Regina Leader-Post

Like father, like son for Rams, Huskies QBS

Quarterbac­ks follow fathers’ footsteps to lead Rams and Huskies out onto the field

- KEVIN MITCHELL kemitchell@postmedia.com twitter.com/ kmitchsp

Noah Picton found an old VHS tape with an intriguing label a while back, and he journeyed 30 years into the past — pre-noah, when his dad was a gunslinger with the Regina Rams.

On those aged pixels was a kid around his own age, his father Dean Picton, throwing footballs and taking control of a nationalch­ampionship game. Noah had heard about his dad’s prowess, but never witnessed it, and he promptly did what any good son would do: He looked for mistakes. There was an early intercepti­on, along with a few assorted items that caught his seeking eyes.

“I can always hear his voice in the back of my head — ‘Get your elbow up! Look off the linebacker, the most dangerous guy!’ ” Noah, the University of Regina Rams’ standout quarterbac­k, said this week with a laugh. “Then I was watching the film, and it’s like, ‘Well, you don’t have your elbow up, and you’re not looking off the most dangerous guy, so lay off a little bit, right?’ It was funny.”

Dean Picton was named the top junior player in Canada while playing with the Rams in 1986. Noah Picton won the Hec Crighton Trophy as the top university player in the country in 2016, also with the Rams, who moved from junior to Canada West in 1999.

On Friday night, Noah Picton will square off against his talented University of Saskatchew­an Huskies counterpar­t, Kyle Siemens, in a battle of deep bloodlines.

Siemens’ father, Doug, was a standout Huskies quarterbac­k in the 1980s, which provides this instant scenario: Two quarterbac­ks, two dads, two programs.

Unlike Picton, Kyle Siemens has never watched his father play. It would be fun, he says, to find a tape like the one Noah dug up and see what Doug Siemens could do on a football field, once upon a time.

“I’ve kind of thought about that,” Kyle says. “It would be very inter- esting to be able to watch. If there is a video, I’d love to go watch it and see how Doug played the game. I have to go off stories from him and some of his teammates back in the day.”

Doug figures there’s some 8mm or 16mm tape lying forgotten somewhere “in the caverns at the university.” He played from 1981 to 1985 and was the Huskies’ career passing leader for more than a decade. The elder Siemens now sits fourth in career yardage with 7,153. Kyle is fifth — one spot below his dad — with 6,646, and will pass him this season if he stays healthy.

“I don’t think I’ve gone through his sports chest yet; I haven’t been able to look at some of those things (such as clippings and memorabili­a),” Kyle says. “There’s a couple of photos of him all padded up and scrambling around, and I’ve seen those. It’s cool to see those.”

The kids on that father-son train took different routes to their positions. Kyle Siemens briefly flirted with playing receiver as a kid before permanentl­y setting up behind centre. He played two seasons with the Regina Thunder and joined the Huskies in 2014.

Noah Picton hasn’t played any position but quarterbac­k. And he always saw the Rams as his destiny.

“A lot of kids dream of playing in the NFL or the CFL. Oddly enough, I wanted to play for the Regina Rams,” he says. “That was my dream growing up.”

Having Dean Picton in the house, he adds, was like having access to his own full-time coach.

“There was always something to be learned watching football or throwing the ball in the back yard,” Noah says. “It was never just playing catch — it was always working on some sort of skills. I love the position, and I love the game. To have him there, teaching and coaching me, I feel very lucky to have him as my father.

“It’s always been quarterbac­k. It’s the only position I’ve ever played. I don’t know if I’d be athletic enough to play anything else on the field, aside from kicker or punter, but I don’t do that particular­ly well. So it’s quarterbac­k or nothing; it’s always been that way.”

Dean Picton says: “I’m just proud of everything he’s been able to do. Proud he was able to make the team, and proud he was able to get on the field and have success. I’m proud and happy he’s having the same experience playing football at the post-high school level that I did. He’s created great memories and lifelong friendship­s.”

In Saskatoon, Doug Siemens wants his kid to savour this final season. He knows how fleeting it is.

“It goes by so fast. It’s a heartbeat,” Doug says. “Then your fifth year goes by in a blink, and you’ve got to stop every once in a while.

“If he stops and smells the coffee, and takes a look around ... I’ve been trying to tell him to do that, as opposed to (worrying about) numbers.”

Friday’s game at Griffiths Stadium is at 7 p.m. Both teams are 2-1. Two dads will watch two quarterbac­ks, knowingly, with pride.

“They’ve been a big part of the community — the Huskies in Saskatoon and the Rams here — and growing up as a little kid, you want to play for those teams,” Noah Picton says. “It’s kind of neat that Kyle’s dad played quarterbac­k, and my dad played quarterbac­k, and now we’re playing against each other. It’s a neat situation.”

 ??  ?? Noah Picton, left, is a second-generation star quarterbac­k with the U of R Rams, while Kyle Siemens is a second-generation star quarterbac­k with the U of S Huskies. Their fathers played the same positions at the same schools in the 1980s. On Friday, the younger Picton and Siemens will face off in Saskatoon.
Noah Picton, left, is a second-generation star quarterbac­k with the U of R Rams, while Kyle Siemens is a second-generation star quarterbac­k with the U of S Huskies. Their fathers played the same positions at the same schools in the 1980s. On Friday, the younger Picton and Siemens will face off in Saskatoon.
 ?? LEFT PHOTO: TROY FLEECE; RIGHT PHOTO: LIAM RICHARDS ??
LEFT PHOTO: TROY FLEECE; RIGHT PHOTO: LIAM RICHARDS

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