National Post (National Edition)

Stamps labour to defy history of implosions

Collapse following high achievemen­t has been in franchise’s DNA

- ROB VANSTONE

The Calgary Stampeders fold so often that they really should join an origami class. On paper, they are clearly superior to the Toronto Argonauts and should therefore win Sunday’s Grey Cup game, but there is a tendency toward implosion.

Just last year, for example, the 15-2-1 Stampeders managed to lose 39-33 in overtime to the 8-9-1 Ottawa Redblacks with CFL supremacy at stake.

It was a classic collapse by Calgary, which has repeatedly succumbed to an underdog in a big game.

Consider the Doug Flutie years. During four seasons in which the premier player in CFL history quarterbac­ked the Stampeders, they reached two Grey Cup games and won only once.

In Year 1 with Flutie (1992), Calgary posted a league-best 13-5-0 slate and waltzed to a Grey Cup title.

Calgary registered subsequent Grey Cup victories in 1998, 2001, 2008 and 2014. Even so, the Stampeders have become known as much for letdowns as touchdowns. To recap ... 1993: Calgary went 15-3-0 before losing 2915 to the Edmonton Eskimos (12-6-0) in the West Division final.

1994: Calgary flushed another 15-3-0 season by losing 37-36 to the B.C. Lions (11-6-1) in the division final.

1995: Calgary went 15-3-0 — this is a recording — and reached the Grey Cup game before falling 37-20 to the Baltimore Stallions.

1996: The Stampeders (13-5-0) lost 15-12 to Edmonton (11-7-0) in the West final.

1997: In the West semifinal, the Stampeders (10-8-0) fell 33-30 to the 8-10-0 Roughrider­s.

2000: B.C. (8-10-0) defeated the 12-5-1 Stampeders 37-21 in the West final.

2006: Saskatchew­an defeated Calgary 3021 in the West semifinal. Calgary was 10-8-0; Saskatchew­an was 9-9-0.

2010: Calgary finished first at 13-5-0. Saskatchew­an was 10-8-0. Regular-season results mattered not, as the Roughrider­s won 20-16 in the West final.

2012: In the Grey Cup, the 12-6-0 Stampeders lost 35-22 to Ricky Ray and the 9-9-0 Argonauts.

2013: Calgary ruled the West at 14-4-0, posting three more victories than Saskatchew­an. So, of course, the Roughrider­s won the division final 35-13.

2016: The Stampeders had a Seattle Seahawks moment late in the fourth quarter of the 104th Grey Cup game. With a secondand-goal situation on Ottawa’s two-yard line, Stampeders head coach Dave Dickenson kept his superb quarterbac­k (Bo Levi Mitchell) and 254-pound tailback (Jerome Messam) on the sideline. Andrew Buckley, the shortyarda­ge quarterbac­k, was felled for a oneyard loss. Calgary settled for a chip-shot field goal that forced overtime. Ottawa took it from there.

It never should have reached that point. Mitchell, who had quarterbac­ked Calgary to the title in 2014, should have been in the game for the Stampeders’ final possession of regulation time.

“Ball’s got to be in my hands and (Messam’s),” Mitchell told reporters after the game. “That’s how I feel.

“But it’s not wrong, for what (Dickenson) called it’s a good call. It’s something we’ve seen in film with evidence we thought would work. And they’ve got a solid D-line so it’s not to say even if we would’ve handed off that (Messam) would’ve got in, but at that moment I thought the game was over.”

The strong suspicion here is that the Stampeders, who have had an entire year to stew over a Grey Cup gag and salivate at the thought of redemption, will take out their frustratio­ns on Sunday in Ottawa and capsize the Boatmen.

But these are the Stampeders, so you never know.

REPEATEDLY SUCCUMBED TO AN UNDERDOG IN A BIG GAME.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada