CFL ROUND-UP
TORONTO – Adarius Bowman, John Chick, Tim Brown and Rob Bagg were named the CFL Players of the Month for August, the Canadian Football League announced today.
The monthly awards include all games played from Week 6 to Week 10.
The four players were chosen by a panel of judges that includes former Canadian Football League players Matt Dunigan and Duane Forde of TSN, and Pierre Vercheval of RDS.
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The Montreal Alouettes will have to continue waiting for Michael Sam.
Both The NFL Network and ESPN reported Tuesday the defensive end is heading to Dallas for a physical with the Cowboys. If Sam passes, he’d join the NFL team’s practice roster.
Sam is trying to become the NFL’s first openly gay player. The 24-year-old was released Saturday by the St. Louis Rams and bypassed by the team for selection to its practice roster Monday.
Sam, a ’14 seventh-round pick by St. Louis, is on the Alouettes’ negotiation list, giving them exclusive rights to the former Missouri star if he chose to play professionally in Canada.
Montreal GM Jim Popp said he has reached out numerous times to Sam’s representatives but as of Tuesday hadn’t heard back from them. Popp said he put the six-foot-two, 262-pound Sam on the Alouettes negotiation list because he believes Sam can be an effective player in the CFL.
“He’s an outstanding pass rusher,” Popp said during a telephone interview. “With his body type, he’s a real true CFL rush end.
“If you look at guys like John Bowman (current Alouettes defensive end), Anwar Stewart and Elfrid Payton, that’s Michael Sam.”
Comparing Sam to Bowman, Stewart and Payton is heady praise, indeed. Payton is a recent inductee into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame while Bowman remains one of the CFL’s top pass rushers and has posted a club-high seven sacks this season.
Stewart is currently an assistant coach with Montreal but played in eight Grey Cup games – winning four – during an illustrious 13-year CFL playing career and in ’04 was named the league’s top defensive player.
But Popp said Sam is worthy of such accolades.
“He’s a very good football player and someone who’d fit our system perfectly and fit into our league very well,” Popp said. “He’s a relentless guy off the edge who wouldn’t have to be in coverage very often.”
Popp said he wasn’t surprised by the reports that Sam had garnered another opportunity in the NFL.
“He’s had some success there, he had a very good pre-season with St. Louis (registering three sacks),” Popp said. “Like I said, he’s a very talented football player.”
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WINNIPEG – Former NFL and Winnipeg Blue Bombers quarterback Max Hall was arrested last week in his home state of Arizona on suspicion of shoplifting and narcotics possession.
Police in Gilbert, Ariz., near Phoenix, reported they were called to a Best Buy on Friday where they found someone they identified as Hall in possession of “several stolen items from Best Buy and a nearby Walmart.”
Police also said they found a “personal use quantity of cocaine” but Hall was released shortly after his arrest.
Before joining the Bombers in 2013 and playing in the CFL, Hall played six games for the Arizona Cardinals of the NFL in 2010.
Hall, 28, started nine of Winnipeg’s final 12 games last season, winning only one as the Bombers tied their worst record ever since the CFL went to an 18-game season at 3-15. His CFL record is 162 completed passes out of 283 attempts for 1,999 yards and nine touchdowns.
But he was still the only one of their quarterbacks from last season the Bombers kept heading into 2014, although he was released in June before the regular season started as part of the team’s final cuts.
Hall grew up in Mesa, another Phoenix-area community, and played college football at Arizona State and BYU before being signed as an undrafted free agent by the Cardinals.
– With files from The Associated Press and The Canadian Press
What's with the strange CFL schedule? Is there a plan there? Current standings mean little both east and west. Edmtn plays Cal 3 times while we play Wpg 3 times. E vs W almost done. Surprised I don't see much comment about.
I don't think there is a plan with the schedule, I believe it's plain and simple a screw up. The CFL didn't think this out any better than they handled the expansion into Ottawa. Winnipeg should have stayed in the East until Ottawa becomes competitive. That way the best six teams would make the playoffs, the way they did it a pretty good football team is going to miss the playoffs and a lousy one will be in.