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June 13, 2016

Pre-season loss reveals a few rough edges for Bombers

Johany Jutras/BlueBombers.com

OTTAWA – Pass around the hard hats and bust out the ‘under construction’ signs – the Winnipeg Blue Bombers remain very much a work in progress.

The Bombers became the first Canadian Football League team to wrap up their 2016 preseason Monday night in the nation’s capital, dropping an 18-14 decision to the Ottawa REDBLACKS that leaves just as many questions as answers.

“When you don’t win, it stinks,” said Bombers Head Coach Mike O’Shea. “Even if it’s a pre-season game it doesn’t feel good. So, it wasn’t good enough.”

The Bombers opened the game with all but one of their projected starters on offence – Weston Dressler was left at home to continue nursing a nagging injury – and the unit struggled to find a rhythm.

Drew Willy finished 11 of 15, but only for 87 yards and the club was stuffed on a couple of third-and-inches attempts that cut into the team’s time of possession. And in the pre-season, when offences are looking to find their mojo even with vanilla attacks, that is a killer.

Johany Jutras

Offensive Coordinator Paul LaPolice goes over the game plan (The Canadian Press)

“We did some good things, but we put ourselves in some tough situations tonight,” said Willy. “Any time you are first or second and long a lot of teams are dropping nine and only rushing three guys so it’s tough to push the ball down the field.

“I felt good out there with my reads but obviously we need to put more points on the board and we need to be better on third-and-one situations.

“We do have a lot of work to do, but we do have 10-11 days here to get ready for a good Montreal team.”

That season opener, June 24 at home against the Alouettes, is eons away if measured by the training camp calendar.

First up are two cut-down dates: to 65 players by Tuesday night and to their final 46-man/10-player practice roster by Sunday.

“There are a couple guys that did some pretty good things that certainly cemented their position,” said O’Shea, when asked if players separated themselves one way or another. “We’ve got to be down to 65 by (Tuesday) night and then we’ve got a significant amount of practice time before we’re down to our final number.

“So these guys are going to keep working and keep trying to earn spots.”

WHO STOOD OUT

WR/KR Quincy McDuffie: Another solid night, returning four kickoffs for 112 yards (including a 59-yarder) and one punt for 11 yards while pulling in three passes for 28 yards.

“I’m a big believer in the more you can do, the better,” said McDuffie. “Tonight I felt I showed my receiver capability. I just hope I did enough for the coaches to see when it comes around to making the finals cuts.”

QB Matt Nichols: The Bombers’ No. 2 man completed six of nine attempts for 73 yards. But he was quick with his decision-making and got the ball out of his hands in a hurry. And on a night when the club surrendered five sacks, that was noticeable.

“I’ve been in so many offences up here,” began Nichols, “and really this offence is a mash-up of two offences I’ve had in the past. There’s a lot of stuff I’m comfortable with and I think my experience last year in starting 14 games (with Edmonton and Winnipeg) has carried over for me. The game seemed slow and I felt like I was seeing it well.”

» BEST IN THE LEAGUE: Is Jamaal Westerman the best pass rusher?

THE CANADIAN PRESS

Westerman makes a tackle during 2015 action vs. the Riders (The Canadian Press)

LB Tony Burnett: He led the Bombers in tackles with five and added another on special teams with a tackle on the opening kickoff.

REC Gerrard Sheppard: Made a couple of tough grabs in traffic and led the Bombers with 45 receiving yards on three receptions.

MOVING FORWARD

Just like last week in the win over Montreal, it was the Bombers’ second and third stringers who were able to move the ball effectively on offence.

Asked afterward if he had any concerns about where his starting attack is at, Mike O’Shea was to the point.

“There’s no concern,” he said. “We have 11 days to work some more concepts in that we don’t have before the first regular season game. Our guys work extremely hard, they practice hard and they understand the idea of practicing at game speed. We’ve got a good amount of time before our first game.”

When quizzed about how comfortable he was with his squad at this point with the regular season approaching, the Bomber coach added:

“Hopefully, you never get comfortable because when you get comfortable you get punched in the face. Don’t get comfortable.”

3-MINUTE DRILL

No major injuries: LB Ian Wild looked to be banged up in the first half and did not finish the game, but O’Shea said the injury didn’t appear to be serious. After losing veteran OL Jeff Keeping to a knee injury a week ago, exiting Monday’s contest without a long injured list was massive – especially with the short turnaround between last Wednesday’s game and this one in Ottawa.

“There’s no concern. We have 11 days to work some more concepts in that we don’t have before the first regular season game.”
Mike O’Shea

THE CANADIAN PRESS

Andrew Harris fights off a tackle during Monday’s pre-season action (The Canadian Press)

Bombers land Craig Smith: The Bombers made a move in their personnel department on Monday, naming Craig Smith as the new National Scout. He replaces Drew Morris, who has left to join the New York Jets. The team had a sense this was coming as Morris was drawing a lot of interest from NFL teams. But in landing Smith, as highly respected as any personnel man in the league, the Bombers have found a solid replacement. Smith was caught up in the Saskatchewan Roughriders purge last December, and had taken a job with Simon Fraser University as a receivers coach when the Bombers called.

Numbers Game: 10 days until the Bombers open their 2016 season for real, June 24 against the Alouettes . . . 27:34, the Bombers’ time of possession Monday night — almost five minutes less than ottawa . . . 22-31, the combined passing totals for the four Bomber QBs but for just 212 yards . . . 75 per cent, the field goal percentage for Sergio Castillo, who was two for three against Ottawa after going four for five last week. Castillo missed his first attempt of the preseason and his last – a 35-yard attempt with 2:45 remaining that could have brought the Bombers to within one point at 17-16.