EDMONTON - It took a highlight-reel catch from Jason Tucker to stop the Edmonton Eskimos from blowing another game in the fourth quarter.
Tucker made a dramatic 36-yard touchdown reception with just 55
seconds left to go as the Eskimos came back to defeat the rival Calgary
Stampeders 34-31 in Edmonton’s home opener Thursday night. The catch
came less than a minute after Brett Ralph reeled in his second
touchdown of the fourth quarter, giving the Stampeders their first lead
of the game and what looked like a victory.
Edmonton quarterback Ricky Ray, who threw for 448 yards in the win,
said it was a massive victory for the team, which has seen all too many
games slip away in the late stages in recent years.
“To have the lead all game long and then lose it at the end and then
be able to fight back and get the lead again, that’s big for us,” he
said. “We lost a lot of games like that in the fourth quarter in the
last few years. It was nice to build some confidence and prove to this
team that all we have to do is play 60 minutes.”
Edmonton head coach Danny Maciocia was also breathing a sigh of relief.
“It’s a huge win because this is what they have to experience,” he
said. “They have to understand that when you are playing from behind
that it is time to buckle up and get your act together. To believe in
one another and get it done. And that’s exactly what happened.
“We got the W. That’s what it is all about.”
The Eskimos (1-1) snapped a seven-game losing streak dating back to
last season and were in jeopardy of losing eight in a row for the first
time since 1971.
John Hufnagel took his first loss as a head coach of the Stampeders (1-1).
“There is no easy way to lose,” he said. “The good teams are the
ones that make the play at the end to win it. They were the ones that
made the play.
“But we certainly made a game of it. Hopefully it was a learning experience for us.”
Leading 25-17 after the third quarter, Edmonton
looked to have caught a break five minutes into the fourth as Stamps
running back Demetris Summers fumbled at midfield and Eskimos defensive
tackle Dario Romero
recovered. But they were unable to convert as Noel Prefontaine missed a
34-yard field goal attempt and the Esks settled for a single.
It proved costly. On the Stamps’ next possession, Calgary pivot
Henry Burris threw a long bomb to Ralph. The 65-yard TD strike cut
Edmonton’s lead to just two points with five minutes left.
Prefontaine restored the three point edge with a punt single, but
Calgary came roaring back to take their first lead of the game as
Burris hit Ralph on a 20-yard strike to go up by four with just 1:38 to
play.
But the Eskimos dug deep and put together a last second scoring
drive of their own as Tucker made a one-handed circus catch in the end
zone with just 55 seconds left.
“That was an unbelievable catch,” Maciocia said. “When we are in a
situation like that you know we are going to call 83’s (Tucker’s)
number. We’ve done that a few times over their careers. He caught the
ball with one-hand over his inside shoulder.”
After being held without a touchdown last week, Edmonton scored its
first of the season four-and-a-half minutes into the opening quarter as
Ray connected with rookie Kelly Campbell for a 32-yard score.
Edmonton was closing in on another score but lost the ball on a Calvin McCarty fumble, and Calgary’s Richard Karikari recovered.
It was a big turnover as the Stamps proceeded to march 79 yards on
four plays, capped off by a 15-yard TD pass from Burris to Jeremaine
Copeland as time expired in the first to tie the game 7-7.
It didn’t take the Eskimos much time to respond, going 71 yards on
three plays to start the second quarter, including a huge 51-yard
strike to Kamau Peterson. They capped the drive with Campbell’s second
TD reception of the contest from eight yards out for a 14-7 Edmonton
lead.
Prefontaine added a pair of field goals and a punt single to give Edmonton a 21-7 lead at the half.
Calgary came back from the dressing room fired up and capitalized on
its opening drive of the third, two minutes in, as Joffrey Reynolds
drove in from the eight to cut the Edmonton lead to seven points.
The Eskimos added a punt single and went for more points late in the
third but a strong drive fizzled in close and they were forced to
settle for a 10-yard field goal from Prefontaine.
Calgary chipped in a three-pointer of its own to close out the
quarter on a Sandro DeAngelis 24-yarder to make it 25-17 after the
third frame.
Both teams are back at it next Thursday as the Stampeders travel to Montreal and the Eskimos play host to the Toronto Argos.
Notes: The Stampeders only won two road games last season (2-7) but
both were in Edmonton. It's been 44 years since Calgary defeated the
Eskimos in Edmonton’s home opener, last doing it in 1964. It looked
like Calgary had sworn off playing an Edmonton home opener after losing
in 1988. They waited 18 years before trying it again, losing 18-14 in
2006. Calgary defensive lineman Julian Jenkins left the game five
minutes into the fourth, taken away by ambulance with a badly injured
left leg. On the injury front the Eskimos were without starting
offensive lineman Dan Comiskey, who suffered a hairline ankle fracture
in last weekend’s loss to the Riders. The 36-year-old was placed on the
nine-game injured list Wednesday. For the Stamps, defensive linemen
Funtaine Hunter (hamstring), Juwan Simpson (ankle) and linebacker Saleem Rasheed
(shoulder) were all out of Calgary’s lineup. Nik Lewis’ first quarter reception
propelled him into sole possession of 10th place in Stamps history for
career receptions, ahead of Willie Burden.