Hamilton to meet Winnipeg in Grey Cup final
Posted November 17, 2019 4:51 pm.
Last Updated November 17, 2019 10:35 pm.
This article is more than 5 years old.
Dane Evans threw for 386 yards and a TD in his first CFL playoff start, leading the Hamilton Tiger-Cats past the Edmonton Eskimos 36-16 in the East Division final Sunday afternoon.
Hamilton, which finished the regular season with a CFL-best 15-3 record, advanced to its first Grey Cup game since losing the ’14 final to Calgary. The Ticats last won the title in ’99, the league’s second-longest drought.
Hamilton will play the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, who advanced with a 20-13 win over the Saskachewan Roughriders in the CFL West Division final.
Evans finished 21-of-36 passing with an interception. More importantly, he improved to 10-2 as Hamilton’s starter before a sun-drenched Tim Hortons Field-record sellout of 25,177 that was predominantly clad in Ticats’ black and waved gold rally towels throughout.
Edmonton had a glorious chance to make it interesting when Godfrey Onyeka recovered Luke Tasker’s fumble at the Hamilton 36-yard line 2:30 into the fourth. But the Eskimos had to settle for Sean Whyte’s 30-yard field goal at 5:11 to cut the Ticats’ lead to 28-13.
David Watford cemented the Hamilton win with a two-yard TD run – his second of the game – at 8:09.
Hamilton’s Bralon Addison had seven catches for 130 yards while Brandon Banks registered four receptions for 100 yards and a TD. Banks didn’t play in Hamilton’s 46-27 East Division final loss to Ottawa last year due to injury.
Edmonton starter Trevor Harris, facing Hamilton for the first time this season, was 29-of-41 passing for 319 yards with a TD and two interceptions while being sacked three times. Harris completed 36-of-39 attempts – completing a CFL-record 22 straight – for 421 yards and a TD in last weekend’s 37-29 East Division semifinal win over Montreal.
Harris had a CFL playoff-record six TD strikes for Ottawa in the ’18 East Division final.
Edmonton was attempting to become the first crossover team to reach the Grey Cup since the concept was introduced in 1996. West Division teams are 0-5 all-time in the East Division final, with the Eskimos dropping to 0-3.
Crossover teams have played in 17 games and are 5-12 all-time with all the victories coming in the semifinal round (5-7).
Hamilton improved to 10-0 at Tim Hortons Field and became the eighth team in CFL history to finish the regular season unbeaten at home. The Ticats become the fourth such squad to reach the Grey Cup but first since ’09 Montreal Alouettes.
Lirm Hajrullahu’s 34-yard field goal at 10:45 of the third increased Hamilton’s lead to 28-13. It came after Edmonton surrendered the safety at 7:03.
Hajrullahu booted three converts, four field goals and a single.
DaVaris Daniels had Edmonton’s touchdown. Whyte kicked the convert and three field goals.
Hamilton put Edmonton into a real bind when Hajrullahu’s 41-yard field goal on the final play of the second quarter staked the Ticats to a 23-13 half-time lead. The Eskimos were a dismal 1-9 this season when trailing at the half.
Harris, after completing his first 22 passes – a CFL playoff record – in the first half of the East Division semifinal, was 15-of-20 for 158 yards with a TD and interceptions as the Eskimos had the ball for over 17 minutes through two quarters Sunday.
By comparison, Evans was 10-of-19 passing but for 224 yards and a TD.
Hajrullahu’s boot came after White connected from 17 and 49 yards out at 14:26 and 9:34, respectively.
Daniels pulled Edmonton to within 13-7 with a 21-yard TD grab to cap an eight-play, 75-yard drive at 2:34. But Hamilton countered with Banks’ acrobatic 47-yard touchdown catch at 4:13 to go ahead 20-7 as the Ticats had scored on four straight possessions.
Hamilton parlayed three Eskimos miscues into a 13-0 first-quarter lead. Hajrullahu’s 48-yard field goal at 4:51 came after a Richard Leonard interception.
Watford scored on third-and-two at 7:55 following Frankie Williams’ fumble recovery and return to the Edmonton 31-yard line. Then following an 11-yard Hugh O’Neill punt – that went for a one-yard net due to penalty – Hajrullahu connected on a 19-yard boot at 13:35.
BLUE BOMBERS GREY CUP BOUND
In Saskatchewan, Kenny Lawler caught a touchdown pass for Winnipeg and Justin Medlock kicked field goals from 44, 43, 32 and 13 yards for the win.
Saskatchewan’s Brett Lauther kicked field goals from 12, 13, 33 and 42 yards in a losing cause in front of an announced sellout of 33,350 at Mosaic Stadium.
Saskatchewan topped the West division with a 13-5 record, ahead of the Calgary Stampeders (12-6) and the Bombers (11-7).
Blue Bombers quarterback Zach Collaros completed 17 of 25 passes for 267 yards and a touchdown pass against the team he started the season with.
He engineered a pivotal first-quarter drive to score the only touchdown of the game.
From their own three-yard line, the Bombers raced downfield on a three-play, 107-yard scoring drive that included Collaros’s 63-yard pass to Darvin Adams and his 26-yard touchdown throw to Lawler in the end zone.
Collaros started the season a Roughrider, but was traded twice and landed in Winnipeg on Oct. 9 via the Toronto Argonauts. The West final was jsut his third start since joining the Blue Bombers.
The 31-year-old pivot experienced the Grey Cup in 2012 as a rookie backup for the Argos, who hoisted the trophy that year.
Collaros was Hamilton’s starter in the 2014 Grey Cup when his Ticats were beaten by the Calgary Stampeders. Five years later, he’ll experience the CFL’s championship game again.
Saskatchewan starting quarterback Cody Fajardo played Sunday with an injured oblique muscle.
He couldn’t run the football as aggressively as he did in a 611-yard regular season. Fajardo was 27-for-41 in passing for 366 yards.
Down 20-13 at the three-minute warning, Saskatchewan squandered a pair of golden opportunities to score.
On a third-and-goal with four seconds left, Fajardo’s pass to the end zone bounced off the crossbar to end the game.
Winnipeg’s defence denied Fajardo on a one-yard plunge attempt for a touchdown with 2:37 remaining.
Winnipeg last played in a Grey Cup in 2011 when the Bombers fell 34-23 to the host B.C. Lions. The Blue Bombers haven’t won the CFL’s championship trophy since 1990.