The Hamilton Spectator

They are players’ coaches, and it shows. Again.

Steinauer, O’Shea are in the (football) people business

- DAN RALPH

Wins and losses are important, but Mike O’Shea and Orlondo Steinauer believe — as CFL head coaches — they’re in the people business.

It’s an approach that seems to work for O’Shea, the head coach of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, and Steinauer, who’s completing his second season with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats. Their teams meet Sunday at Tim Hortons Field in the 2021 Grey Cup game.

Winnipeg defeated Hamilton 3312 in the last Grey Cup contest played in 2019.

“When you put 70 people into a room, they’re not all going to like you,” Steinauer said Wednesday at the Grey Cup coaches’ news conference. “It’s not about getting them to like you, can you get them to bond?

“That gives you the best opportunit­y as a team. You deal with them as people, not as X, Y, Z, however you want to label them. The bottom line is humans and people make mistakes, so there’s got to be a certain amount of grace. But, at the same time, you’re responsibl­e for winning and losing, but you know that when you sign up. That’s not the focus.”

O’Shea agreed. “Yeah, he said it pretty well,” he said. “If not for grace, I wouldn’t be sitting here. The other thing you realize with

people ... life is going on for these guys outside that door. As much as

they walk through it, it doesn’t work that way. You have to respect the fact that their life is going outside those walls, too.”

And life has become much more complicate­d since the 2019 Grey Cup.

O’Shea and Steinauer share the same philosophy regarding the issue of vaccinatio­ns. The CFL didn’t play in 2020 due to the pandemic and held a shortened 14-game campaign this year that required players, coaches and tier-one personnel to follow COVID-19 protocols.

Last month, Ottawa introduced new regulation­s barring unvaccinat­ed individual­s from air travel. O’Shea confirmed Wednesday offensive lineman Asotui Eli was unable to travel here a day after reports surfaced the team placed Eli on the suspended list due to COVID-19 protocols.

“You have to deal with each person individual­ly,” O’Shea said. “You have the broad statement saying, ‘Here’s what the science suggests, here’s what the protocols are, here’s what might come down the pipe as we go along.’

“As always, you’re dealing with humans,” the coach added. “You’re listening to the players, you get a sense of where they’re coming from. Like with anything, when a player isn’t able to play for whatever reason, what comes to my mind is the person, what they’re feeling and the turmoil they’re going through ... in the end it’s always about the individual player.”

Added Steinauer: “I never had a strong meeting about what they should or should not do. They’re humans, they can make their own decision and while, from the outside looking in, it might be, ‘Well that’s personal, that’s selfish,’ that doesn’t enter the mind. It’s their personal choice. With the protocols and everything changing, not just outside the building but inside the building, that was a tough juggling act. But all you had to know was you weren’t the only team going through it and you just push on.”

O’Shea and Steinauer have earned a reputation of being players’ coaches. That could help explain why both teams still have many veterans on the roster from the 2019 Grey Cup game.

“They’re just two great coaches,” said Hamilton linebacker Jovan Santos-Knox, a former Bomber (2017-18). “I know they were teammates and I know it must be a special thing for them going against each other. Two great guys I really, really respect.”

Winnipeg is minus only 13 players from its 2019 Grey Cup roster while Hamilton is without 18 regulars from two years ago.

Both figures are impressive considerin­g the abundance of one-year deals in the CFL and annual turnover of league lineups.

“He (Steinauer) has always related to people,” O’Shea said. “Best in the room at relating to the players.

“Besides all the Xs and Os and how just damn smart he is, he’s just a better dude you want to hang out with and have a beer with. That’s pretty simple for me.”

Once again, Steinauer nodded his head in agreement.

“I know that doesn’t make good storylines ... but he’s that guy,” Steinauer said. “Coach is a title, I think we’re people first. I got to keep it light or I’ll get emotional. I care about him as a person. I’m not shocked why he’s up here again. He’s just a fighter. Everybody should be proud, he’s a true Canadian and what the CFL is all about.”

 ?? ?? Winnipeg Blue Bombers head coach Mike O'Shea, left, and Hamilton Tiger-Cats head coach Orlondo Steinauer address the media at the Hamilton Convention Centre on Wednesday.
Winnipeg Blue Bombers head coach Mike O'Shea, left, and Hamilton Tiger-Cats head coach Orlondo Steinauer address the media at the Hamilton Convention Centre on Wednesday.

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