National Post (National Edition)

Rising young quarterbac­ks to meet again on Canadian soil

- BY JOSHUA CLIPPERTON

VANCOUVER • Jonathon Jennings and Jeff Mathews first met while trying out for the Green Bay Packers in the summer of 2014.

Neither stuck with the NFL club, but the quarterbac­ks will have a chance to get reacquaint­ed on Friday night when Jennings and his B.C. Lions host Mathews and the Hamilton Tiger-Cats.

“He’s a great guy, a great talent,” Jennings said of Mathews. “He’s a good dude. It’s exciting watching him play.”

The young QBs have both been unexpected­ly thrust into the spotlight in their first CFL campaigns. The 23-year-old Jennings moved from No. 3 to No. 1 on the depth chart with B.C. after starter Travis Lulay and backup John Beck got hurt, while the 24-year-old Mathews assumed the top job in Hamilton when Zach Collaros was lost to a season-ending knee injury.

And while Jennings and Mathews have each shown poise and promise, their teams are in very different predicamen­ts with the regular season winding down.

The Lions (5-10) desperatel­y need a win in the West Division playoff chase after blowing leads the last two weeks, while the Tiger-Cats (105) are in a battle for top spot in the East.

“Some unfortunat­e things have happened late in games,” said Jennings, who is 1-3 as a starter. “There’s no moral victories in profession­al football. You win or you lose. It doesn’t really matter how you win, you’ve just got to find a way to get it done.”

The underachie­ving Lions are being chased for third in the West by the Winnipeg Blue Bombers (5-11), who host the Ottawa Redblacks on Saturday.

The Tiger-Cats, who are 2-1 with Mathews under centre, head into the weekend a game up on both Ottawa and the Toronto Argonauts for first in the East.

The Lions are just 2-7 over their last nine — a downward spiral that started with that blow-out loss in Hamilton — but Tiger-Cats head coach Kent Austin said his team is ready for a battle.

“We’re not going to underestim­ate them,” Austin told reporters this week. “We’ve said very clearly there’s a lot of parity in this league. You better show up to play every week. It’s hard to win.”

 ?? DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? B.C. Lions quarterbac­k Jonathon Jennings was a one-time NFL hopeful with the Green Bay Packers, as was his opposite number for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, Jeff Mathews. The two meet in Friday night’s game.
DARRYL DYCK / THE CANADIAN PRESS B.C. Lions quarterbac­k Jonathon Jennings was a one-time NFL hopeful with the Green Bay Packers, as was his opposite number for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, Jeff Mathews. The two meet in Friday night’s game.

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