Toronto Star

Argos outworked on Labour Day

Ticats improve to 7-0 in holiday classics at Tim Hortons Field

- DAN RALPH

HAMILTON—There’s something about Labour Day that brings out the best in Dane Evans, Frankie Williams and the rest of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats.

Evans threw two touchdown passes while Williams scored on a 67-yard punt return as Hamilton defeated the Toronto Argonauts 32-19 Monday. The Ticats improved to 7-0 at Tim Hortons Field on Labour Day.

“We talk about every game is just the next game … and then you get to Labour Day,” Evans said. “When it’s Labour Day week, we emphasize, ‘It’s Labour Day. We don’t lose here on Labour Day.’

“We know the fans are going to be behind us, we know Toronto is going to be chippy, we know it’s going to be sunny, we know it’s going to be windy. Everything that happened (Monday) we prepared for. There is something extremely special about Tim Hortons Field on Labour Day … you can feel it in the air, I can’t put it into words.”

Williams, broke the game open at 7:41 of the third quarter as his huge return staked Hamilton to a 17-4 advantage. Williams

was the CFL’s top specialtea­ms player in 2019.

“Any quarter you can get a punt return for a touchdown is big,” Ticats head coach Orlondo Steinauer said. “For us, I think it was a big momentum swing, I thought it was huge for us.”

Evans put Hamilton ahead 25-4 five minutes later with a 57-yard touchdown pass to Tim White and another toss to Jaelon Acklin for the two-point convert.

Toronto made it interestin­g when Nick Arbuckle found Eric Rogers on a 12-yard touchdown pass at 7:56 of the final quarter. After hitting the convert, Boris Bede boomed an 80-yard single on the kickoff at 8:12 that cut Hamilton’s lead to 26-12.

But a terrific 58-yard Joel Whitford punt, which wasn’t returned, put Toronto on its own 11-yard line with roughly 5:30 to play. Simoni Lawrence corralled a Jovan Santos-Knox deflection and returned the intercepti­on three yards for the touchdown at 10:12 to give Hamilton a 32-12 advantage.

“When you win in all three phases or contribute the way we did, you should win a lot of football games,” Steinauer said. “But winning is never guaranteed.

“Scoring on special teams, offence and defence, it’s a rare combinatio­n, but we’ll take it and enjoy it.”

Hamilton (2-2) earned its second straight victory to move into a tie with Montreal (2-2) and Toronto atop the East Division standings. The Ticats also lead the overall Labour Day series with Toronto 36-13-1.

And the sun-drenched gathering of 15,000 — the most allowed under Ontario government protocols — loved every minute of it. Hamilton was playing its first home game since a 36-16 East Division final win over Edmonton on Nov. 18, 2019, a span of 659 days.

“When I was driving in … you didn’t know what to expect,” Steinauer reflected. “As you got closer and saw people threeand-a-half hours before the game wearing jerseys and yellow, it begins to sink in a little bit.

“It’s not just Labour Day and a lot of excitement but there’s a lot of relief, a lot of healing just for people being back in the stands. This was just an outstandin­g win … for the city of Hamilton and everybody that put all of their hard work in.”

The contest was certainly an emotional one, typical of Labour Day, and it ended with an on-field melee. But Toronto often found itself on the wrong end of penalties (nine for 93 yards, including four first-half unnecessar­y roughness calls) and most of the contest’s explosive plays. “They got after us a bit … we didn’t block or pass protect well,” Argos head coach Ryan Dinwiddie said. “They just kicked our butts, we’ve got to come back and be a better team next week.

“We preached all week (about) penalties. We knew it was going to be a chippy game, it’s a rivalry game and you can’t have selfish penalties. We knew special teams was their edge and we have to do a better job of that.”

Evans completed 21 of 29 passes for 248 yards. Arbuckle completed 18 of 32 attempts for 207 yards, with two intercepti­ons, before being replaced by McLeod Bethel-Thompson.

Bethel-Thompson had an eight-yard touchdown pass to Rogers late in the fourth.

Monday’s contest was the first of four this year between Hamilton and Toronto. The two teams square off again Friday at BMO Field.

“The best thing about this week is we get to line up again in a (few) days,” Evans said. “I’m already looking forward to that.”

 ?? PETER POWER THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Tiger-Cats running back Don Jackson gets caught in an Argonauts defensive sandwich between lineman Shawn Oakman, below, and back Shaquille Richardson in first half play. Hamilton (2-2) won to move into a tie with Montreal and Toronto atop the East.
PETER POWER THE CANADIAN PRESS Tiger-Cats running back Don Jackson gets caught in an Argonauts defensive sandwich between lineman Shawn Oakman, below, and back Shaquille Richardson in first half play. Hamilton (2-2) won to move into a tie with Montreal and Toronto atop the East.

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