Vancouver Sun

Blue Bombers’ defensive line comes up big

But concerns linger about consistenc­y, writes Paul Friesen.

- pfriesen@postmedia.com Twitter.com/@friesensun­media

WINNIPEG The evidence continues to trickle in, and it’s as confoundin­g as any whodunit.

One day you think the Winnipeg Blue Bomber defences looks guilty of repeating its crimes from the last two seasons, the next it looks like a changed unit.

On a hot and steamy Saturday night in Winnipeg, with the liquor and the sweat flowing freely around it, the Bombers’ dirty dozen stood steadfast and true in a 41-19 manhandlin­g of the B.C. Lions.

A statement game, perhaps? “You tell me,” linebacker Adam Bighill, the star of the show, replied. “What’s in the headline?”

I was about to tell Bighill I don’t write the headlines, when he offered a one-word suggestion.

“Execution.” Normally, that’s not a word a hardened criminal wants to hear.

But for these “offenders,” it’s the simple explanatio­n for what they did better against the Lions than they’d done against Hamilton the week before, or Edmonton in the season opener.

“We didn’t do a lot of special things,” Bighill continued. “But what we did was solid. We just executed our stuff really well. I’m telling you, when we execute, those are the things that happen.

“It comes to being consistent. If we want to be a great defence, consistenc­y’s the key.”

It’s not sexy, like a jail-break pass rush on every other play.

But it was murder on Lions quarterbac­k Jonathan Jennings, who was sacked four times, picked off three times and held to less than 200 yards passing.

The thing is, the up-and-down nature of the Bombers defence through four games raises the possibilit­y of a stinker next weekend.

Perhaps that’s why nobody in blue and gold wanted any part of any statement.

“They executed a good plan,” coach Mike O’Shea said. “They took advantage of play calling that was quite timely, they made plays, they played tougher on the football than they did previously.

“But statement games. I’m not sure what that even means.”

It means you’ve figured it out and can count on a high level of play, week to week, the serious problems behind you.

You’ll be consistent, to use Bighill’s measuring stick.

The jury is still out on that.

BIG EVE FOR ADAM

Teammates were raving about Bighill’s two-intercepti­on, onetouchdo­wn game against the Leos.

There’s nothing quite like sticking it to your old team, apparently.

“Adam was on fire,” running back Andrew Harris, another former Lion, said. “I know how good that feels. I’m right there with him.”

A coach like O’Shea may downplay the notion of getting more fired up for certain games, but it’s real.

“He was focused all week,” corner Chris Randle said of Bighill. “I’m not saying that he’s never focused, but it’s that extra element to it, being that it’s his old team.”

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