TICATS, STAMPEDERS ADVANCE TO 2014 GREY CUP

HAMILTON, Ont. – Brandon Banks and the Hamilton Tiger-Cats made the Montreal Alouettes eat their words Sunday.

Banks had a playoff-tying two punt return TDs to lead Hamilton back to the Grey Cup with a 40-24 East Division final win over the Montreal Alouettes. Banks had five punt returns for a playoff-record 226 yards and had another 78-yard TD return negated by a penalty.

The victory was especially gratifying for Banks and the Ticats, who remained silent last week after Montreal players Duron Carter, Bear Woods and S.J. Green all boldly predicted their team would win. The assurances came despite the Alouettes losing 29-15 here Nov. 8 that earned Hamilton first in the East and home field for the division final.

Banks was a multi-threat, adding three carries for 35 yards and four catches for 33 yards. He finished with 294 total yards and played a major role in making Montreal choke on its words.

“Of course, we won,” Banks said. “They guaranteed a win, didn’t they so (they) can eat those words.

“It is what it is.”

Defensive back Brandon Stewart, who was also centred out by Green last week, relished having the last laugh but said Green was gracious in defeat.

“He came up to me after the game and said, ‘Good game, go win it in B.C.,” Stewart said. “There’s always respect, I mean he’s a great receiver . . . but we’re going to B.C. and they’re not.

“That’s all that matters.”

Banks’ 88-yard return at 10:55 of the fourth quarter was nothing short of amazing. The five-foot-seven, 153-pound speedster – whose nickname is Speedy B – was completely surrounded by Montreal defenders after corralling Sean Whyte’s boot but somehow found a seam, then sprinted along the sidelines to put Hamilton ahead 37-24.

“He did a better job than our cover team,” Montreal head coach Tom Higgins said. “I think we might have missed 13 tackles on one play, probably a guy had two shots at him.

“He had an outstanding performance and hats off to him.”

Woods, who had a game-high 13 tackles, also gave Banks a tip of the cap.

“I told him walking off the field ‘Man, you’re the little killer,” he said. “That’s because that’s two years in a row.”

On Oct. 26, 2013, Banks returned a missed field goal 107 yards for a TD and added a 45-yard touchdown run as Hamilton beat Montreal 27-24 to clinch second in the East Division. The Ticats then beat the Alouettes 19-15 in the conference semifinal.

Hamilton’s Kent Austin is off to his third straight Grey Cup game as a CFL head coach. He won the ’07 contest in his rookie season on the sidelines with Saskatchewan. He left for the NCAA ranks after that season before returning north to Hamilton last year and said Sunday’s contest was decided on special teams.

“I don’t know if you ever expect that kind of performance but when you block hard for a talented returner like Brandon is, you always have a chance,” Austin said. “Special teams was a big part of this game.

“You always have plays but at the end of the day it’s just effort, it’s just a desire to stay on your blocks . . . but (Banks) is an unbelievable player.”

The win, which improved Hamilton’s record at Tim Hortons Field to 7-0, delighting the enthusiastic sellout of 24,334 on a balmy 11 C afternoon. The Ticats will face the Calgary Stampeders in the Grey Cup on Nov. 30 at B.C. Place and chase their first CFL title since ’99 – when they beat the Stampeders 32-21 in Vancouver. Calgary downed the Edmonton Eskimos 43-18 in the West final later Sunday.

The Ticats lost 45-23 to the Saskatchewan in last year’s Grey Cup game at Mosaic Stadium.

Hamilton pivot Zach Collaros was 18-of-27 passing for 199 yards and also added 19 yards rushing on three carries.

“We were confident but we’re not going to run our mouths to the media,” Collaros said. “That’s not what we’re about.

“Speedy B and the defence carried us through and we did enough on offence. I don’t know what to say about Speedy B, he’s just amazing out there.”

Grigsby’s three-yard TD run at 8:50 of the third put Hamilton ahead 27-14. It was set up by Erik Harris’s interception, with an unnecessary roughness call on Carter put the Ticats’ on the Montreal 38.

Medlock had four converts and four field goals.

Whyte booted three converts and a field goal.

NOTES- Offensive lineman Marc Dile and receiver Giovanni Aprile didn’t dress for Hamilton. Defensive lineman Corvey Irvin and defensive back Jamahl Knowles were Montreal’s scratches . . . During the regular season, Ticats opponents have converted just 28 per cent of their second-down opportunities at Tim Hortons Field . . . With CFL commissioner Mark Cohon in Calgary for the West Division final, league COO Michael Copeland performed the opening coin toss.


(Canadian Press)

CALGARY – The Calgary Stampeders are a win away from capping a stellar season with a Grey Cup.

After matching the franchise’s best record of 15-3, Calgary will play the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in the CFL’s championship game Nov. 30 in Vancouver.

The Stampeders were efficient and versatile in a 43-18 win over the Edmonton Eskimos in Sunday’s West Division final. With the Eskimos limiting the top rushing offence in the league, the Stampeders won it in the air.

Calgary claimed the Grey Cup in John Hufnagel’s first year as head coach and GM in 2008.

Upset losses at home in the West final to Saskatchewan in 2010 and 2013 – when Calgary’s records were 13-5 and 14-4 respectively – were deflating conclusions to outstanding campaigns.

Despite a regular-season record of 88-37-1 in Hufnagel’s seven seasons at the helm, Calgary’s only other appearance in a Grey Cup was in 2012 when they lost to the Toronto Argonauts.

“We’ve been working for so long and we’ve experienced so much disappointment,” Stampeder running back Jon Cornish said. “I want to win this Grey Cup, not for personal gain, but for every single person in this locker-room, every single person on the support staff and every single coach. They’re the people that deserve this.”

The Stampeders went 15-3 three straight seasons from 1993 to 1995, but did not win the Grey Cup under Wally Buono during that span.

Stampeder quarterback Bo Levi Mitchell threw a pair of touchdown strikes to Eric Rogers, had touchdown throws to Cornish and Marquay McDaniel and ran the ball in for a TD of his own against the Esks.

Cornish scored his second touchdown of the game on a two-yard run late in the fourth quarter. The CFL’s rushing leader was held to 54 yards on 14 carries, but Cornish made his impact in the game as a receiver.

He totalled 120 yards on four catches. One of them was a 78-yard rumble for a touchdown in the second quarter.

Edmonton starter Mike Reilly was 20-for-33 in passing for 216 yards and was intercepted twice. He threw touchdown passes to Paris Jackson and Adarius Bowman in the third quarter when he was injured on the last two plays.

Reilly did not return for the fourth quarter, when backup Matt Nichols completed nine of 15 passes for 92 yards. Hugh O’Neill kicked a 42-yard field goal for the visitors.

Cornish, who is from New Westminster B.C., said he spent some time at his mother’s condominium in Vancouver in the off-season, looking across the water to B.C. Place and thinking about the 2014 Grey Cup.

“I sat out and just thought about what it would feel like to go to B.C. Place,” Cornish recalled.

The Tiger-Cats earned their second consecutive trip to the championship game with a 40-24 win over the Montreal Alouettes in the East Division final.

So this year’s Grey Cup will feature teams who have been disappointed in it recently.

Hamilton lost 45-23 to the Saskatchewan Roughriders last year in Regina, while Calgary fell 35-22 to the host Argonauts two years ago.

“We had the trouble in 2012 winning the Grey Cup and they had trouble winning it last year, so we’re both hungry,” Mitchell said. “Neither team is going to be celebrating this win too long. It’s going to be a great game. It’s going to be a dogfight.”

With weather a non-factor indoors, the Stampeders will be the favourite against a team that was 9-9 in the regular season. Calgary was 2-0 versus Hamilton this season with scores of 10-7 and 30-20.

The Stampeders offence had the ball for 12 and a half minutes in Sunday’s first half compared to Edmonton’s time of possession of 17:34. Mitchell made the most of his time with the ball.

He threw for 284 yards and three touchdowns on just eight passes as well as rushing for one himself. The 24-year-old Texan won his first career playoff start completing 14 of 22 passes for 336 yards and four touchdowns without an interception.

“We had to make some hay in the air because we weren’t doing very much on the ground, especially in the first half,” Hufnagel said. “I thought Bo played an excellent football game. He threw the ball with great accuracy, he handled the pressure, kept his poise and didn’t make any major mistakes.”

Winning the division and earning a bye week in the post-season helped Calgary get healthy on offence as Mitchell had multiple targets with which to work.

The temperature at Sunday’s kickoff was zero under cloudy skies with a light wind out of the south. Attendance was announced at 31,004, but there was ample room in McMahon Stadium’s stands.

Reilly can inflict damage with his legs, but his mobility was compromised by a late-season foot injury that’s been reported as a broken bone.

The Eskimos quarterback looked winded when he was sacked by Simpson late in the first half. Reilly remained in the game to throw a pair of touchdown passes in the third quarter.

He was tackled hard by Shawn Lemon and sacked again by Simpson on the final two plays of the quarter. Reilly was taken by motorized cart to the visitors’ dressing room early in the fourth quarter.

Reilly indicated he’d reinjured his foot on the Lemon tackle.

“It made my whole leg sore, knee and everything,” Reilly said. “I don’t think that it really did much damage and then the last play that I was in, I’m not really sure what happened, but when I went to stand up I just couldn’t put any pressure on it.”

Eskimos head coach Chris Jones was Hufnagel’s defensive co-ordinator from 2008 to 2011 and held the same position with the Argonauts when they beat Calgary in the Grey Cup two years ago.

Edmonton held Calgary’s running game in check, but the Eskimos backfield was beaten by the athleticism of receivers Rogers and McDaniel and the relentless legs of Cornish.

“Unfortunately we didn’t play our best football tonight,” Jones said. “Calgary’s a very, very well coached and very good football team. You’ve got to give all the credit to them. They came out with a good game plan. They executed and kudos to them.”

Notes: Calgary defensive tackle Charleston Hughes played in the first half for his first game action since injuring his foot Sept. 13, but did not appear in the second half. Hufnagel said following the game the CFL’s defensive player of the year in 2013 injured his other foot . . . Edmonton’s mayor Don Iveson will donate 100 pounds of food to Calgary’s food bank in payment of a wager with counterpart Naheed Nenshi.

(The Canadian Press)

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Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

I'm a redneck westerner who cheers for and supports the Riders but I'll be cheering for Kent Austin because I prefer him to John Hufnagel. However, I'm envious of both teams because Kent and John are real football men. It doesn't matter who goes down they just plug in another one.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Kent Austin 3 years in CFL as a Head Coach and 3 years in the Grey Cup. 2 years as Assistant and Quarterback Coach (I think) and one year in Grey Cup. 2 Years as Offensive Co-ordinator and one Cotton Bowl….Looks like money in the Bank anywhere he goes…..is this his last year in CFL? Looks like he is NCAA or NFL foder….

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Coach Hufnagle is slam dunk for Coach of the Year. You heard it here first! Ti-Cats don't have a chance in heck to compete with the incredible Stamp. Way too much talent.

Yomama

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Whatever.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

I agree! Stamps win the Grey Cup! It won't even be close!
Patrick

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

I got to say…

Oskii wee wee guy I will be cheering for your Cats even though your kinda annoying.

Hamilton has been bad for so long and have had good fan support I hope they win.

Realistically they don't have a chance. Hope I am wrong.

ABC. Anybody but CALGARY.

Travis

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago
Reply to  Anonymous

Thanks Travis. I'll take a break and give it a rest, maybe?

Go Cats Go !
Go Cats Go !
Go Cats Go !
Go Cats Go !

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

They better play the game.
Calgary hasn't had their C-H-O-K-E game yet.
Next weekend maybe???

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

This could be a great Grey cup. Stay tuned.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

I don't understand the hate for Kent from some people around here. So he's the coach of another team, big deal. So he left us to move home to be with his dying mother, how can you blame him? Like it or not, he is a great coach and as far as I'm concerned, a legend around these parts. There is a reason why his image is on the side of our stadium alongside Aldag. I will be cheering for Hamilton this weekend, great fans that deserve a Cup.

Dubya

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Calgary annual choke job is next up. So incredibly full of themselves. Can't wait.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

We could have had Kent but it was all or none and there was some egos in Regina that didn't want to give up their status.

Handy Andy
Handy Andy
9 years ago

i agree with Anonymous … why should Rider fans hate Kent Austin? He is a Rider Legend.
Have to say how I enjoyed seeing Chris Baby Jones run off the field without shaking Huffer's hand after the game. No class whatsoever.
Cheering for the Ticats but doubt they can win. Calgary is too strong.

Handy Andy
Handy Andy
9 years ago

i agree with Anonymous … why should Rider fans hate Kent Austin? He is a Rider Legend.
Have to say how I enjoyed seeing Chris Baby Jones run off the field without shaking Huffer's hand after the game. No class whatsoever.
Cheering for the Ticats but doubt they can win. Calgary is too strong.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago
Reply to  Handy Andy

rider fans are like the guy or girl who gets dumped, then cant stop talking crap about their ex long afterwards its kinda pathetic really

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

What if the Tiger-cats from Hamilton and the Red and White from Calgary both want to wear black?

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Dubya: Totally agree with you. Go Cats.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

So…what happened to the Inuit,er, Eskimos.
Should be the end of the obnoxious Edmonton fans…and your NHL team also sucks.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Over by half time and the ratings will reflect that as most will switch to nfl. Stamps in a laugher. Don't buy into the hype over this grey cup. The playoff structure needs to change. Hamilton did not deserve a first round bye. Hate to admit it but the Stinkimoes were more deserving of a first round bye. The team with the third best record deserves a home playoff game. The CFL board of directors abdictated the responsibility for managing the league to toronto based TSN.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

The two teams with the best scouting staffs are in the Grey Cup. Are you listening Brendan?

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Man it could have been worse if our Riders would have been there . Stamps will probably smother Hamilton in the Grey Cup .

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Kent and the Ti Cats 'all the way' to the winners' circle!!!
Good Luck to the coaches and entire team!! They are so deserving…..show the young can overcome the 'aging'!!!