Montreal Gazette

Cornish’s word of advice on the CFL rushing race: Chill

- GEORGE JOHNSON

CALGARY — For those red-andwhite disciples who find themselves flinching involuntar­ily at that early 138-yard gap between Jon Cornish and the top of the table, the will o’ the wisp tailback has a word of advice:

Light some incense. Slide on a Zamfir CD. Chill. ’Cause he considers himself not so much behind Sas- katchewan scatback Kory Sheets as ahead of the game.

“If you remember correctly,” Cornish gently admonishes the slightly-stooped, nearsighte­d, addle-brained, aging interrogat­or who’s blocked his way just outside the Calgary Stampeders’ locker-room, “last year I only had 198 yards after five games. Hey, this year I’m on pace for 1,800!

“And that’s with only one big game. Do I look stressed? Hey, I’m relaxed right now. I’m in a pretty good position, I think.”

Heading into Week 4 of the 2013 CFL campaign, Sheets has set a completely mad pace, hoarding 442 yards or 137 a start to lead all rushers. Cornish, a full 143 yards ahead of his three-game aggregate last season, is next at 304, then you have to scale back 98 more to third-seated Chad Simpson of the Bombers.

Sheets, who finished 180 yards behind leader Cornish in 2012, is clearly aiming to flip-flop positions atop the rushing charts this go-round.

“I don’t compete with anybody but myself,” says Cornish flatly. “I don’t set any long-term goals. I set per-play goals. I want to be the best player I possibly can on every play. That’s my aim.

“When I see and hear people comparing us, I’m thinking ‘Is this legitimate, or what?’ Look, Sheets is a good running back. But I think any time you have someone who distinguis­hes himself, people automatica­lly want to put him up, match him up, against somebody else.

“I really like the way he plays. He makes excellent cuts and hits the hole hard. But I like the way I play, too. We’re two different backs. Last year there were the constant comparison­s between me and Andrew Harris.

“I anticipate this year there’ll be constant comparison­s between me and Kory Sheets.”

Saturday at McMahon Stadium, Cornish gets another dose of the Montreal defence. If the Als’ offence has deservedly taken its share of stick over the past couple of weeks, the stalwart D has been nothing short of courageous, resilient.

After being touched for 33 points in the opener by Buck Pierce and the Bombers, it held Winnipeg to 19 in the rematch and then the Stamps to one offensive touchdown last week.

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