HAMILTON - The Toronto Argonauts bought troubled head coach Rich Stubler some time Monday.
Bryan Crawford’s one-yard touchdown run at 6:57 of the fourth quarter rallied Toronto to a nail-biting 34-31 Labour Day win over the arch-rival Hamilton Tiger-Cats.
Heading into the game, speculation was swirling that an Argos loss
would result in Stubler being fired and replaced by Mike (Pinball)
Clemons, who hand-picked Stubler to succeed him as Argos coach when he
was promoted to chief executive officer.
Monday’s victory capped a tumultuous nine days for the Argos, who
over that span dealt quarterback Michael Bishop to Saskatchewan and
released veteran safety Orlondo Steinauer before having to deal with the added distraction of Stubler’s future.
But when he emerged from Toronto’s dressing room afterwards, a
sweat-drenched Stubler simply opened up his shirt to reveal a T-shirt
with the words “Life is good.”
“All the turmoil was in your hands, not in our hands,” he said. “We had to eliminate some things, eliminate some distractions.
“We had a big distraction with me but I just told them, ‘Hey, if it
happens, it happens. If I die tomorrow, I die tomorrow.’ We eliminated
all the distractions and let our players play. The game is about
playing.”
Crawford’s run gave Toronto some breathing room after Mike Vanderjagt’s 50-yard field goal earlier in the quarter put the Argos ahead 27-26 before a loud but disappointing Ivor Wynne Stadium gathering of 25,911.
The Argos needed it, as Hamilton made it interesting with 2:31
remaining when Nick Setta’s 43-yard field goal cut Toronto’s lead to
34-31. That came after Vanderjagt conceded a safety with 5:05
remaining. But the Ticats’ aspirations for the comeback win died with
fullback Jeff Piercy was stopped cold on a third-down gamble at the Toronto 44-yard line with 28 seconds remaining.
It was a peculiar call, given Hamilton running back Jesse Lumsden had run for a game-high 104 yards, Terry Caulley added 68 yards on 10 carries and quarterback Casey Printers had 68 yards on seven carries. But Ticats coach Charlie Taaffe
defended the call, saying Piercy had been effective in short-yardage
situations before and Hamilton didn’t have time to get backup Richie Williams in for Printers, who was nursing a thumb injury, for a quarterback sneak.
“It’s been a very consistent play for us and Jeff has made it every
time he has run it prior to that last play,” Taaffe said, adding
Hamilton surrendered “too many big returns in the kicking game and then too many big plays … with their offence against our defence.”
Toronto (4-5) recorded its first win in three tries this season with
Hamilton (2-7) to remain second in the East Division standings, four
points behind first-place Montreal (6-3). The Ticats are tied for last
with Winnipeg.
Toronto improved to 17-3-1 in its last 21 games against Hamilton and
earned its third straight Labour Day victory. The Ticats still lead the
Labour Day series 27-12-1.
After watching Hamilton run for more than 400 yards combined in
their two previous meetings, Toronto showed several different looks on
defence. The Argos pretty much scrapped their heralded 3-4 alignment
and went with four-and five-man fronts and sometimes put a defensive
back up on the line as well . The changes left the unit with two or
sometimes one natural linebacker, resulting in limited playing time for
veteran linebackers Michael Fletcher and Mike O’Shea.
Fletcher got on the field with a four-man front, while O’Shea saw
limited playing time when the club went to its 3-4 setup but remained
on special teams.
Toronto also went with a different look in its secondary. Veteran
defensive back Ken Wheaton moved to safety in place of the departed Orlondo Steinauer, while CFL rookie Jason Shivers took Wheaton’s spot at defensive back. Ken Heatley, another newcomer, started at the other defensive back position.
But when asked about all the changes worked out, Stubler had a predictable response.
“We scored three points more than they did,” he said. “The mark of a
team is how many points you can score as opposed to how many you can
hold them to.
“The last quarter and a half we played well on defence.”
The Ticats didn’t have many problems adjusting to Toronto's new look
on defence, running for 259 yards and putting up 416 total yards.
Printers magically eluded an all-out Argos blitz and scampered 26 yards
- thanks to a nice downfield block by receiver Pat Woodcock - for his second TD of the game at 7:36 of the third to put Hamilton ahead 26-21.
But Toronto’s much-maligned offence wasn’t chopped liver, either. Quarterback Kerry Joseph was 18-of-33 passing for 399 yards and a touchdown and had a team-high 49 yards rushing. Arland Bruce III had a game-high 10 catches for 149 yards and a TD while Dominique Dorsey had two receptions for 105 yards and finished with 265 all-purpose yards.
Stubler said the absence of Bishop on the sidelines helped further emphasize that the Argos remain Joseph’s team.
“Absolutely,” he said. “For the past three years we’ve played great defence and haven’t played in the Grey Cup.
“We need to find a way to score points and play good defence too.”
Joseph, though, disagreed with his head coach.
“I just wanted to come out and be the leader I can be by playing on the field,” he said. “It’s not my team, it’s our team.
“We played together and when we do that we can be tough to beat.
That chapter is closed. Nothing has changed for me and I want to be the
player I can be to help this team.”
Jamal Robertson had Toronto’s other touchdown. Vanderjagt booted three converts, four field goals and a single.
Chris Bauman had Hamilton’s other touchdown. Setta added three converts and a field goal. The other points came on two safeties.
NOTES - By virtue of winning the first two head-to-head games this
season, Hamilton secured the Ballard Cup for the first time since 2001
… Both Hamilton and Toronto have quick turnarounds this week. The
Ticats’ next game is at home to B.C on Saturday while Toronto is in
Montreal on Sunday … CFL legend Ron Lancaster, who was diagnosed with
lung cancer last month, was back behind the mic as the colour man on
the Ticat’s radio broadcast.