MOSAIC PLACE RECAP: WSF – ESKIMOS 18 RIDERS 10

Photo courtesy Jeff Armstead

EDMONTON (CP) – Veteran Saskatchewan quarterback Kerry Joseph didn’t mince words about his performance Sunday.

The 41-year-old completed just 7-of-17 pass attempts for 120 yards to go along with one touchdown and five interceptions_ including four in the first half_ as the Roughriders fell to the Edmonton Eskimos 18-10 in the CFL West semifinal.

“I just sucked. Bottom line I sucked,” a dejected Joseph said. “It was horrible on my part. I let these guys down, I let this organization down, I let the province of Saskatchewan down and it was horrible, plain and simple.”

Pulled after throwing his final interception six minutes into the third quarter, Joseph said his dismal day – which could the final one of his long career – was a combination of the Eskimos defensive game plan and his own issues.

“They brought a lot of pressure early,” he explained. “I didn’t see the field well, I didn’t make good throws. At the end of the day, the only way I can sum it up is I sucked.”

Still, the Eskimos weren’t able to take full advantage of the turnovers and the excellent field position they enjoyed throughout the first half. They managed just three field goals and a single until Kendial Lawrence’s 84-yard punt return touchdown about nine minutes into the second quarter.

“The same thing that was a weakness for us during the season came back to bite us in the ass in this game,” Rider coach Corey Chamblin said of Lawrence’s touchdown. “You can’t expect to win games like that. If we don’t give that up, it’s 11-10 and you do a couple of little things and you win.”

Joseph did connect with Korey Williams for a 54-yard touchdown pass with 53 seconds left in the half to send the Riders into the dressing room trailing by just 10 points.

There was a sense of confidence in the Saskatchewan room at half time “because we knew despite the turnovers we were still in the ball game,” said Joseph.

The Riders, however, could manage only one field goal in the second half.

Running back Anthony Allen, who was held to just 22 rushing yards on six carries, praised the Edmonton defence for its first-half effort.

“The defence was playing great,” he said. “They were doing a good job of using the short field and only letting them get three points, sometimes no points. It was up to us to capitalize and we didn’t today.”

Chamblin said he didn’t pull Joseph in the first half, or at halftime, because he wanted to give the veteran the “chance to pull us out with his experience.”

“(Edmonton coach) Chris Jones sent pressure the whole time. He was going to live or die by it. We couldn’t get some balls off (Joseph) just didn’t have it.”

The Riders, who ran for 172 first-half yards in their win over Edmonton one week earlier, could never get their running game going on Sunday.

“That’s the whole thing, they were blitzing the run. Jones knew that was our strength, our running game, and he was able to take that away and move us to the pass game.

“I’m never pleased with a loss but that score right there is (evidence) we fought to the end and that’s one thing I will commend this team for, they fought to the end.”

EDMONTON (CP) – When the Edmonton offence couldn’t get it going, the defence more than made up for it on Sunday.

The Eskimos defence recorded five interceptions and Kendial Lawrence had an 84-yard punt return touchdown on special teams as Edmonton beat the Saskatchewan Roughriders 18-10 in the CFL’s West semifinal.

“Our defence was pretty vital tonight,” said Eskimos head coach Chris Jones. “We needed to play good there. If you want to win in the playoffs you have to play great on defence.”

“Our defence seems to be able to do that week in and week out,” Lawrence added. “They gave us a lot of chances on offence and we just need to take better advantage of them.”

The game was billed as a battle of the backup quarterbacks between Edmonton’s Matt Nichols and Saskatchewan’s 41-year-old QB Kerry Joseph, but neither lasted past the midway mark of the third quarter.

Edmonton’s No. 1 quarterback Mike Reilly came into the game six minutes into the third quarter despite nursing a broken bone in his right foot.

“I knew I was probably going to get in at some point,” said Reilly, who was then asked to critique his performance. “We won so good enough. That’s how it goes in the playoffs. If you win, you were good enough. If you lost, you didn’t. We played good enough against a good football team in some tough conditions out there. It will only get harder from here on out, so we certainly want to get better though.”

With a week to rest, the current belief is that Reilly may be ready to start next Sunday when the Eskimos meet the Stampeders in the West Final in Calgary.

“I’m sure that the time between games will help with his injury, we are certainly hoping that it will,” Jones said. “I’d say it looks pretty likely he will start next week.”

“I definitely expect that will be the case after tonight,” Reilly said. “As of right now I feel comfortable that will be the case, but we are still seven days away. That should continue the recovery process and hopefully I will be further along.”

Quarterback Tino Sunseri finished off the game for the Roughriders.

The loss ended any hopes the Roughriders had of defending their Grey Cup championship from last year.

“We didn’t do enough things to win,” said Saskatchewan veteran defensive lineman John Chick. “First of all, you can’t give up points, big points on special teams. That’s tough to come back from. There’s no secret to the game, you can look throughout the year the turnover battle usually wins the game.

“No matter what position we’re put in, we have to do better.”

Edmonton took the opening kickoff and got on the board just three minutes in on a 37-yard Hugh O’Neill field goal.

O’Neill added a 42-yarder with four minutes remaining in the first quarter after the Roughriders turned over the ball on an poor throw by Joseph that was picked off by Aaron Grymes without a Saskatchewan receiver in the vicinity.

Joseph was intercepted on his team’s next possession as well, with Chris Rwabukamba snagging it on the Edmonton 45-yard line. O’Neill missed the ensuing three-point attempt – settling for a single to make it 7-0 by the start of the second quarter.

It was the 13th consecutive quarter without allowing a touchdown at home for the Eskimos.

Saskatchewan was intercepted for the third straight series as a Joseph pass was deflected into the air by a prone Rob Bagg and into the arms of defender Cauchy Muamba at the Roughriders’ 44.

Nichols and the Eskimos continued to struggle to take advantage of the gifts from their defence as a short Saskatchewan punt was once again wasted. A 21-yard O’Neill field goal – to make it 10-0 with eight minutes left in the second frame – was all Edmonton could make of it.

Edmonton’s special teams stepped up instead as Lawrence found a seam and blazed 84 yards for a punt-return touchdown less than two minutes later to make it 17-0 for the Esks.

“That was a big spark in the game and gave us a lot of confidence,” Jones said. “He is a tremendous player. He struggled last week, but it was good to see him bounce back.”

Joseph was picked off for a fourth time by Ryan Hinds, but Nichols gave it right back on the next play when he was intercepted in the end zone by Rider Weldon Brown.

Saskatchewan got on the board with 44 seconds left in the first half. Joseph took a hit to unleash a long bomb to Korey Williams, who reeled in the 54-yard pass while falling backwards into the end zone.

Edmonton recorded a fifth interception on Joseph eight-and-a-half minutes into the third quarter with Dexter McCoil coming away with the pick at midfield. Reilly came in as quarterback following the play and got the Esks in range for a 39-yard O’Neill field-goal attempt, which ended in another miss and a single point.

Sunseri then came in to replace Joseph as the Riders’ QB and marched his team down the field, leading to a 30-yard Chris Milo field goal to make it 18-10 heading into the fourth quarter.

Saskatchewan was pressing late in the game, but the Eskimos defence came up big again to keep them off the scoreboard and allow the offence to run out the clock.

Notes: It was only the second home playoff game for the Eskimos at Commonwealth Stadium in the last decade. Edmonton (12-6 in the regular season) won two of the three games this season against the Roughriders (10-8). Saskatchewan won the final meeting 24-17 at home on Nov. 8. The game featured seven of the 12 West Division defensive all-stars, including season sack-leader John Chick (15) and co-runner up Odell Willis (13). … These two teams hadn’t met in a playoff game since 2004, when the Roughriders won the West semifinal at Commonwealth Stadium 14-6. … There was a significant difference in the players on each team with CFL playoff experience with Saskatchewan having 120 games and Edmonton only 67 The attendance on a chilly day in Edmonton was 26,237.

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Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Well, enough KJ, let's give Tino a chance.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Ugly first 20 minutes. I guess we will see how good the OC and OL are as good as advertised

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Hand Hoppy his retirement gift now, This game is over! Riders are getting physically manhandled. When a running team is getting physically abused at the line and the team has a GM who hasn’t found a receiver in 15 – 20 years (Stegall/Simon) then you are doomed to fail offensively. Can’t put it on the O-coord, he doesn’t find talent, he just coaches what he gets. Can’t blame the fact the Riders are playing a back-up because the Eskimos are playing a back-up QB who hasn’t won a CFL game as a starter yet. Hopefully the new president can remove… Read more »

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Joseph is playing like he has his whole carreer except the two years Ken Austin was his coach. No surprise here.

Rider fan since 1960 and will die a Rider fan but we were doomed the minute DD went down.

Chris
Chris
9 years ago

This is a playoff game, thanks for preparing your team appropriately coach Chamblin. What a disgrace.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Consistent……consistently awful football. Terrible offense….poor special teams play. Please end this pain…..one more half and it is over.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

41 yr old QB?

Joseph wasn't even a real quarter back when he was 31.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Someone wipe that grin off of Chris Jones second chin.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Odell has been offside every single play…the fix is in.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Thats it band wagon jumpers, blame everyone

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Running out of town, time and excuses.

w
w
9 years ago

Yeah….so I think Dressler got more looks in Kansas City.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

I'm feelin so good that I got Cortez and his 4 plays on my side.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Time for Joseph and Kevin Glen to ride off into the sunset.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

When the opposition knows you can only run you are in trouble. Sunseri can at least attempt the odd pass, give him a shot.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Worst offense of line in the league. The myth is over.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

It is obvious that this is a poorly coached team. I don't care who is injured, There are things happening continuously that can't even happen in a high school environment in order for a team to win. I am not sure if it is the head coach or the position coaches, but this is a very poorly coached football team.

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Hello, my name is Johnny Cash,

Your going to cry cry cry …. ,

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

And the Oscar for best actor, …. Mike Reilly ! For the performance, "You played on a broken foot".

Anonymous
Anonymous
9 years ago

Can't be champions every year…