Vancouver Sun

Yell puts fear in CFL QBs

- JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

Ronnie Yell dropped into coverage, read the play and was stunned by what was unfolding in front of him.

With roughly 90 seconds left on the clock and the Winnipeg Blue Bombers set up at their own 32yard line in a 42-42 tie, the B.C. Lions defensive back faked like he was going deep at the snap before camping out about 10 yards off the line of scrimmage.

Bombers quarterbac­k Matt Nichols, who never took his eyes off the intended receiver to his left, was fooled as Yell jumped the route for a decisive intercepti­on last Friday to set up his team’s game-winning field goal.

“I just played the situation,” Yell recalled this week. “I couldn’t believe he threw it.”

After a broken foot suffered in warm-ups before a game abruptly ended his 2016 season last August, Yell could only watch as the club’s injury-ravaged secondary managed a CFL-low nine intercepti­ons.

Minus Yell, T.J. Lee (Achilles tendon) and Steven Clarke (knee), B.C. managed to finish with a middle-of-the-pack average of 291.4 passing yards against per contest, but the absence of momentumsh­ifting turnovers, especially late in games, gnawed at both head coach Wally Buono and defensive co-ordinator Mark Washington.

Fast-forward through the first five weeks of 2017 and the Lions already have four intercepti­ons as part of their 10 take-aways — they had just 29 last year — with Yell sitting in a three-way tie for second in the CFL with two picks.

“He brings a lot to the table, from his experience to his playmaking ability to his talent,” said Washington, a former defensive back who also coaches B.C.’s secondary. “When you take all those things off the field, there’s a big hole.”

As the Lions’ boundary corner usually matched up against an opponent’s best wide receiver on the short side of the field, the five-foot-10, 185-pound Yell is also second in the league with six pass knock-downs and third on the team with 18 defensive tackles, to go along with a fumble recovery.

“It feels amazing,” the 26-yearold Los Angeles native said of being able to contribute again. “Whenever your season ends on a fluke injury like that, all you think about is what you could have done to help the team, how you’re going to come back. The foot’s holding up nice, secondary’s jelling together.”

In his fourth full year with the Lions, the San Jose State product has been thrust into a leadership role as part of a group that has seen a lot of change since he arrived at the tail end of 2013.

“I’m definitely a vet in the crew now,” said Yell. “I’m just trying to take the younger guys under my wing as Dante Marsh, Ryan Phillips and Korey Banks did when I came in.”

Part of that leadership was on display before his clutch intercepti­on against Winnipeg. The Lions lost both Anthony Gaitor and Keynan Parker to injuries earlier in the game, forcing a position shuffle in the secondary with just five healthy defensive backs.

The unit — and the defence as a whole — rebounded with a fourthquar­ter shutout that was capped by Yell’s pick after the Bombers had scored 28 straight points to grab a 42-27 lead.

“Ronnie made a great play,” Buono said. “You can tell he’s been around. He kind of baited the quarterbac­k.”

 ?? GERRY KAHRMANN/FILES ?? The B.C. Lions’ Ronnie Yell is tied for second in the CFL with two intercepti­ons after an injury-wrecked 2016.
GERRY KAHRMANN/FILES The B.C. Lions’ Ronnie Yell is tied for second in the CFL with two intercepti­ons after an injury-wrecked 2016.

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