QUEBEC CITY – The No. 2 Calgary Dinos and the No. 4 Queen's Gaels meet in Saturday's Desjardins Vanier Cup – a match-up few would have predicted just a week ago, let alone in the pre-season.
Kickoff is at noon local, 10 a.m. MT at Université Laval's PEPS Stadium in Quebec City, live on TSN and Radio-Canada (French).
DINOS MEDIA GUIDE (pdf, 8MB)
QUEEN'S MEDIA GUIDE (pdf, 7.5MB)
THE MATCH-UP
It is the first meeting between Calgary and Queen's since the 1983 Vanier Cup at Varsity Stadium in Toronto, where the Dinos won their first of four national championships with a 31-21 victory. The quarterback in '83 was Hec Crighton winner
Greg Vavra, who is the offensive coordinator with the Dinos in 2009 and mentors another Hec-nominated pivot,
Erik Glavic. The 1983 national championship game is the only previous meeting between the two storied CIS football programs.
BACK TO THE DANCE
Calgary makes its first appearance in the Vanier Cup since 1995, a 54-24 defeat of Western Ontario. Other appearances came in 1975 (loss to Ottawa), 1983 (defeated Queen's), 1985 (defeated Western Ontario), 1988 (defeated Saint Mary's), and 1993 (lost to Toronto). Saturday will mark the first game against an Ontario-based team for the Dinos since that 1995 Vanier Cup title.
Until the 2008 season, the '95 Vanier Cup was the last playoff game the Calgary program had won. The Dinos defeated Simon Fraser for the Canada West title last season before falling 59-10 to eventual champion Laval in the Uteck Bowl at PEPS Stadium in Quebec City – so the 2009 national championship game will mark the second straight year the Dinos have played on the turf at Université Laval.
The Dinos are winners of 10 straight games, with their only loss of the season coming by one point in overtime Sept. 4 in Saskatchewan when a two-point convert attempt was unsuccessful. In compiling just the third 7-1 season in school history and a trip to the national title game, Calgary has averaged 39.8 points per game, outscored its opponents 438-240, and broke or tied four team offensive records: total offence, first downs, completion percentage, and touchdowns (39, tied with 1995).
ROAD WARRIORS
The Dinos are in the midst of a record-breaking road trip, brought about because of the CIS Bowl schedule and complications surrounding Sunday's Grey Cup game at their home field, McMahon Stadium in Calgary. The team departed Calgary after practice last Tuesday, Nov. 17, flying overnight to Halifax to prepare for last week's Uteck Bowl against Saint Mary's. Following their semi-final triumph, the Dinos loaded onto buses and headed west for Quebec City, arriving at the host hotel late Sunday night. After Saturday's game, the team will bus to Montreal on Sunday from where they will fly home Monday morning after spending 13 nights on the road.
Travel is certainly something the Dinos are used to, this being the team's third straight game and fourth in five weeks on the road. Road trips in conference play this season included two eight-hour bus trips to Saskatchewan to face the Huskies in Saskatoon and the Rams in Regina, a flight to Vancouver to visit UBC, and a relatively short three-hour trip north to face Alberta in Edmonton. All told, when the team returns to Calgary on Monday they will have travelled more than 13,400 km in 2009 and have played in every time zone in the nation, save Newfoundland. Including the Vanier Cup, the Dinos' last four games of the year will be played in four different time zones.
THE COACHES
While the Dinos have been strangers of late to the Vanier Cup, head coach
Blake Nil certainly is not. Nill, the 2009 Canada West coach of the year, took over the Calgary program in 2006 and in just four seasons has made three playoff appearances, won two conference titles, appeared in two Bowl games, and qualified for the Vanier Cup. He has two national championships to his credit in 2001 and 2002 with Saint Mary's University and makes his fifth appearance on the sidelines in a Vanier Cup game. He last competed for the title in a 2003.
Nill and his Queen's counterpart, Pat Sheahan, are the first two coaches in CIS history to lead two different programs to Vanier Cup appearances. Sheahan led the Concordia Stingers to a Vanier Cup appearance in 1998 before taking over at Queen's in 2000. Sheahan was last season's CIS coach of the year.
THE SEASON
The Dinos opened the 2008 season still smarting from that Uteck Bowl loss to Laval but with the goal of returning to PEPS for a shot at the Vanier Cup, this time with
Erik Glavic at quarterback.
Glavic's impact was immediate. The Dinos wound up on the wrong side of six or seven plays, any one of which would have changed the game's outcome, in their season-opening 34-33 loss at Saskatchewan. The classic game in front of a big Griffiths Stadium crowd put the Dinos and the Huskies on a collision course for what would be an equally entertaining Hardy Cup final 10 weeks later.
Calgary survived a late scare from Alberta to prevail 34-33 in their home opener, then headed back east to face Regina.
Matt Walter posted 259 rushing yards in just over one half as the Dinos easily handled the Rams 41-15. Week 4 against Simon Fraser in the 2008 Hardy Cup rematch, the Dinos came out on top 49-22 after taking a 42-3 lead into halftime.
A 50-26 road win over UBC followed, with the Manitoba Bisons next on tap in Week 6 at McMahon Stadium. The Dinos shot out to a 23-0 lead, then gave up 24 unanswered points and trailed 24-23 heading into the fourth quarter. Calgary bounced back to score two unconverted majors in the fourth to win 35-24, surviving their most significant scare of the season.
The Dinos wrapped up the regular season by easily handling Regina 47-29, piling up 719 yards total offence, then winning their first game at Alberta in more than five years with a 40-5 drubbing at Foote Field.
THE PLAYOFFS
Despite finishing the season 7-1, the Dinos still finished second in Canada West because Saskatchewan also finished 7-1 – and the head-to-head tiebreaker went to the Huskies. Calgary started to prepare for Manitoba as its first-round playoff opponent, but early in the week the Bisons were stripped of three victories for using an ineligible player and the Dinos turned right around and played the Alberta Golden Bears for the second straight week.
Anthony Parker returned the opening kickoff 108 yards for a touchdown, then took an onside kickoff attempt 59 yards in the last minute of the game as the team overcame a lackluster offensive performance to win 45-13, setting up the West showdown against Saskatchewan in the 73rd Hardy Cup.
The game did not disappoint. In a classic battle, both offences moved the ball virtually at will, combining for more than 1,200 yards. Calgary trailed by nine points in the fourth quarter but got a field goal, a two-and-out, and a touchdown drive capped off by a four-yard Glavic run to the end zone to take a 39-38 lead with two minutes left.
Saskatchewan drove the length of the field, setting up a 35-yard game-winning field goal attempt for kicker Grant Shaw. But the attempt was low and wide, and
Nathan Coehoorn extended the Dinos' season by running it out of the end zone as Calgary captured its second straight and 11th overall Canada West football championship.
Glavic threw for 470 yards in the game and added 106 on the ground as he almost singlehandedly sent the Dinos into the next round.
THE BOWL GAME
The Saskatchewan Huskies behind them, the Dinos turned their attention to the eastern Huskies as they jetted east to Nova Scotia.
Halifax was abuzz as
Blake Nill,
Erik Glavic, and the University of Calgary Dinos touched down last Wednesday to prepare for the Uteck Bowl against Saint Mary's. It was the first appearance for both Nill and Glavic at Huskies Stadium since both left SMU for Calgary, and thousands packed the grandstand and lined the track around the field to witness the much-hyped affair.
Turns out the hype neglected to mention the Dinos' rushing game, which was the best in Canada this season.
Matt Walter racked up 235 yards along the ground, including 69- and four-yard touchdowns, while
Steven Lumbala added 156 yards rushing. Calgary ran for 426 yards and needed just 77 passing yards from Glavic to complement a three-interception performance by the Dinos defence as Calgary won convincingly 38-14, qualifying for the Vanier Cup for the first time since 1995.
THE QUARTERBACKS
Saturday's outing will be a clash of two of the greatest quarterbacks CIS football has ever seen as Dan Brannagan lines up under centre for Queen's while 2007 Hec Crighton winner
Erik Glavic, who is nominated for his second CIS MVP honour in 2009, is at the controls for Calgary.
Glavic is a superb athlete who poses a triple threat in the backfield. He had the most accurate passing season in school history at 67.5 per cent, passed for 2,186 yards – the fourth-best season in program history – and finished second in Canada West in passing yards. He was also fourth in the conference with 503 yards rushing and was joined in the backfield by
Matt Walter, the 2008 Canada West MVP and the rushing champion for the second straight season.
THE OFFENCE
The Dinos were among the best offensive teams in the nation with a quartet of weapons behind a solid offensive line. Outside Glavic, tailback
Matt Walter was a second-team All-Canadian last season and won the conference rushing title for the second straight year with 1,103 yards. Slotback
Anthony Parker and wide receiver
Nathan Coehoorn were both conference all-stars after finishing one-two in Canada West in receiving. Calgary has other weapons at receiver as well, and
Richard Snyder has broken out in the playoffs. Against Saskatchewan he had 222 yards and two touchdowns on seven catches and added another major in the Uteck Bowl.
Calgary's offensive line is young but impressive, with four sophomores and one redshirt freshman starting. Centre
Alex Krausnick-Groh was the conference all-star at his position, as was right tackle
Kirby Fabien, who in his first year of eligibility has drawn significant attention from pro scouts.
THE DEFENCE
Calgary had the second-best rush defence in the nation behind only Laval, led by a veteran and deep group in the front seven. Rookie of the Year candidate
Linden Gaydosh started all eight games on the interior of the defensive line, while ends
Deji Oduwole and
Andrew Obrecht shard the team lead with three sacks apiece. The linebacking corps is veteran, led by fourth-year All-Canadian middle linebacker
Andrea Bonaventura. He finished second on the team in tackles with 40.5 on the season, just back of fifth-year senior
Chase Moore's 43.0.
The secondary has shown improvements but is still young in many areas. Seniors
Matt Grohn and
Steve Truzak are the anchors of the defensive backs, while
Wyatt Getty,
Brian Hagen,
Tye Noble, and
Sam Hurl are each in either their first or second years of eligibility.
Michael Lau replaced starter
Chudi Nzekwu at the boundary corner spot for the Uteck Bowl after Nzekwu was injured in the Hardy Cup game.
THE SPECIAL TEAMS
Kicker
Aaron Ifield became the team's all-time leading field goal kicker this season and has good range, with his season-long a 46-yarder in 2009. He also handles the punting duties, posting a career-high 39.1-yard average.
Anthony Parker returned two kickoffs for touchdowns in the Canada West semi-final against Alberta and is Calgary's key threat in the return game.
THE SENIORS
Four members of the University of Calgary Dinos will play their final CIS games Saturday as they wrap up their fifth year of eligibility: QB
Deke Junior, DB
Matt Grohn, LB
Chase Moore, and DL
Andrew Obrecht.
THE GAME NOTES
• Two Queen's players hail from Calgary, both from Western Canada High School: DB Ben D'Andrea and LB Geoff Mohtadi. Mohtadi, who is injured, is the son of Dr. Nick Mohtadi, a noted orthopedic surgeon who practices out of the University of Calgary's Sports Medicine Centre. Dr. Mohtadi will join the Dinos on the sideline Saturday.
• Not a single player on the Dinos' active roster had been born the last time the Dinos faced Queen's, the 1983 Vanier Cup.
• Calgary's record away from McMahon Stadium is 5-1 this season, with the lone loss coming Week 1 at Saskatchewan. The Dinos have not lost at home since Sept. 29, 2007, a span of 13 consecutive games.
• Seven Dinos were named CW all-stars in 2009: QB
Erik Glavic, RB
Matt Walter, and WR
Nathan Coehoorn were all unanimous choices, in addition to SB
Anthony Parker, C
Alex Krausnick-Groh, OT
Kirby Fabien, and LB
Andrea Bonaventura. Walter and Coehoorn were second-team All-Canadians in 2008, while Bonaventura made the first team.
• Calgary has an all-time post-season record of 6-4 against schools now in Ontario University Athletics. The most-played opponent is Western Ontario whom the Dinos have faced four times, posting a 3-1 record.
• The Dinos will wear white UnderArmour uniforms in Saturday's Vanier Cup game. Calgary previously wore white in the Vanier Cup in 1985, 1988, and 1993, winning two of those three games. Calgary signed an exclusive agreement with UnderArmour Canada before the season, making UnderArmour the official outfitter of the University of Calgary Dinos football program.
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