Waterloo Region Record

It’s spoiler time for Lions, Ticats and Als

- Dan Ralph

The B.C. Lions, Hamilton Tiger-Cats and Montreal Alouettes are out of playoff contention but can still impact the Canadian Football League post-season.

B.C. (6-10) visits Winnipeg (11-5) on Saturday to face a Blue Bombers team that can clinch second in the West Division with a victory. Even if the Lions win, the Bombers would clinch home-field advantage for the conference semifinal if Calgary (13-2-1) beats thirdplace Edmonton (10-6) on Sunday.

Should Winnipeg lose and Edmonton win, the Bombers would need to defeat Calgary on Nov. 3 to clinch second in the West.

A Riders loss Friday to Montreal (3-13) and an Edmonton win over Calgary would make Saskatchew­an (9-7) the crossover team and third playoff seed in the East.

But, if Saskatchew­an and Calgary both win, the Riders’ regularsea­son finale at home to the Eskimos on Nov. 4 would decide third in the West. The Riders won the first meeting, 54-31, at Edmonton on Aug. 25.

Hamilton (5-11) is in Ottawa on Friday night. The Redblacks (7-9-1) have cemented an East Division playoff spot but are second behind idle Toronto (8-9).

A tie or Hamilton win would give Toronto first and home-field advantage for the East final. If

Ottawa prevails, the Argos could secure top spot with a win or tie against B.C. on Nov. 4.

HARRIS WATCH: Andrew Harris’s historic quest took a bit of a hit Saturday.

The Winnipeg native was held to 32 yards rushing and two catches for four yards in the Bombers’ 29-28 road loss to Toronto. That leaves Harris with 903 rushing yards and 96 catches for 820 yards with two regular-season games remaining.

Harris is attempting to become the first CFL player to accumulate 1,000 yards rushing and receiving in the same season.

Winnipeg hosts B.C. on Saturday needing a victory to clinch second in the West Division and home field for the conference semifinal. Should the Bombers win, Harris could see limited playing time in the regular-season finale versus Calgary, thus impacting his ability to register the historic double.

COLLAROS’S FUTURE: Zach Collaros’s future in Hamilton looks bleak. With the Ticats out of playoff contention, Collaros saw his first game action in nine weeks Sunday. He appeared in just one series in Hamilton’s 43-16 win over Montreal, completing two passes for 24 yards.

Collaros lost his starting job in August when June Jones became interim head coach and promoted backup Jeremiah Masoli. The Ticats are 5-3 since.

Masoli started against Montreal and was 12-of-19 passing for 320 yards and two TDs into the fourth quarter. Collaros was replaced by Everett Golson, who completed the only pass he threw for 14 yards.

Hamilton reportedly discussed a trade with Saskatchew­an involving Collaros earlier this season and there was talk Toronto was interested in re-acquiring the 29-year-old quarterbac­k.

But Hamilton opted against dealing Collaros at the CFL trade deadline. Prior to being benched, Collaros, who has a year remaining on his contract, had lost 12 straight starts, one short of the league record.

Masoli’s emergence isn’t the only factor weighing against Collaros’s return to Hamilton. The Ticats also have former National Football League first-round pick Johnny Manziel on their negotiatio­n list.

Collaros’s CFL career began with Toronto in 2012 and he was 5-2 as the starter in ’13 when veteran Ricky Ray was injured. Collaros signed with Hamilton as a free agent before the ’14 season.

He was enjoying a stellar ’15 campaign — 3,376 passing yards with 25 TDs and only eight intercepti­ons through 12 games — before suffering a season-ending knee injury.

 ?? GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Tiger-Cats quarterbac­k Jeremiah Masoli hands off to Alex Green during Sunday’s 43-16 win over Montreal.
GRAHAM HUGHES, THE CANADIAN PRESS Tiger-Cats quarterbac­k Jeremiah Masoli hands off to Alex Green during Sunday’s 43-16 win over Montreal.

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