Ottawa Citizen

JURY STILL OUT ON HARRIS’ ‘TRIAL UNDER FIRE’

Redblacks pivot feeling the pressure in first year as ‘the guy’ under centre

- TIM BAINES Twitter: @TimCBaines

Through the first half of the CFL regular season, the Ottawa Redblacks were a model of inconsiste­ncy.

There was plenty of good, but too much bad. And when the bad happened, it was crippling. The past two weeks have been better, though far from perfect.

The offence is always an easy target for nitpickers. The playcallin­g, the quarterbac­k decisions — it’s all been put under the magnifying glass in the favourite pastime of critics: Armchair Quarterbac­king 101.

Redblacks quarterbac­k Trevor Harris says he has learned plenty during the 2017 season, much of it off the field.

“It’s been trial under fire,” said Harris on Wednesday, just before the team hopped on a bus and travelled to Montreal, where they will play the Alouettes Thursday night. “This is the first year I’ve been actually the guy. People look at you differentl­y. I’m always critiquing myself, there are always ways to get better. But in terms of getting better, it’s more off-the-field stuff. On the field, I am who I am at this point.”

Offensive co-ordinator Jaime Elizondo likes the tools in his tool box. He likes the players he has to work with. While it’s evolving, it will get better, he said.

“We’re finding our identity,” Elizondo said. “We’re playing better, we’re moving around better, we’re causing confusion better. When we first got a couple of the injuries, we were moving guys around, guys played different spots ... so you put the best player in the best situation. That’s going to cause you to play a little slower. That’s what happened the first few games with Diontae (Spencer) being a bit banged up, losing Juron (Criner to injury), putting different guys in. We’re a work in progress and hopefully trending upward.”

In Saturday’s 31-24 win over B.C., Harris threw a couple of intercepti­ons where maybe he should have looked for another option instead of tossing it into coverage.

The second one, which led to a touchdown that cut the Redblacks’ lead to seven, was an ill-advised pass that Ronnie Yell picked off at the Ottawa 37 and took to the three-yard line — where Harris forced him out of bounds.

Getting Harris and the other 11 guys on the field in sync is the goal.

“It’s a process knowing what Trevor’s comfortabl­e with, what our receivers can do, what our line can protect, how we can run the ball better,” Elizondo said.

A win would give the Redblacks some breathing room in the hunt for a playoff spot. Not only would they move three points ahead of the Als, they’d also take over top spot in the East, a point ahead of Toronto, which will have a game in hand.

MADU STAYS IN: William Powell will stay on the one-game injured list, while Mossis Madu Jr. will again start at running back for the Redblacks.

Madu rushed for 42 yards and had another 40 yards on catches versus the Lions. He also scored two touchdowns. In the four games he has started, Madu has averaged 48 rushing yards. He leads the CFL with three twopoint converts.

“They’re similar guys,” said Redblacks coach Rick Campbell, who added that Powell was “close to returning.

“We’re lucky to have two very capable guys where we don’t seem to miss a beat with whoever’s in there. Mossis made some big plays for us last game. We really feel comfortabl­e with both those guys.”

KUDOS FOR THORPE: Noel Thorpe has plenty of respect around the CFL. Count the Redblacks QB among those who know the difference the Als defensive coordinato­r can make in the tone of a game.

“He does a good job of keeping you off balance, blitzing you, dropping people into coverage at opportune times,” said Harris. “That’s why he’s one of the best in the business.

“His scheme’s unique. Every defence in this league is kind of unique. Every D co-ordinator has his own touch, his own picture he paints. But it’s our job as an offence to just do what we do, not really concern ourselves with what they’re doing.”

THE END AROUND: The Philadelph­ia Eagles waived former Redblacks DB Mitchell White Wednesday. You can bet he’ll exhaust any NFL opportunit­ies before considerin­g the CFL. And Ottawa is happy with Corey Tindal and Jonathan Rose.

I’m always critiquing myself, there are always ways to get better. But in terms of getting better, it’s more off-thefield stuff. On the field, I am who I am ...

 ?? TONY CALDWELL ?? The Redblacks’ offence with QB Trevor Harris leading the way remains a “work in progress,” says co-ordinator Jamie Elizondo.
TONY CALDWELL The Redblacks’ offence with QB Trevor Harris leading the way remains a “work in progress,” says co-ordinator Jamie Elizondo.
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