Skip to content

Veteran presence has certainly helped Blue Bombers make another Grey Cup appearance

HAMILTON — Familiarity shouldn't be an issue for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers on Sunday. The Bombers will attempt to secure a second straight CFL title when they face the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in the Grey Cup game.
20211211151256-61b510c85ba97e9bac67cc8cjpeg

HAMILTON — Familiarity shouldn't be an issue for the Winnipeg Blue Bombers on Sunday.

The Bombers will attempt to secure a second straight CFL title when they face the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in the Grey Cup game. Winnipeg captured the 2019 title with a 33-12 victory over the Ticats.

A total of 31 players who were on Winnipeg's 2019 Grey Cup roster played in its 21-17 West Division final win last weekend over the Saskatchewan Roughriders.

"You bring them back for these types of reasons," Winnipeg head coach Mike O'Shea said Saturday. "These types of games because they know what they need personally and are also aware of what their teammates need."

The Bombers held their final walkthrough Saturday, with the head coach happy with the state of his squad.

"I like where they're at," he said.

---

NO NOSTALGIA: O'Shea will make a sixth career Grey Cup appearance Sunday when the Blue Bombers face the Hamilton Tiger-Cats at Tim Hortons Field.

And he comes in sporting an unblemished 5-0 record.

O'Shea won three rings as a linebacker with the Toronto Argonauts (1996-97, '04) and another as their special-teams co-ordinator (2012). O'Shea captured his first title as a head coach in 2019.

But he wasn't feel nostalgic Saturday.

"I don't know that now is the time to compare them," O'Shea said. "What I really enjoy about this right now is watching these players, watching these guys interact, watching this team work. 

"I don't know why I would try to compare it to another time."

Hamilton head coach Orlondo Steinauer, who played and coached with O'Shea in Toronto, wasn't surprised at O'Shea's Grey Cup record.

"Besides being a great friend, he's a great coach," Steinauer said. "I was unaware of that but definitely not surprised."

And while Steinauer and O'Shea are very close friends, Steinauer definitely wants the win Sunday.

"Don't let the smile fool you," Steinauer said. "Absolutely we're competitive.

"But the thing I respect about Osh is he works. I think we're both looking forward to this competition."

Asked if he savoured moments more now, O'Shea said: "I think that's a natural thing as a player … standing back and watching other players was an important transition but I'm not a player anymore. I get to stand back and watch all these guys all the time."

And O'Shea has a clear idea of what kind of game will transpire Sunday.

"Sixty minutes of tough football played in a great environment, Hamilton-style football," he said. "We probably both play the same brand, good defence, offences that can get after it, big plays."

---

NO REDEMPTION: Steinauer reiterated Saturday the Tiger-Cats' Grey Cup rematch with the Blue Bombers isn't a grudge match after Winnipeg's lopsided win over Hamilton two years ago. 

"You can growl, you can roar, you can do media," Steinauer said. "The game is to be played and not talked about.

"It's about execution and the team that executes the best will have the best opportunity to win. There really is not a revenge factor or a get even (factor), this is about 60 minutes of football or more and trying to get a win."

---

SCORING FIRST: CFL players and coaches routinely talk about the importance of starting fast. But scoring first hasn't been nearly as crucial so far in the league playoffs.

Over the four post-season contests, the team that scored first did not register the victory. In the regular season, the squad that opened the scoring won 59 per cent of the time (37-26). 

--- 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Dec. 11, 2021.

The Canadian Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks