Monday, June 15, 2020
Week 3: 2019 Winnipeg at 1991 Toronto
After a quiet second quarter, which ended when the Bombers blocked an Argos field goal, the Argos came back in the third, mounting a rally that resulted in a 21-14 score early in the fourth quarter. The Bombers did make the Argos work for it, with long drives and short touchdown runs by Pinball Clemons and Kevin Smellie ending the drives, but the feelings of "No lead is safe" didn't last long, as the Bombers chewed up most of the fourth quarter on time consuming drives. A two score lead was re-established after the 3 minute warning with a Justin Medlock field goal, and then Jeff Hecht and Marcus Sayles ended any chance of a Toronto comeback with interceptions.
The Bombers offense wasn't impressive on paper, but it did just enough to keep the team in front. Andrew Harris was limited to 67 yards on the ground and Matt Nichols completed less than 50 percent of his passes. Matt Dunigan threw for 336 yards, but the four interceptions were back breakers.
Winnipeg heads home to face the 1981 Eskimos in a battle for first place, and the Argos get ready to travel to Sacramento to face the Gold Miners.
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Wednesday, June 10, 2020
2020 Week 3: The Battle of Commonwealth, chapter 1
The second quarter opened with a 31-yard Field Goal by David Cutler, and the '81 squad was finally on the board, trailing 14-3. 2003 had a few efficient plays to march the ball, but another penalty from the undisciplined squad kept them short of continuing the drive, and they had to settle for a field goal attempt. 03 kicker/punter Sean Fleming was wide right on the attempt however, and returner Gary Hayes elected to bring it out, to start the drive deep in their own territory. The 81's third two-and-out looked to give momentum back to the newer club, but an errant pass by Ray intended for favourite target Terry Vaughn was picked off by veteran DB Ed Jones on his own 27. This time the older squad decided to play the short game and nickle-and-dimed their way down the field, and when their opponents moved up, delivered a 29-yard laser to wide receiver Brian Kelly to bring the ball to the 2003's 26-yard line. This ultimately led to Cutler's second field goal of the night, and the 81s were clawing their way closer. A squibbed kickoff was played by an 03 up-back where Canadian receiver Scott Robinson was shaken up on the play, but he managed to stay in. This was a warning shot by fate however, as on the next play the 03 team was deflated on what looked like a routine Mike Pringle run, when 2nd-year QB phenom Ricky Ray got tangled up with a defender after the exchange and had to be carted off the field. The effect on the younger team was measurable from this point as the older squad made short work of their next series, including a 63-yard bomb to slotback Tommy Scott, stopped just shy of the goal line. Moon ran a pass to veteran Canadian receiver Stu Lang for the club's first touchdown of the night, and with the convert the teams were separated by the slimmest of margins 14-13, which was the score as the half drew to a close.
The defenses were especially fired up coming out of the locker rooms for the 3rd quarter, and both teams traded punts again. Warren Moon tried the short pass game again, but showed his arm strength with a 34-yard pass again to Scott followed by league receiving leader Waddell Smith's first catch of the night, a 40-yard touchdown grab to give the 1981 team their first lead of the evening at 20-14. QB Jason Maas, who had lost his starting job to the rookie Ray the year before, wanted to show that he was no second-stringer in talent with a 48-yard toss to speedster Ed Hervey, but the 81 defense welcomed him back to the playing field as DB and return man Gary Hayes picked him off on a crossing route in the Red zone to snuff out the drive. Moon again mixed short and long passes with ground gains by Germany and Angelo Santucci before Cutler's 3rd Field Goal of the night, and again the 81 secondary forced the more modern squad to give up the ball on yet another 2-and-out as 3/4 time drew to a close.
1981's ball control offense starting wearing down the clock in the final frame, with a 4 minute drive ending in another Cutler 3-pointer, and their defense again stymied an 03 drive to get the ball back for their offense. a nearly-5 minute drive again lead by Moon resulted in the 5th and final field goal in Dave Cutler's night to lead 29-14 and many fans started heading for the exit just before the 3-minute warning. If the fans had given up, the 2003 team hadn't though, and the long ball was Maas' friend again as they worked against their biggest enemy - the score clock - and an efficient drive marched 70 yards down field, culminating in a short, 3-yard pass to Jason Tucker to bring the game to within a single score. Needing a major and a 2-point convert to tie the game, the 03s attempted an onside kick, which Fleming executed to perfection, as the teams clashed in a morass of bodies as the final minute flag was raised. a 16 yard strike to Jason Tucker started to put doubt into the minds of the '81 supporters, but two straight incompletions brought the balance of the game down to a Hail Mary, which was knocked away at the last second by Ed Jones to end the threat as the clock read 00. Fans of the CFL everywhere are hoping that Ricky Ray's injury isn't as serious as it first appeared, but if it is, the 2003 squad at least showed that their backup may be as good as many other teams' starter and they still will remain a dangerous opponent as the season rolls on. We can't wait to see these two teams go at each other in week 7, when they have their rematch.
Next up for the 2003 team is Baltimore as they head to Memorial Stadium to try and catch the Stallions after their short turnaround, while the 2-1 1981 squad travels to IG Field to take on Andrew Harris and the undefeated Winnipeg Blue Bombers in a clash for 1st place!
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Friday, June 5, 2020
2020 Week 2: 1995 Baltimore at 2019 Winnipeg
Andrew Harris started the second quarter off with a bang, going 63 yards on a carry to put the Bombers in scoring range again, and he would put the finishing touches on the drive from 2 yards out, and all of a sudden, the Bombers were up 17. Another 2 and out from Baltimore gave the Bombers the ball back, and they ground down the Stallions defense again with Harris scoring from 5 yards out after carries of 14 and 20 on the drive, and it looked to all the world like a blowout was in progress.
Late in the quarter, a pass interference penalty gave Baltimore a bit of life, and Carlos Huerta hit a 25 yard field goal at the end of the half to get the Stallions on the scoreboard. That would be the beginning of Winnipeg mistakes, but not the end by any means. On the opening drive of the second half, driving for another potential score, Matt Nichols was picked off by Chris Johnson to end the threat, and the Stallions would pick up a single point on their drive, with Carlos Huerta missing a field goal. Winnipeg then ate some clock but ran out of gas just out of field goal range, and the teams would trade punts to end the third quarter.
With 11 minutes to play, the 20 point Winnipeg lead was starting to look safe, but a botched snap deep in Winnipeg territory was scooped up by Tracy Gravely, and Baltimore pounded the rock in for their first major of the day. They would not make the two point conversion, but all of a sudden, the Stallions were back in it at 24-10.
No matter, the Bombers were driving again looking for a putaway score when Andrew Harris fumbled on the Baltimore side of midfield, killing another potential scoring drive for the Bombers. After a few punts back and forth, Winnipeg had to punt it back, but a bobbled snap had Justin Medlock rushing a kick, and the ball went out of bounds on the Winnipeg side of midfield with 3:40 to go. Shawn Jones finally got into rhythm, hitting Reggie Perry and Shannon Culver for big gains before Mike Pringle scored from 5 yards out to bring Baltimore within a touchdown. Winnipeg was able to eat all but 10 seconds off the game clock, but Justin Medlock missed from 49, and the ensuing return out of the end zone gave Baltimore one last chance from their 34. Shawn Jones looked to pass, was flushed out of the pocket, and flipped the ball back to Mike Pringle, who had been attempting to block on the play. Pringle reversed field and had open space in front of him, but was finally cornered at the Winnipeg 25. He lateraled back to Chris Armstrong, but Armstrong was tripped up as he tried to cut back across the field, and the game ended.
Winnipeg now travels to 1-1 Toronto and the surprisingly 0-2 Stallions stay home to host the Gold Miners.
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Thursday, June 4, 2020
2020 Week 2: '91 Toronto Argonauts @ '81 Edmonton Eskimos
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Sunday, May 31, 2020
2020 Week 2: 03 Edmonton Eskimos vs. 94 Sacramento Goldminers
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Friday, May 29, 2020
2020 Week 1: 2003 Eskimos 34 - 1991 Argos 18
Overreactions to CSDCFL week 1, pointspreads for week 2
They say you should never take too much away from week 1 result in any football league – never mind a league stacked with great Canadian Football League teams like the CSDCFL – but as it says here, what’s the point of posting online if you can’t overreact once in a while?
Starting to wonder about the imperviousness of the Baltimore Stallions, for example, and ready to start talking some Sacramento Gold Miners football; could these guys contend? (Based on an overtime loss? Come on, Os, you’re talking pure h
One question: Why only two playoff teams? No. 3 and quite possibly no. 4 in this league look to be some quality and competitive teams. Besides, just imagine an Eskimos-Eskimos game for all the marbles. Yeesh, right?
Pointspreads and over/unders for week 2 CSDCFL games follow.
1991 Toronto Argonauts +5½ at 1981 Edmonton Eskimos, over/under 45½ points.
After a disappointing 34-18 loss to the 2003 Edmonton Eskimos, head coach Adam Rita made the decision to stay put in time but not space, allowing his Argonauts all the advantages of the 21st century -- but gambling that timelag won't affect his team too seriosuly. But it may not matter: With the opening-day win over the Baltimore Stallions, the '81 Eskimos have established themselves as the team to beat in the Dream League...
1995 Baltimore Stallions -1 at 2019 Winnipeg Blue Bombers, over/under 56½ points.
If the DSCFL had power rankings, the Stallions would have taken the biggest tumble after a 34-28 loss to the 1981 Eskimos that wasn’t as close as the score indicates – but this observer can’t help wonder if the Bombers’ neo-platoon system at quarterback is enough to keep pace with the Stallions, assuming that Andrew Harris isn’t necessarily good for over 8.0 yards per carry. Baltimore played from behind in their entire week 1, and the Bombers needed 13 points in the fourth quarter to force overtime against the Gold Miners – we’ll be looking to see whether either can hold a lead in this game.
2003 Edmonton Eskimos -4½ at 1994 Sacramento Gold Miners, over/under 56½ points.
Call these two sides the positive surprises of week 1. The late-entry ’03 Eskimos ran up an impressive 34 against the Argos, while the Miners scored 23 points in the game’s first 50 minutes against the Bombers, one of the DSCFL’s better defenses. In a 10-game season, an 0-2 hole is major, so figure Sacramento to play even craftier ball than last week – but they’ll have to avoid the fourth-quarter collapse against an ’03 Esks side, at nearly 32 points per game, that seems to score on every possession. And how topsy-turvy could Sacramento make things on the standings board already with a win…?
–written by Os Davis