Waterloo Region Record

Ticats look for help from above against CFL-leading Stamps

- Carol Phillips

HAMILTON — The Hamilton Tiger-Cats are determined not to let the disciplina­ry action taken against head coach Kent Austin hinder their ability to compete against the best team in the CFL.

Austin was banned from the sideline for one game and fined $10,000 by the CFL this week after making contact with an official in last week’s game against Saskatchew­an. The discipline comes with the 11-1-1 Calgary Stampeders set to visit Tim Hortons Field on Saturday in a key game for the 6-7-0 Tiger-Cats, who are fighting to stay in sole possession of second place in the East Division.

Calgary hasn’t lost since the first week of the season so the Ticats know they’ll have to be at their best even without Austin on the sideline.

“It doesn’t change anything for me, so we’ll be good,” said quarterbac­k Zach Collaros, who added he doesn’t think it’s been a distractio­n for the players.

Austin is allowed to coach from the spotter’s box on the stadium’s seventh floor. He’ll have a headset and be in regular contact with his coaching staff and quarterbac­k.

He will also be in the lockerroom before kickoff and during halftime. Defensive co-ordinator Orlondo Steinauer will run the sidelines during the game.

“Offensivel­y, it starts with the quarterbac­k, so I have to be on my game,” said Collaros. We can’t turn the football over, (we have to) eliminate negative plays on first down, stay out of second-and-longs.”

Austin said he knows the team will be in good hands.

“From a personal standpoint, it’s not great,” he acknowledg­ed Friday. “But we’ll get through it. Get over it and be better for it.”

Calgary has already secured a playoff spot thanks to a 12-game unbeaten streak. A win or tie in Hamilton will make it the longest single-season unbeaten streak in CFL history.

But it will be an emotional game for the Stampeders, after the shooting death of 23-year-old teammate Mylan Hicks outside a Calgary nightclub last weekend. Stampeders safety Jamar Wall will be wearing Hicks’ No. 31 as a tribute and he told reporters this week that the team wants to honour him through their play.

Austin said he knows that despite the adversity, the Stampeders will be ready.

“It was a terrible loss, but I know they’ve got a strong team and a strong locker-room and a lot of resiliency on that football team,” he said.

The Stampeders signed defensive end Cordarro Law this week to bolster a pass rush that is already third in the league with 33 sacks. Law played for Calgary in 2012 and 2013 before leaving for the NFL’s San Diego Chargers. He won’t dress Saturday. The Tiger-Cats, meanwhile, have been hit with key injuries, primarily to their offence.

Running back C.J. Gable and receiver Luke Tasker are on the one-game injured list. Receiver Chad Owens has been placed on the six-game injured list, along with running back Ross Scheuerman, who was supposed to be Gable’s replacemen­t, but has played just one game.

The Ticats have also lost Rico Murray and Courtney Stephen on defence. Hamilton acquired cornerback Johnny Adams this week from Winnipeg and he’ll start against Calgary.

After missing the first part of the season with an injury, Adams recorded 21 defensive tackles, five special-teams tackles, one intercepti­on and one fumble recovery in his five games with the Bombers.

It has also been a tough week for Adams, who was close friends with Hicks. They attended Michigan State University together.

Calgary defeated Hamilton 30-24 in their last meeting in Week 10.

 ?? GARY YOKOYAMA, THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO ?? Kent Austin is allowed to coach from the seventh-floor spotter’s box and will be in regular contact with his coaching staff and quarterbac­k.
GARY YOKOYAMA, THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR FILE PHOTO Kent Austin is allowed to coach from the seventh-floor spotter’s box and will be in regular contact with his coaching staff and quarterbac­k.

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