Argos Came Back From The Dead

TORONTO (Nov. 18) — The team upon which I threw in the towel near the end of September tossed it right back at me — full of the blood, sweat and snot required to overcome crippling adversity and win the Canadian Football League championship. When the Toronto Argonauts mismanaged the final moments against Hamilton on Sep. 20 and lost at home by a field goal, the club was plummeting toward the East Division basement. Then, out of absolutely nowhere, the Argonauts began to cook with the recipe that prevails virtually every year in the CFL. The Boatmen played their best football of the season when it mattered. As it always does starting in late–September.

A 37–31 triumph over Montreal at BMO Field was followed by a 14–11 slog at Winnipeg (the two best teams in the league). A no–doubter at home to Ottawa, in which the Argos bolted to a 28–0 lead in the second quarter, clinched a playoff spot. The season ended with a meaningless loss at Edmonton… but not–so meaningless in hindsight. Journeyman quarterback Nick Arbuckle came on to relieve starter Cameron Dukes and performed very well. He was named the CFL’s offensive player of the week (starter Chad Kelly was rested). Providing him valuable confidence, if needed, down the road. Arbuckle watched as Kelly and the defense rang up 58 points against Ottawa in the East semifinal; then three quarters of the Division title game, in Montreal. When, suddenly, he was called upon to sub for Kelly, who broke his leg on a tackle with 0:36 left in the period, that confidence from Edmonton paid off.

Arbuckle nursed the visitors to an improbable, 30–28 victory and a berth in the 111th Grey Cup.

How, then, in the wild and wacky CFL, could Arbuckle not author a second improbable story, being named Most Valuable Player on Sunday night as the Argos pulled away in the fourth quarter from the heavily favored Winnipeg Blue Bombers and breezed to a 41–24 victory for their second Grey Cup title in three years. Both guided by coach Ryan Dinwiddie, whose head I wanted on a platter several times during the season. As I wrote last week, however, Dinwiddie’s show of raw emotion when Kelly got hurt fueled his players to scrap against the favored Alouettes in the final 15 minutes. His ball–hawking defense then took over after Arbuckle had superbly managed the Grey Cup game. Interception returns by Rob Priester (61 yards for a touchdown) and Wynton McManis (who was tripped at the Winnipeg two) added an exclamation mark to the latest conquest by Toronto’s best sports team.


There were two major turning points in the game. In the second quarter, the Argo defensive front sacked Winnipeg quarterback Zach Collaros on second down, deep in Toronto territory. The Bombers were leading, 7–3. A touchdown would have put the Argos down by 11 points. Difficult hill to climb without Kelly. Instead, Winnipeg was held to a field goal. Then, in the third quarter, with the game still tight, the Blue Bombers blocked a John Haggerty punt and recovered inside the Argo 25. But, the Bombers were called for loose–ball interference (Benjie Franklin was pushed while attempting to recover for the Argonauts). By rule, Toronto retained possession with a first down.

The Argos were able to control future Hall–of–Famer Collaros in their encounters this season. Collaros was ineffective while healthy on Sunday… then unavoidably disastrous after slicing open his throwing hand in the fourth quarter. He returned wearing a receiver’s glove but quickly yielded the scoring interception to Priester.

And, the lock–down pick by McManis.

Rout on. Game over.

The Argos have won their past eight trips to the CFL championship: 1991–96–97–2004–12–17–22–24. No club has lifted the Grey Cup as often in the past 35 years. That from a team that failed to appear in the Cup match for an astounding 19 years (1952–71) in a nine–team league. But, times clearly have changed for the Double Blue.

As always seems to happen when the Argonauts come on strongly at the end of the season, the veteran defenders began to smell money. McManis, Folarin Orimolade, DeShaun Amos, Royce Metchie, Jake Ceresna, interception machine Franklin. It remains undeniable: defense wins championships. Not without help from a quarterback… and Arbuckle exceeded all expectation at B.C. Place. A  razor–close, 17–16 game in Toronto’s favor erupted into a landslide with the Priester interception return and a touchdown after the McManis pick. Toronto struck for a Grey Cup–record 24 points in the fourth quarter. Turns out the Argos accumulated 129 points in their three playoff games, an average of 43 per match. More than enough to win a title. Even minus your No. 1 quarterback.

It must again be pointed out that the Argos are the antithesis of the Core–4 Maple Leafs, who are also the heroes of November each year. The truly great players embrace high–leverage circumstances. The pretenders wither.

EMAIL: HOWARDLBERGER@GMAIL.COM

11 comments on “Argos Came Back From The Dead

  1. Love how these Argos always rise to the occasion at crunch time. Our beloved Leafs could learn a thing or two from them.

  2. A total team effort! Everyone kept their noses to the grindstone and didn’t give up! Led by a very determined coaching staff and surrounded by rabid fans, there was no stopping these guys!

  3. Great Game. The Argos seem to be the only Toronto Team to deliver consistently in my life time.

    Is it because they are practically invisible in the city\province\country and no one pays them any attention? Kinda like the Tampa Bays and Floridas in Hockey?

    I am eating crow as well due to a comment about their uniforms earlier this year. Its not the unis or the shoes but the people who dawn them.

  4. Congratulations to the Argos for a great win! I hope this will encourage more people to go to Argo home games next year.

    And welcome back to the CFL Howard. I seem to recall you wrote a whole column earlier in the season where you said you’d never fo to anothter Argo game ever again. I’m glad you didn’t give up!

  5. I’ve always felt the awards are handed out prematurely. If anyone deserves Coach of the Year, it should be Ryan Dinwiddie.

    No team went through what the Argos did this year and then to end up on top points at Ryan and his coaching staff leading the way.

    Great game, great story too. Another example of this great Canadian league and for 111 years!!!

    Thanks Howard for all you do

    Mike

  6. Hi Howard. Great victory for an Argos team that refused to quit, and always believed in one another.” Eating a little crow,” is nothing to be ashamed of Howard. It’s good for the soul. Take it from a guy who has dined on some crow himself. Well written Howard. Ron Asselstine

  7. Great team victory…they all pulled together…
    The MVP couldn’t have happened to a better guy !
    I was surprised Chad wasn’t there on the sidelines…

    1. Congratulations on a great game. And what is even more impressive then winning the grey cup is how the players shared it with their children and families. ???

    2. Congratulations on a great game. And what is even more impressive then winning the grey cup is how the players shared it with their children and families. ??? They all showed such class, and that starts with R.D. To see Arbuckle play an almost perfect game as well as being a perfect Team mate is what’s missing in high priced sports today.

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