Toronto Star

Edmonton coach seeking redemption

Maas taking over team that beat his Redblacks in Grey Cup

- DAN RALPH THE CANADIAN PRESS

For Jason Maas, it’s the perfect match.

The 40-year-old begins his first CFL season as a head coach on June 25 when his Edmonton Eskimos play host to Ottawa in a rematch of last year’s Grey Cup.

Not only are the Eskimos the defending champions after rallying for an exciting 26-20 victory, but Maas is eager for redemption after serving as the Redblacks’ offensive co-ordinator last season.

“When you look up at the clock and have five minutes to go in the game and you’re leading the Grey Cup and then it just doesn’t happen, that’s very disappoint­ing,” Maas said.

“And then to come to this team that’s just won, I think it’s a good match.

“It’s a team that’s confident, that knows how to win with a coach who wants to win even more now.”

Maas returned to Edmonton in December to replace Chris Jones, who left to become the Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s’ head coach/GM. It was a homecoming for Maas, a Wisconsin native who spent 10 of his 12 CFL seasons as a quarterbac­k with the Eskimos and was part of two Grey Cup-winning teams. Maas takes over an Edmonton squad that won its final 10 games last season and is looking to become the first repeat Grey Cup champion since Montreal (2009-10) and just the second since the Argonauts did it in 1996-97.

The 2016 season kicks off June 23 with Toronto hosting the archrival Hamilton Tiger-Cats at BMO Field. The Argos are moving into the refurbishe­d outdoor stadium after 27 seasons at the domed Rogers Centre.

BMO Field will also stage the Grey Cup game Nov. 27. The Argos won the last CFL championsh­ip held in Toronto, that being the historic 100th Grey Cup in 2012 at Rogers Centre.

Maas isn’t the CFL’s lone new head coach this year.

Jones faces rebuilding a Riders team coming off a league-worst 3-15 record. And in B.C., GM Wally Buono returns to the sidelines for the first time since leading the Lions to the 2011 Grey Cup title.

Dave Dickenson took over as Calgary’s head coach when John Hufnagel stepped down after eight seasons to concentrat­e on his GM duties. Hufnagel later added the president’s title to his resume.

The sideline turnover leaves Toronto’s Scott Milanovich, entering his fifth CFL season, as the league’s longest-tenured head coach.

Buono, 66, holds the CFL record for wins as a head coach with 254. He’s captured five Grey Cup titles and four times has been named the league’s top coach.

Other CFL storylines this season include:

Can veteran quarterbac­k Henry Burris continue fending off Father Time? The 41-year-old was the CFL’s outstandin­g player last season after leading Ottawa (12-6) to the Grey Cup in just its second season. Burris was the lone quarterbac­k to start all 18 regular-season games, but the Redblacks signed former Argo Trevor Harris in free agency.

Several other teams open the season with questions at quarterbac­k. Veteran Darian Durant returns as Saskatchew­an’s starter, but he’s coming off two injury-plagued seasons. Ricky Ray’s healthy return in Toronto from shoulder woes is pivotal with Harris moving on to Ottawa. Winni- peg’s hopes bank on a big year from injury-prone Drew Willy. And in Hamilton, the Ticats open the season minus starter Zach Collaros, who continues to recover from last year’s season-ending knee injury.

There will be drug testing in the CFL this year. There was none in 2015 after the league severed its partnershi­p with the Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sports, which resumes its role of conducting the tests. The number of tests performed will be equal to 100 per cent of the players in the league. Those testing positive face a two-game suspension for a first violation. It will increase to nine games for a second and a one-year ban for a third. A fourth offence results in a lifetime ban.

Over 140 players hit the free-agent market in February. Among those changing teams were running back Andrew Harris, kicker-punter Justin Medlock, centre Jeff Keeping and defensive lineman Euclid Cummings (all with Winnipeg), receivers Weston Dressler (Winnipeg), Chad Owens (Hamilton) and Chris Getzlaf (Edmonton), defensive back Keon Raymond, defensive linemen Brian Bulcke, Bryan Hall and Justin Hickman and tackle Josh Bourke (all Toronto).

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Eskimos quarterbac­k Mike Reilly hoists the Grey Cup after his team beat the Redblacks last year.
NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS Eskimos quarterbac­k Mike Reilly hoists the Grey Cup after his team beat the Redblacks last year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada