By Marshall Ferguson
On the Week 21 broadcast of Winnipeg relying on the Montreal wind to clinch top spot in the West Division, I mentioned that looking at season-long statistics as a way to qualify any major team-wide argument can be a faulty process thanks to many teams across the CFL having what has felt like three distinctly different seasons over the past six months.
Perhaps nowhere is that sentiment more true than with BC and Saskatchewan where the Lions went through their quarterback eras while the Riders rollercoaster began 5–1, then went 0-6, and closed out the year 4-1.
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Saskatchewan is hosting its first playoff game since 2021 and by some strange twist of fate in a nine team league the last time BC and Saskatchewan met in the playoffs was all the way back in the 2013 Western Semi-Final with Saskatchewan claiming a 29-25 victory.
Over a decade later they get set to duel for a spot in the Western Final. Here’s a positional breakdown to get you set.
QUARTERBACKS
There’s so much to dig through here. Obviously BC’s quarterback dynamic paints the picture as a whole with Vernon Adams Jr. stepping in for Nathan Rourke just before the playoffs begin. VA is likely taking back the starting spot he dominated in over the first half of the year and with a more complete bill of health.
Trevor Harris missed time again this season with injury and since returning has been quintessential Trevor with accuracy and high completion percentage. These two went head-to-head when Harris and his then club Edmonton crossed over into Montreal to take on Alouettes’ starter VA five years ago. In that game, Vernon had two bad interceptions and lost, but he’s come a long way since those days while Trevor is much the same.
Trevor will make his first playoff start as a Roughrider. He is (3-4) in the post-season while VA is 1-2 in the playoffs. This comes down to playing style and connection with primary players in the offence for me and while my head says play it safe and pick Harris as he will no doubt shred the Lions with trademark patience and control, the heart says Adams Jr. and the Lions based on two things.
The first is Vernon’s Western Semi performance last year against Calgary, it was as good a first half of CFL football you’ll ever see from a passer. The second is the inspired Lions performance in VA’s return to the lineup a few weeks ago vs. Montreal.
ADVANTAGE: BC
RUNNING BACKS
William Stanback has squeezed more than anyone could have imagined out of his body in 2024 after leaving Montreal but in a heavyweight tilt of ball carriers the nod goes to Ouellette.
ADVANTAGE: Saskatchewan
RECEIVERS
Outside of KeeSean Johnson there isn’t nearly as much meat on the bone as BC. That group is lead by Justin McInnis, who totalled 20 catches for 362 yards in the two regular season matchups.
ADVANTANGE: BC
OFFENSIVE LINE
Despite sacks as a whole being down this year, that’s still too many to get a vote of confidence here. The question becomes who from the Roughriders will make them pay Saturday?
ADVANTAGE: Saskatchewan
DEFENSIVE LINE
ADVANTAGE: BC
LINEBACKERS
This will potentially be the most important group on the field when Vernon Adams Jr. breaks the pocket as he undoubtedly will early and often.
ADVANTAGE: Saskatchewan
DEFENSIVE BACKS
ADVANTAGE: Saskatchewan
KICKERS
ADVANTAGE: BC
RETURNERS
All respect to Terry Williams, who might have a higher average return in this one, but Alford housing one wouldn’t surprise anyone.
ADVANTAGE: Saskatchewan
SUMMARY
The season series was split between these two with BC winning 35-20 in Week 6 and the Riders answering 39-8 in Week 19.
I expect this to be a close one right down to the end and a critical decision by either Harris or Adams Jr. defining the game and who gets to go to Winnipeg next week.
Corey Mace is 0-0 as a head coach in playoff games, but he won the 2022 Grey Cup on this field as the Argonauts defensive coordinator. Can the good vibes carry over?