Toronto Star

The Hamilton Tiger-Cats’ offensive line takes it personally when their QB gets sacked,

Pass protection in front of Masoli a big plus for Tiger-Cats entering the East Division final

- STEVE MILTON THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR

One thing about Big Beef’s local branch office: they audit their own books and quickly correct the mistakes.

Whenever the Hamilton Tiger-Cats are hit by a noticeable number of quarterbac­k sacks, the starting five (and six and seven, with tight end Landon Rice and running back Alex Green) plus their backups go to work dissecting film like it’s a lab specimen.

They don’t avoid the mea culpas — even when the fault is not theirs, as it often isn’t — and then accept, and contribute to, offensive line coach Dennis McKnight’s remedial measures.

“I just think the guys we have take that stuff personally,” says right tackle Ryker Mathews. “We’re not the kind of guys who say, ‘Aw, we just gave up four sacks.’ We’re the types who say, ‘Guys, we gave up four, we better change something up so it doesn’t happen any more.’ ”

Most recent case in point: in the first of two back-to-back games against B.C. in late September — only a week after Jeremiah Masoli had been sacked four times by Calgary — the Lions were credited with five sacks, three of them in the first quarter.

But in the next seven quarters he played against the Lions, including the three in the semifinal blowout last Sunday, Masoli was sacked just once.

Another more-this-weekend case in point: In late July, the Ottawa Redblacks had five sacks against Hamilton. In their next two meetings with the Ticats, they had zero.

As Masoli and his head coach/offensive guru June Jones both say, sack stats are full of extenuatin­g circumstan­ces: the receivers are covered; the quarterbac­k makes the wrong read on where to move; communicat­ion breakdowns between thrower and catcher; and so on and so on.

Coming into training camp there were some public concerns about the Ticats’ offensive line, after the off-season trade of three-time all-star Ryan Bomben to Montreal. But third-year guard Brandon Revenberg has evolved rapidly into the East’s top offensive lineman, right guard Darius Ciraco was the only CFL draftee to start every game, centre and leader Mike Filer was his usual, effectivel­y aggressive self, Mathews was strong again and, first Avery Jordan, and now Kelvin Palmer, have been unanticipa­ted upgrades from traded Tony Washington at left tackle.

With support from Rice and Mathieu Girard, that group ended up third in the CFL, and first in the East, in fewest sacks allowed. They also opened holes for a strong running game and allowed Masoli to set a club record for most 300-yard games.

More than one-third of their total sacks were permitted in just three games and over the past six games the Ticat quarterbac­k has been dropped just four times.

“I’m a protection guy before anything else,” Jones says.

“Even those four and five earlier in the year, six of them were called running plays that shouldn’t have been sacks. I’d say anywhere from six to10 (of the opposition’s 36 sacks) the receiver didn’t run the right route and Jeremiah held the ball instead of throwing it. Those are coverage sacks.”

The Ticats know that the Redblacks’ creative defensive co-ordinator, Noel Thorpe, will have some new looks and blitz packages in store for them Sunday afternoon, and their rush, led by “Minister of Defence” A.C. Leonard can be formidable.

But the B.C. defensive line was more formidable, with the best sack numbers in the league, yet in the East semifinal they took until deep into garbage time to record their one sack: against Masoli’s backup, Dane Evans. Jones explains it simply: “We do a good job.”

 ?? PETER POWER THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Hamilton Tiger-Cats head coach June Jones meets with B.C. Lions head coach Wally Buono before the Tiger-Cats’ 48-8 playoff win on Sunday.
PETER POWER THE CANADIAN PRESS Hamilton Tiger-Cats head coach June Jones meets with B.C. Lions head coach Wally Buono before the Tiger-Cats’ 48-8 playoff win on Sunday.

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