Times Colonist

Lions, Als both desperate to snap losing streaks

GAME DAY: MONTREAL AT B.C., 7 P.M.

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

VANCOUVER — Wally Buono relaxed on B.C.’s picturesqu­e Sunshine Coast for a couple days before taking a trip up to Whistler. Solomon Elimimian visited friends south of the border and found himself at a Seattle restaurant eating fried grasshoppe­rs.

No matter how or where the B.C. Lions chose to unwind during their bye week, the three consecutiv­e losses that helped push them into the basement of the CFL’s ultra-competitiv­e West Division loomed overhead like the smoky haze from wildfires that continue to blanket the region.

“You can’t separate yourself from what you do,” said Buono, the Lions’ head coach and general manager.

“It’s always on your mind,” added Elimimian, B.C.’s standout linebacker and the league’s leading tackler.

Seemingly in good shape a month ago, the stumbling Lions (5-5) will look to get back on track today when they host the Montreal Alouettes (3-7) — a club equally desperate to snap its own threegame slump.

“Adversity and difficulti­es bring teams together,” said Elimimian. “It makes guys focus.”

Much of the focus from a Lions’ perspectiv­e is on Buono’s decision to start veteran quarterbac­k Travis Lulay after the ineffectiv­e Jonathon Jennings was pulled at halftime in a 31-24 loss to the Ottawa Redblacks in the nation’s capital on Aug. 26.

Lulay, who was 3-1 while Jennings was out with an injury to his throwing shoulder earlier this season, nearly rallied the team back from a 31-3 deficit in the fourth quarter against the Redblacks, racking up more than 200 yards and two touchdowns through the air before a late intercepti­on sealed the result.

“Just look at [Lulay’s] success,” Buono said when asked why he made the switch. “When he’s played, he’s played very well. The team responds to him.”

Lulay has thrown for 1,693 yards with 10 touchdowns against seven picks in 2017, and owns the league’s highest passer rating and completion percentage.

The most valuable player of the Lions’ 2011 Grey Cup victory, Lulay has dealt with shoulder and knee injuries on and off since 2013, but is back at full strength for a franchise that needs to make a push in a division where, at this point, a .500 record is only good enough for last place.

“I’m confident this team can be back playing better football and be the team we set out to be,” said Lulay, also the league’s most outstandin­g player in 2011. “If we focus on the little things and being 1-0 every single week, the playoff scenario takes care of itself.”

The West holds a dominant 19-3-1 edge in head-to-head meetings with the East this season, including B.C.’s 23-16 triumph in Montreal on July 6, but the Alouettes did pick up home wins over Saskatchew­an and Calgary early in the schedule.

Much like today’s opponent, Montreal is searching for answers after the club’s current slide stretched to three games with an ugly 32-4 loss to Ottawa last week. The Alouettes sit third in the East, but will probably need to finish first or second in the division to qualify for the playoffs because of the crossover rule.

“It’s always tough playing a team coming off the bye, especially with the situation they’re in,” quarterbac­k Darian Durant said in Montreal this week. “We know they’re going to be ready. We have to start fast.”

The Alouettes, who are 2-14 in Vancouver since 2001, have failed to score an offensive touchdown in two of their last three games and come in 0-4 on the road.

“We just have to be consistent across the board,” added Durant. “It’s mental or physical errors being made by a different guy each play.”

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