Times Colonist

Grey Cup desire deep for Argos, ’Riders

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TORONTO — He’s yet to decide his football future, but Ricky Ray wouldn’t mind following the script Henry Burris did last season.

Burris, 41, called it a career in January roughly two months after leading the Ottawa Redblacks to a 36-30 upset win over the Calgary Stampeders in last year’s Grey Cup game. Ray, 38, can move a step toward a similar scenario today when the Toronto Argonauts host the Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s in the East Division final at BMO Field.

The winner advances to the Grey Cup game on Nov. 26 at Ottawa’s TD Place versus either the Edmonton Eskimos or Calgary Stampeders.

“I’m not sure, I’m just trying to get through this year,” Ray said when asked about his plans. “I think everybody who’s playing the game wishes they could do what Henry did last year to be able to go out on top and kind of ride off into the sunset.”

The six-foot-three, 195-pound Ray has enjoyed a resurgence this year, finishing second overall in CFL passing (5,546 yards) and leading Toronto (9-9) to first in the East Division. Heady stuff for a player who’d played in a combined 12 regular-season games due to injuries the past two years.

A resilient Ray missed just one start this season despite being hit often. In his first season under new head coach Marc Trestman’s offence, Ray hit the 5,000-yard passing plateau for the first time since ’08 and the fourth time in his career, joining Hall of Famers Anthony Calvillo and Doug Flutie as the only ones to do so in league history.

That earned Ray his third career nomination as a finalist for the CFL’s outstandin­g player award against Edmonton’s Mike Reilly. It’s one of the few awards Ray, a three-time Grey Cup champion, hasn’t won over his illustriou­s 15-year career in Canada.

“We wouldn’t be here without him,” Trestman said. “You never are without the quarterbac­k playing at a high level. Ricky does that every day, He leads the way, he gets us through the practices.”

Riders coach/GM Chris Jones, who’s also in charge of the club’s defence, said watching film of Ray isn’t any fun.

“It’s a nightmare for me,” Jones said. “There was probably at least five or six balls in the last game we played here in Toronto (27-24 win Oct. 7) where we had defenders right there, but he’s able to stick that ball in.

“He knows right where to go with the football. His heart rate is around 40 or 50 regardless of whether you hit him or if he just threw a touchdown. He’s very tough to go against.”

Ray said the feeling is mutual preparing for Jones, who’s never been afraid to be unconventi­onal in his schemes and gameplans.

“I’ll take that as a compliment,” Ray said. “It’s a nightmare going up against his defence.

“He’s dropping 10 sometimes and then bringing eight the next play so you’ve got to be ready for anything against him.”

Saskatchew­an counters with its own veteran starter in Kevin Glenn. Like Ray, Glenn is 38, but the 17-year CFL veteran hasn’t yet been able to play for a Grey Cup winner.

But Glenn, too, has enjoyed a solid ’17 campaign with 4,038 passing yards and 25 TDs, his best totals in each category since ’12. And Glenn does have history on his side, having led teams to the Grey Cup in 2007 (Winnipeg) and ’12 (Calgary), but the Detroit native said the longer a player’s career is, the better he learns to cherish these opportunit­ies.

“The excitement that goes into it, the preparatio­n and all that is still the same,” he said. “Like I’ve been telling some of the guys, you try to enjoy it and maximize your opportunit­ies and try to just seize the moment. This game is always about urgency because you’re not promised tomorrow.”

Trestman said Ray and Glenn are both examples of players who still have a passion for the game.

“The biggest thing with guys who play that long is somehow they come to terms with courage, with toughness,” Trestman said. “It’s so hard to stand in there for so many years and take the kind of hits these guys take throughout their career.”

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