Vancouver Sun

Burnham and Lions seeing red over red-zone ineffectiv­eness

- BEN KUZMA bkuzma@postemedia.com twitter.com/ benkuzma

Bryan Burnham cut to the chase as well as he can cut on a passing route.

The frustrated B.C. Lions slotback believes his CFL club beat itself Friday in a 24-23 loss to the Hamilton Tiger-Cats. The see-saw struggle was finally settled when Sergio Castillo kicked a 50-yard field goal with 10 seconds remaining at B.C. Place.

As much as a 6-7 last-place record in the West Division is unsettling, the manner in which the Lions continuall­y stalled in the red zone before 18,091 fans was beyond frustratin­g.

Burnham led the Lions with six receptions for 74 yards — including a 24-yarder with 4:24 left in the fourth quarter, which was followed by Jeremiah Johnson rambling for 19 yards. But the drive stalled and Ty Long booted a 20-yard field goal for a tenuous 23-21 lead.

“We settle for field goals when they were scoring touchdowns and you’re not going to win football games that way,” Burnham said. “At the end of the day, we got into position to win the game, but just didn’t take it. It was right there in front of us and we didn’t take it.

“We just have to want it more and fight for it harder. I don’t have much to say. There’s a lot going through my mind right now and there’s a lot of disappoint­ment.”

There should be. It wasn’t just one red-zone gaffe.

In the third quarter, quarterbac­k Jonathon Jennings found Shaquille Johnson for a 48-yard reception, and from the three-yard line, the Lions couldn’t covert two passes and didn’t give the ball to Jeremiah Johnson, who was having a strong second half.

The Lions had to settle for a 10yard field goal to pull to within 1814 when they could have taken the lead. Long finished with five field goals — a good night for any kicker — but it wasn’t good enough Friday. That says a lot.

Considerin­g Jennings had several long strikes in going 22-for-33 for 345 yards, the fact he couldn’t find his favourite targets in Burnham and Manny Arceneaux once inside the red zone was unsettling.

The only major the Lions managed was when Jennings scampered from two yards out in the first quarter to cap a methodical 10-play, 52-yard drive in which the pivot looked like he had regained some lost mojo.

“We’ve got to do a better job of getting in the end zone when we get to the red zone,” he understate­d. “We have to make more plays because we just didn’t do enough. We just didn’t make it happen and we had some opportunit­ies down there but we didn’t take advantage. We have to figure out a way to get better.

“It’s very frustratin­g. I thought we moved the ball and did some things well and maintained control of the ball but just didn’t finish. That obviously bit us in the butt at the end of the game.”

Of course, it wasn’t supposed to be this way — at least on paper. The Tiger-Cats were East Division cellar-dwellers at 2-9 and had surrendere­d a league-worst 381 points, a whopping 34.6 average per outing. They were also giving up a league high 347.4 yards a game and in this late-night cat fight, they were supposed to suffer the most damage.

Instead, they inflicted it when it mattered most.

That’s going to lead to plenty of navel-gazing. How else do you explain Johnson finishing with 91 yards on 14 carries after combining with Chris Rainey for just 14 first-half rushing yards? The Lions found their offensive balance in the second half, but seven penalties for 60 yards took the starch out of drives, and that speaks to the individual and collective resolve to remain discipline­d.

The trickle-down effect is that, heading into a bye week, the Lions could be waving goodbye to the playoffs unless they find their way in a hurry.

“I want to figure out ways to win football games and get into the playoffs,” Jennings said. “I’m going to do everything I can to scratch and claw and make that possible. Hopefully, everybody is feeling the same way.

“We have to do everything we can to get better. I’m going to watch film and make sure I tune up the body during the bye week. I think we can all use that and come out fresh. We have to make sure we don’t make the mental errors and beat ourselves.”

Allowing Alex Green to rush for 140 yards on 13 carries kept the Lions off balance defensivel­y because agile elusive Hamilton quarterbac­k Jeremiah Masoli also found Luke Tasker seven times — including once for a major — while Shamawd Chambers and Brandon Banks had six catches apiece.

But it was the lack of red-zone success that really cost the Lions.

“I thought we made some bad decisions on the reads as far as runpass options,” Lions coach Wally Buono said. “We get the big play by (Shaquille) Johnson and the ball is on the three-yard line. You score there and it’s a huge play.

“We didn’t execute there and it cost us four points (the Lions kicked a field goal) and it cost us the game.”

 ?? DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Quarterbac­k Jonathon Jennings and the B.C. Lions moved the ball against the Hamilton Tiger-Cats Friday, but their drives stalled in the red zone too many times, allowing the visitors to kick a game-winning field goal in the dying seconds at B.C. Place.
DARRYL DYCK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Quarterbac­k Jonathon Jennings and the B.C. Lions moved the ball against the Hamilton Tiger-Cats Friday, but their drives stalled in the red zone too many times, allowing the visitors to kick a game-winning field goal in the dying seconds at B.C. Place.

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