Toronto Star

Tying Flutie mark is a rush

Argonauts, Franklin salvage some pride by outlasting Alouettes

- DAN RALPH

It was sweet redemption for James Franklin.

Franklin’s record-tying, oneyard TD run with 56 seconds remaining rallied the Toronto Argonauts to a 26-22 win over Montreal at BMO Field on Saturday night. It came after Tevaughn Campbell returned Franklin’s intercepti­on 37 yards for the touchdown at 9:10 of the fourth to put the Alouettes ahead 21-13.

But Franklin redeemed himself with 2:21 remaining, smartly moving the Argos 75 yards on nine plays. He capped the winning drive with his second rushing touchdown of the game and 14th this season, tying Doug Flutie’s league record for most rushing scores by a quarterbac­k.

The 14 rushing touchdowns are also an Argos single-season mark.

“It was nice,” Franklin said. “The thing I appreciate­d about that was how positive the guys were (after the intercepti­on TD).

“I give them a lot of credit for just how they were with me. It (tying Flutie’s record) was pretty cool, you saw how excited the guys were once we scored ... that was collective. Unfortunat­ely for them my name is going to go into the book, but I wish everyone could go in there just because of how hard they work at it.”

Drew Brown’s field goals of 37 and 38 yards pulled Toronto (412) to within 21-19. Boris Bede’s single off a missed 39-yard try made it 22-19 at 12:39.

Franklin finished 26-of-37 passing for 277 yards and two intercepti­ons as Toronto snapped an ugly seven-game losing streak. More importantl­y, the Argos won their final home game of the season but didn’t announce the atten- dance.

“It’s really big, especially the last home game,” Franklin said. “It’s always nice to finish with a win for (Argos fans).

“We are out of the playoffs but we’re trying to stack three wins in a row and take that momentum into next season.”

The victory also snapped the longest losing streak of Toronto head coach Marc Trestman’s CFL tenure. Trestman felt his team persevered through its share of adversity Saturday night, especially Franklin.

“You’ve got to have amnesia to play the position,” Trestman said. “He took us down the field on that last drive and we scored a touchdown.”

The contest featured what one would expect of a contest involving the CFL’s two worst teams with four combined turnovers, 14 penalties and six sacks.

Bede also missed two field goals, which certainly didn’t help Johnny Manziel’s cause. The former Heisman Trophy winner remains winless in the CFL, dropping to 0-6 as a starter with the Alouettes (3-13). The Montreal record is 0-10 set by Carroll Williams (1967-68), while the league mark is 0-11 held by George Herring (195859, B.C.-Saskatchew­an).

Manziel finished 23-of-30 passing for 220 yards with a touchdown and intercepti­on, while rushing for 38 yards on four carries.

“We played better today and good enough to win this game,” Manziel said. “We just didn’t win it.

“That’s been the story of our season.”

But Manziel said he continues to evolve in the Canadian game.

“Things are starting to make sense to me on the football field now,” he said. “We have two opportunit­ies left, our team is playing for something.”

 ?? COLE BURSTON THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Argonauts quarterbac­k James Franklin shook off a pick-six to lead a late game-winning touchdown drive against Montreal.
COLE BURSTON THE CANADIAN PRESS Argonauts quarterbac­k James Franklin shook off a pick-six to lead a late game-winning touchdown drive against Montreal.

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