Calgary Herald

Bombers upend Alouettes

- BILL BEACON

It had been 10 months since Joey Elliott took a snap in a game, but the Winnipeg Blue Bombers third-string quarterbac­k said it went fine.

Elliott, who missed most of last season after tearing a knee ligament against Calgary on July 14, led a trio of Bomber quarterbac­ks with nine completion­s for 111 yards as Winnipeg opened the CFL pre-season with a 22-10 victory over the Montreal Alouettes on Thursday night.

“It felt good,” he said. “The first pass, getting a completion, I got things rolling after that.

“I’m back 100 per cent, but I’m also still kind of a rookie in this league myself. In game experience, I’m not that high on the totem pole. But I’m trying to learn as much as I can and game action is going to help. Games are really a lot quicker than practice.”

Bloi-dei Dorzon scored the Bombers’ only touchdown on a 37-yard run while Justin Palardy had three field goals and Eric Wilbur booted two.

Travon Patterson caught a touchdown pass for Montreal, while Sean Whyte had two field goals.

Neither team used its starting quarterbac­k, Anthony Calvillo for Montreal or Buck Pierce for Winnipeg. Alex Brink started for Winnipeg and went 7-for-15 for 74 yards. Justin Goltz went in late and was 2-for-6 for 11 yards. For Montreal, starter Adrian Mcpherson struggled with one completion in seven passes for only five yards. But Josh Neiswander completed 12 of 24 for 124 yards and Scott Riddle went 5-for-10 for 36 yards. They each threw one intercepti­on.

Goltz moved into the No. 3 slot when Elliott went down last season and now the two are battling for that job in camp.

“It’s Buck’s team and we’re all behind him,” said Elliott. “We have three young quarterbac­ks and if one of our numbers is called, we all try to jump in there and be successful.”

Coach paulla police was not thrilled with the Bombers’ performanc­e. The quarterbac­ks were sacked six times, the team took 12 penalties for 94 yards and there were two fumbles.

“Unfortunat­ely, we were putting the ball on the ground too much,” he said. “We were completing passes and fumbling it.

“The quarterbac­ks did OK, but we only had one TD and it was on a big play, so we have to execute better. I told the players we can’t be happy with what we did. You’ve got to sustain drives and stay on the field.”

Neiswander capped his first drive with a seven-yard TD toss. Montreal coach Marc Trestman said Neiswander played well in spots but showed he needed more work.

“I was disappoint­ed with the performanc­e of our offence in total,” he said. “We had opportunit­ies we didn’t convert.

Montreal lost receiver Brandon London to a mild concussion.

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