Toronto Star

Chamblin weighs both sides

Former Riders head coach keys Argos defensive surge with Grey Cup ticket on line

- DREW EDWARDS HAMILTON SPECTATOR

Corey Chamblin says he isn’t the best football coach in his family at the moment.

With his two young sons playing flag football back home in Arizona while dad runs the defence for the Toronto Argonauts, Chamblin’s wife, Samantha, stepped in to serve as head coach and offensive co-ordinator. How’d she do? They are heading to the playoffs as the fourth seed in a 14-team league and have the highestsco­ring offence.

“I’m super proud of her. She had to take a step and do something unbelievab­le, so it’s rewarding to see the work she’s put in and the fruit that’s come from that,” Chamblin said this week as his team prepares for Sunday’s East final. “Except now she’s telling me what we should be doing.”

Chamblin knows a little bit about the ups and downs that come with rapid ascension and more or less instant success. After a largely uneventful six-year career in the NFL — he played 11 games with the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars while bouncing around several practice squads — Chamblin took his first coaching gig as a positional assistant in 2006. Six years later, he was the head coach of the Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s and one year after that, a Grey Cup champion.

But despite that title — played on home soil in the 100th year of the franchise — Chamblin was fired less than two seasons later after an 0-9 start. Still on the Saskatchew­an payroll, he returned to the United States to do some profession­al developmen­t and personal soul-searching.

“I had a great run as a coach at a young age and it was important for me to get back to the point where I was ‘Corey’ and not ‘coach’ anymore, separate the role from the person,” he said. “Sometimes you can get so caught up in that role you can forget that your needs, your family’s needs must come first. There are still sacrifices that have to be made, but now I can balance things better.”

Chamblin started a website called Gameday Connection­s aimed at developing networking opportunit­ies for coaches and athletes on and off the field. He spent time with other

“My quality of life is a whole lot better as a person and as a coach because of the lessons I learned in Saskatchew­an.”

COREY CHAMBLIN ARGOS DEFENSIVE CO-ORDINATOR

coaches, including friend and mentor Mike Tomlin, the head coach of the Pittsburgh Steelers. He weighed his options in both American college football and the NFL. Then Marc Trestman called. The newly minted head coach of the Argonauts had Chamblin on a very short list of potential defensive co-ordinators, despite the fact the two had never coached together. They spent much of their early getto-know-you conversati­ons talking not about football but about their philosophi­cal approach to life.

“A lot of it was on a personal level: this is who I am, this is what it is,” Chamblin said. “Marc’s very detailed on how he wants certain things done. We may say things a different way, but we have the same end result in what we believe. Both of us have head coaching experience, so we meet there because we have the team in mind.”

So Chamblin returned to the CFL and has helped the Argonauts to a remarkable defensive turnaround. After finishing in 2016 season dead last in points surrendere­d — the team was 5-13 — Toronto was second in net offence allowed, tied for first in sacks and, mostly importantl­y, 9-9 and first in the East Division.

“He brings energy and finds ways to motivate you every day,” defensive end Shawn Lemon said. “He finds that small thing and gets in your mind before practice and has you work on the little details. He keeps you on edge.”

Chamblin says facing his old team in Sunday’s playoff game with a trip to the Grey Cup on the line won’t carry any extra emotional significan­ce.

“Would I have liked it to turn out differentl­y? Yes. But my quality of life is a whole lot better as a person and as a coach because of the lessons I learned in Saskatchew­an,” he said. “There’s nothing I would do differentl­y because I wouldn’t end up here.”

Sounds like something Coach Samantha would agree with.

 ?? JOHANY JUTRAS/TORONTO ARGONAUTS ?? Argonauts defensive co-ordinator Corey Chamblin, working with defensive back Jermaine Gabriel, won a Grey Cup as head coach of the Roughrider­s.
JOHANY JUTRAS/TORONTO ARGONAUTS Argonauts defensive co-ordinator Corey Chamblin, working with defensive back Jermaine Gabriel, won a Grey Cup as head coach of the Roughrider­s.

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