Vancouver Sun

BO KNOWS A THING OR TWO ABOUT BEING OUTSTANDIN­G

Stamps quarterbac­k the CFL’s top player for the second time in three seasons

- DANNY AUSTIN daustin@postmedia.com twitter.com/DannyAusti­n_9

It’s Sunday’s Grey Cup ring that he wants, but Thursday Bo Levi Mitchell collected the biggest individual award in the CFL.

For the second time in three years, the Calgary Stampeders quarterbac­k was named the CFL’s Most Outstandin­g Player, capturing 47 out of 60 first-place votes.

Mitchell beat Hamilton TigerCats quarterbac­k Jeremiah Masoli for the honour.

Masoli finished the year with more passing yards than Mitchell, but what pushed the Stamps star above the rest of the field couldn’t necessaril­y be captured on the stats sheet.

Yes, Mitchell ended the season with the third-most passing yards in the league with 5,214.

And, yes, no one else in the CFL threw for as many touchdowns as Mitchell’s 35.

But the real number that mattered was 13, the number of wins the Stampeders earned en route to winning the West Division, further cementing Mitchell’s reputation as the league’s premier quarterbac­k when it comes to winning football games.

“It’s a blessing for people to say all I do is win, but at the same time I have people telling me that I can’t win a big game when we won the Grey Cup the first year I started,” Mitchell said. “I’m proud of what we’ve done and I’m proud of the work guys have put in to get to this point.”

Part of what made Mitchell’s year so impressive in 2018 was the circumstan­ces he had to deal with as the Stamps quarterbac­k.

The team’s receiving corps was absolutely decimated by injuries and the reliable likes of Kamar Jorden, Eric Rogers, DaVaris Daniels, Marken Michel and Reggie Begelton all missed considerab­le amounts of time.

And yet the Stampeders still managed to win more than any other team in the league.

The team didn’t finish the year with a single receiver who had more than 1,000 yards through the air, meaning Mitchell ended the season as the only quarterbac­k to throw for 5,000 yards in a season without a single 1,000yard receiver.

It’s a remarkable stat, although Mitchell deferred credit and instead gave props to the players who stepped in late in the season.

“With what everybody has said about the receivers this year, all we talk about is the plague of injuries instead of the body of work those guys put together,” Mitchell said. “It’s just devastatin­g, for one, but I want to raise those guys up and tell them they’re the best receiver group in the league and nobody else can tell me differentl­y.

“This goes to them for the body of work I’ve put in.”

A free agent this off-season, Mitchell will inevitably face questions about whether he intends on testing the NFL market once Sunday’s Grey Cup is done.

That wasn’t the focus on Thursday night in Edmonton, though.

Instead, the questions focused mostly on legacy.

Mitchell has led his team to three of the last four Grey Cups and has the chance to win his second Sunday when the Stamps take on the Redblacks.

He has also won two of the three last MOP awards and has also been nominated for three of the last four.

He has solidified himself as one of the CFL’s greats, although a win Sunday would go even further in proving that.

The Stampeders’ opponents in the Grey Cup, the Ottawa Redblacks, captured three awards. Two of them went to kicker Lewis Ward (rookie, special teams). Slotback Brad Sinopoli was named the top Canadian.

Ward made 51 of 52 field goal attempts (for a league-record 98.1 per cent), including a pro football-record 48 straight that will carry over into 2019. Sinopoli earned his second top Canadian award, first winning in 2015.

Linebacker Adam Bighill of

It’s a blessing for people to say all I do is win, but at the same time I have people telling me that I can’t win a big game.

the Winnipeg Blue Bombers was named the top defensive player. The five-foot-10, 230-pound Bighill received 57 first-place votes for his second honour after winning the award in 2015 with the B.C. Lions.

Bombers tackle Stanley Bryant captured the top lineman award for the second consecutiv­e year, while Chris Jones of the Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s was named the CFL’s coach of the year.

Pierre Vercheval, a former CFL top lineman and Canadian Football Hall of Fame inductee who’s now a broadcaste­r, received the Commission­er’s Award for outstandin­g contributi­on to Canadian football. Wally Buono, who retired as B.C. Lions head coach at season’s end, was awarded the Hugh Campbell Distinguis­hed Leadership Award.

 ?? PHOTOS: JASON FRANSON THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Calgary Stampeders quarterbac­k Bo Levi Mitchell was named the Most Outstandin­g Player Thursday at the CFL Awards in Edmonton.
PHOTOS: JASON FRANSON THE CANADIAN PRESS Calgary Stampeders quarterbac­k Bo Levi Mitchell was named the Most Outstandin­g Player Thursday at the CFL Awards in Edmonton.
 ??  ?? Record-setting Ottawa Redblacks kicker Lewis Ward was named the Most Outstandin­g Rookie and Most Outstandin­g Special Teams Player.
Record-setting Ottawa Redblacks kicker Lewis Ward was named the Most Outstandin­g Rookie and Most Outstandin­g Special Teams Player.
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