The Telegram (St. John's)

Rare win has Alouettes in better mood

- BY BILL BEACON

One win doesn’t make a season, but it certainly put the Montreal Alouettes in a better frame of mind.

After ending a 13-game losing streak last week in Saskatchew­an, the Alouettes (1-2) will look to even their record against the Ottawa Redblacks (1-1) on Friday night at Percival Molson Stadium.

“For me, being new to the team and coming in without a lot of the baggage, so to speak, it doesn’t change a whole lot,” receiver Chris Williams said Thursday. “But you can definitely feel that there was a sense of relief to just get that out of the way.

“Franchise record - not the kind you want to set - we got that out of the way. Got the win and now we can put all that junk aside and move forward.”

The Alouettes had not won since last Aug. 11 against Toronto, which was also their last home win.

Now they hope to win two in a row for the first time since they took three straight to close the 2016 campaign.

Quarterbac­k Jeff Mathews is set to make his first CFL start since he lasted only 30 minutes

playing for the Argonauts against the Alouettes last August. Mathews came on in relief when starter Drew Willy suffered a stinger in the third quarter against the Roughrider­s.

While he went eight-for-12 for only 98 yards, the veteran didn’t turn over the ball and helped put away the win with some solid drives.

The Redblacks are coming off

a 24-14 loss in a defensive battle against unbeaten Calgary. They will be without Kyries Hebert, the popular linebacker who asked for and got his release by Montreal in February and signed with Ottawa. Hebert will serve a suspension for a nasty hit on Calgary’s Devaris Daniels.

Williams, who sits third in CFL receiving with 14 catches for 250 yards, expects a stiff test

from Ottawa, which won all three meetings with Montreal last season.

“Well-run organizati­on, they’ve been to two Grey Cups in five years,” said Williams. “Solid players, good quarterbac­k, good offence, good defence. So we’ll have to play a good game.

“We’ve got to eliminate the penalties, play smart football. And we’ve got to stay on the field on offence to eliminate them being on the field because it’s very much a ball-control team with (running back) William Powell and (quarterbac­k) Trevor Harris and him getting it to their guys.”

Alouettes coach Mike Sherman, the former Green Bay Packers boss who will coach his 100th career profession­al game, likes to treat all weeks the same whether his team wins or loses.

But last week’s victory was a relief and a confidence-builder for Montreal if only because it had been so long in coming.

“It certainly didn’t hurt,” said Sherman. “When you come back after a win you can be a little harder and more demanding actually, because they’re listening and they’re not sulking about their wounds, so it allows you to be a bit more aggressive with the players as opposed to trying to build up their confidence.

“So it is a bit different approach, although I do try to treat winning and losing as almost identical. We’ve got to correct the same mistakes whether we win or lose, but it’s how we correct them. When you lose a game you have to be careful about their psyche and where their mind’s at. You don’t want to bury them, but at the same time you’ve got to be honest with them.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Montreal Alouettes players run onto the field prior to their home opener against the Winnipeg Blue Bombers in Montreal on Friday, June 22.
CP PHOTO Montreal Alouettes players run onto the field prior to their home opener against the Winnipeg Blue Bombers in Montreal on Friday, June 22.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada