Bombers carrying ‘extra fire’ into Banjo Bowl as Riders seek ‘payback’ for Labour Day loss
There is some extra fire for when the Winnipeg Blue Bombers host the Saskatchewan Roughriders in the annual Banjo Bowl at Princess Auto Stadium on Saturday.
Fresh on the Blue Bombers’ minds is the illegal hit that knocked their starting quarterback, Zach Collaros, out of the game late in the first half of last Sunday’s Labour Day Classic in Regina. The CFL fined defensive tackle Miles Brown for that indiscretion.
“We’re a brotherhood, we work with all of these guys putting in work every single day,” Bombers linebacker Tony Jones said Friday.
“So, whenever one of your guys goes down — especially with an illegal hit — it does add a little extra fire into you, especially your starting quarterback, who means so much to the team.”
Bombers running back Brady Oliveira is determined not to allow the possibility of it happening again.
“Obviously, it’s been talked about — ‘Hey, we can’t have anyone hitting our quarterback,”‘ he said. “But we need to take even more pride and understanding what’s going on up front and make sure that no one touches [Collaros].
“It’s on us. It’s on the offensive line. It’s on me as a running back going back there in pass protection to make sure no one gets a finger on Zach. So, I guess that’s our little added motivation.”
Brown claimed he had no intent to injure Collaros.
“Not at all did I mean to try to hurt him and intend to hit him in the head,” Brown told Regina reporters.
‘Game will be physical enough’: Riders coach
Bombers head coach Mike O’Shea believes a fine does not act as enough of a deterrent for such incidents. He thinks the CFL should introduce the possibility of an ejection after the command centre checks such plays out.
“I don’t think I was satisfied with this one,” O’Shea said. “It is what it is. There’s nothing that I can do about it.”
Roughriders head coach Corey Mace, who insisted that Brown is not a dirty player, does not expect any extra-curricular antics as a result of the incident.
“I just know Osh [O’Shea] and the type of mentality he likes to put on his team — those guys play a physical brand of football, but they also try to play it the right way,” he said.
“The game will be physical enough. Will it be chippy? I think it’s just kind of a rivalry anyway to be chippy, but I’m certain he’s telling his team the same thing that I’ve told ours.”
Collaros, who will return to action on Saturday, was looking ahead not behind.
“You think about last week — I didn’t finish the game, which was the disappointing part for me, obviously,” he said. “I treat this week like I do any other week … nothing really changes. Once that first snap happens, you’re just locked into your job and looking forward to it afterwards.”
After Collaros was knocked out of the match, the Bombers held on for a 35-33 victory. So, the Roughriders are determined to avenge that loss.
“Looking for some payback,” Logan Ferland, who will start at centre, told Regina reporters. “They came into our house and did that, and we have to go into theirs and do the same.”
Starting Saskatchewan quarterback Trevor Harris relishes playing in such an environment.
“It’s fun,” he said. “The Banjo Bowl, we know it’s going to be loud. We aren’t going to be able to use our cadence because the fans are going to be too loud for us to use it. But, what more would you want? You don’t want to play a road game with 8,000 people.
“So, it’s gonna be all of them against us, so let’s go. Like Rocky IV in a hostile environment in Russia. Get ready for it and build for it.”