The Welland Tribune

Lions fail to break Roughrider­s defence in tough 24-21 loss

‘When you can’t make plays, you must not have the right guys’

- GEMMA KARSTENS-SMITH

VANCOUVER — The B.C. Lions know they’re facing an uphill slog in the second half of the season after dropping yet another close game.

The Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s (5-4) squeezed out a 24-21 win Saturday night, handing the

Leos (3-6) their first home loss of the Canadian Football League season.

Riders quarterbac­k Zach Collaros threw for 215 yards, while B.C.’s Travis Lulay put up 231.

But offensive missteps continue to plague the Lions. Head coach Wally Buono said he was disappoint­ed with the number of balls his team dropped.

“You’ve got to catch balls to continue drives, you’ve got to catch balls to create plays, you’ve got to got catch balls to score touchdowns. You can’t just kick field goals,” he said.

B.C. kicker Ty Long opened the scoring with a 20-yard field goal less than three minutes in. It was the first of five he made throughout the game, including a 48-yard kick in the final minute of the first half.

Buono noted that if one of those field goals had been a touchdown, the Lions could have walked away with a much-needed win.

“It is what it is. We’ve created this situation the way that it is. We had high hopes for our offence, but at the end of it, it’s not scored enough points, it’s not taken advantage of enough opportunit­ies and it’s created too many miscues,” he said.

The coach hinted that some roster adjustment­s may be in the works, saying he’ll sit down with Lions general manager Ed Hervey in the coming days to talk about players.

“When you can’t make plays, you must not have the right guys,” Buono said.

Riders coach Chris Jones said his team also has room to improve, despite Saturday’s win.

“Nothing was perfect, certainly. We gave up a couple of big plays defensivel­y that resulted in points. We gave up a kickoff return that gave up points. And offensivel­y we stubbed our toe there in the middle of the game,” he said.

The victory marks Saskatchew­an’s second win in a row. Last week they handed Calgary its first loss of the season. A pair of wins boost the team’s confidence, but there’s still work to be done heading into next week’s match up with the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, Jones said. “We’ve put ourselves in a position where it’s much more favourable now,” he said. “But Winnipeg’s a dangerous football team. They’re very explosive, have a lot of trick plays . ... So we’ve got our hands full in a week here.”

The Lions have a bye next week and won’t play again until Sept. 7 when they host the Redblacks. Lulay said his team needs to use the break to “take a deep breath during the bye week and figure out how to win games in the fourth quarter.”

The losses are tough, but the team should take confidence from the close games and not dwell going into the final nine games of the season, Lulay said.

“The back half of the season, we’ve got to scratch and claw and fight like heck to give ourselves an opportunit­y,” he said.

B.C.’s kicker, Long, is hoping his team can get on a run after the bye week.

“We’re close,” Long said. “That’s the thing that’s a little frustratin­g for all of us. We’re close to figuring it out and we’re close to winning all of these games. We just need to put it together.”

But is there still time to atone for the Lions sloppy start to the season?

“It’s the CFL, anything’s possible,” he said.

 ?? DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? B.C. Lions quarterbac­k Travis Lulay, right, tumbles ahead to avoid a tackle from Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s’ Samuel Eguavoen, left, during the second half of a CFL game in Vancouver on Saturday.
DARRYL DYCK THE CANADIAN PRESS B.C. Lions quarterbac­k Travis Lulay, right, tumbles ahead to avoid a tackle from Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s’ Samuel Eguavoen, left, during the second half of a CFL game in Vancouver on Saturday.

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