn’t have a deep threat to balance the attack. The team fired coach Jacques Chapdelain­e and defensive co-ordinator Noel Thorpe in mid-season, with Reed stepping in as coach and not winning a game.

Now, they’ll try again with a greatly revamped roster.

Besides Williams, guard Ryan Bomben and fullback Patrick Lavoie were brought back on offence.

“You get that sense that we’ve got something special brewing here,” said Williams. “It’s been an organizati­on that in my time in the CFL has been successful.

“With coach (Marc) Trestman they won some titles here. A rich tradition. Always a really strong defence. I’m thankful to be part of it. Hopefully we can turn last year around. I know there’s a lot of new faces, mixed in with the veterans who have seen some of the ups and downs. You can sense the hunger.”

The main changes were on defence, where former Calgary Stampeders Tommie Campbell and Joe Burnett as well as Mitchell White joined the backfield while linebacker­s Henoc Muamba and Dominique Ellis and linemen Alan-michael Cash and Jamaal Westerman also were added.

Reed’s pick as defensive coordinato­r — Kahlil Carter — resigned before camp, but they had his “adviser” Rich Stubler on hand to take over. Khari Jones is the new offensive coordinato­r while former Concordia University head coach Mickey Donovan takes over special teams.

Some popular players are gone, including slotback Nik Lewis and linebacker Kyries Hebert, but they kept long-serving Alouettes John Bowman and Chip Cox.

And there were some Alouettes who had good 2017 seasons including Cunningham, who had a career-high 1,128 passing yards. Slotback Ernest Jackson is back and they have a solid running back in Tyrell Sutton who may flourish on a team led by offence-oriented Sherman.

Whether it’s enough to get back in the playoffs for the first time since 2014 is the main question.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Montreal Alouettes quarterbac­k Garrett Fugate carries the ball against the Hamilton Tiger-cats during second half preseason action in Montreal.
CP PHOTO Montreal Alouettes quarterbac­k Garrett Fugate carries the ball against the Hamilton Tiger-cats during second half preseason action in Montreal.

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