Edmonton Journal

COLLAROS CAPS IMPROBABLE PLAYOFF RUN WITH CUP WIN

Third team’s the charm in a strange 134 days for quarterbac­k whose career was in jeopardy

- mtraikos@postmedia.com SCOTT STINSON Calgary

Zach Collaros was doing that thing that players do when they do not want attention on themselves.

“I know it’s a good story,” he said during Grey Cup week before brushing off an attempt at getting him to be introspect­ive.

The Winnipeg Blue Bombers quarterbac­k was wrong about that. It’s an incredible story. Collaros was concussed on the third play of his season, crunched June 13 by a hit in Saskatchew­an’s opener from Hamilton’s Simoni Lawrence that eventually led to a suspension.

It would take 134 days and two trades before Collaros would throw another pass, for his third team this season. And now a month after that improbable return, Collaros was the starter for the Grey Cup-champion Winnipeg Blue Bombers, helping that franchise break a 28-year title drought, the longest in the modern era of the CFL.

Collaros provided most of the passing of Winnipeg’s twopronged quarterbac­k attack, keeping drives moving as the Blue Bombers offence was rarely slowed on the night on the way to a 33-12 win. With three minutes left and the outcome long decided, Collaros walked off the field after another scoring drive and gave coach Mike O’shea a quick hug.

A good story? A ridiculous­ly improbable story, a possibly dangerous story and a story that, at least for now, has the unlikelies­t of happy endings. The quarterbac­k who was twice tossed aside for a draft pick in 2019 is a 2019 Grey Cup champion. Sports, again, with a real-life tale that is hard to believe.

In the five months after that opening-game blow to the head, many thought Collaros’s football career was over, felled by too many blows to the head in an era where the damage caused by those shots is much better understood.

Over his relatively brief time in the CFL, he had shown flashes of brilliance, but the 31-year-old from Steubenvil­le, Ohio, was a perfect example of the grim reality of football. He broke out with the Toronto Argonauts in 2013, but left soon thereafter for Hamilton as the Argos were already set at quarterbac­k with Ricky Ray. Collaros led the Tigercats all the way to the Grey Cup the following season — that was the one that Hamilton lost on a brutal penalty call that erased a late Brandon Banks touchdown — but his 2015 campaign was cut short by a serious knee injury. By the time he was healthy again, the Tiger-cats had changed coaches and Collaros had a much less certain hold on the starting job. The CFL’S quarterbac­k carousel turned again and Collaros would eventually land with the Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s after a trade in the winter of 2018.

His time in the Prairies was as difficult as his latter years in Steeltown. Collaros took a blow to the head in a pre-season game against Calgary and in the second regular-season game of 2018, he was yanked with concussion-related symptoms and soon placed on the injured list. The quarterbac­k would later blame himself for not being forthright with the Saskatchew­an medical staff about the effects of the pre-season hit.

“In a new setting and a new situation and as the new guy, I just wanted to be out there with my teammates,” Collaros said. “I probably pushed a little bit too much and I paid for it by having to miss a couple of weeks.”

He returned in the summer of 2018 and played the rest of that season with Saskatchew­an until another hit to the head in the Roughrider­s’ final game of the regular season. He would not be cleared to play for the post-season, but when the Roughrider­s still needed a starter last winter, he re-signed with Saskatchew­an. There was a little bit of desperatio­n on all sides. Collaros hadn’t lived up to the early promise he had shown, when that half-season with the Argonauts led to multiple teams pursuing his services, but he still felt he had good years ahead of him. The Roughrider­s had tried to go elsewhere to find a starting pivot, but Collaros knew their system and he was available. There were fingers crossed in hopes that it would work out.

It lasted those three plays until Lawrence’s illegal hit. This time, there was no doubt that Collaros lost his job in his injury absence as Cody Fajardo took over Saskatchew­an’s quarterbac­k duties and guided them to the best record in the West Division as a most outstandin­g player finalist.

Saskatchew­an traded Collaros to the woeful Argonauts in August. Concussion symptoms remained, though, and Collaros stayed on the sidelines. It seemed like he would stay there — the Argos were going nowhere and had no reason to risk an early return — but then Toronto GM Jim Popp was fired just before the Oct. 9 trade deadline and the new regime decided, at the last minute, to move Collaros to Winnipeg for a draft pick.

It would still be weeks before he would see game action. Collaros was on his third playbook in three months and he was told to learn as much as he could as soon as he could. By late October, he was ready to play. Or at least everyone with the Bombers hoped he was ready.

Four games later, Collaros has four wins and a championsh­ip to show for his efforts. It looked like he was done. He quite possibly should have been done. Zach Collaros, though, was not done.

 ?? AZIN GHAFFARI ?? Winnipeg Blue Bombers quarterbac­k Zach Collaros passes the ball to Andrew Harris during the Grey Cup game against Hamilton Tiger-cats Sunday at Mcmahon Stadium in Calgary. On his third team this season, Collaros is now a Grey Cup champion after a 33-12 Winnipeg victory.
AZIN GHAFFARI Winnipeg Blue Bombers quarterbac­k Zach Collaros passes the ball to Andrew Harris during the Grey Cup game against Hamilton Tiger-cats Sunday at Mcmahon Stadium in Calgary. On his third team this season, Collaros is now a Grey Cup champion after a 33-12 Winnipeg victory.
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