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TrueBlue4ever

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Everything posted by TrueBlue4ever

  1. The start of it was nothing special, just the volume: "He's got it at the 20, moves left, gets away, NOW HE CUTS BACK, AT THE 30, 35, 40, 45, STILL ON HIS FEET!!!! The 50, 45, 40..." which is all OK if you don't mind hearing the screaming from 2 Provinces over without the need for a microphone, but it was the "GO KENDAL!!! GO KENDAL!!! GO KENDAL!!!!!! KEEP GOING KENDAL!!!!!! YESSSS!!!!!!! TOUCHDOWN 'RIDERS! WHAT A CLASSIC!!!!" blatant cheerleading on the call which is the epitome of classless and unprofessional broadcasting.
  2. Ah, ah, ah, ah….stayin' alive! Stayin' alive!
  3. Good call, sir, although you must have been sweating it out in the 4th quarter.
  4. Well friends, the annual Labour Day match-up between the Blue Bombers of Winnipeg and the Roughriders of Saskatchewan is in the books, and for the final time at old Taylor Field here in Regina, and there was no shortage of excitement on both sides of the ball. And after squandering big halftime lead the Bombers clawed back and looked ready to walk away with their 5th straight victory, before the Saskatchewan returner number 32 ran a punt back with 42 seconds left to seemingly break the Bomber faithful hearts once again. But this Winnipeg team has shown us something different this year, which is the ability not to throw in the towel, and once again that resiliency was in full display. Now the Happy Honker is traditionally not meant for the best player on the team, not the one who makes the "big play" per se, but someone who does something extra special in the game. Now, often it can be the big play that defines the game that becomes our Happy Honker winner, but not always. And likewise, while the game star is not usually the Happy Honker winner, it doesn't mean they can't be. And when the game comes down to the last play, you need to look hard at what really stood out in the game. So although A.J., er B.J. McDuffie, whatshisname? [Bob Irving patiently interjecting: "Quincey MacDuffie, Cactus"] right, B.J. MacDuffie had a big touchdown catch and some good returns in the kicking game tonight, and although Joey….Johnny Adams had a big interception, and C.J. Roberts had a even bigger interception on the goal line late to keep Saskatchewan of the board when they were threatening to take the lead, and Mo Ligament had some important kick returns to keep points off the board, none of that ultimately decided the game. No, this was decided by the kickers. And Saskatchewan's Tyler Crapola, Crapola? [Irving: "Close enough, Jack"] did not put his best foot forward, so to speak. No, he missed two field goals and let Mr. Leggant produce those aforementioned returns, and then with a last minute lead staring them in the face, Craptastic once again muffed a convert to keep the game tied. Now when the shoe was other the other foot, that of Justin Medlock, well it was a different story altogether. After extending his field goal streak to 22 consecutive successful field goals, Justin channelled his inner Keiran Hyroglyphics, the former Bomber kicker who never met a goalpost he didn't like to hit, and clanged one off the upright to finish his streak. But not to be deterred, Justin went out and started a new one, and with the outcome on the line, he calmly connected from 43 yards away for his 5th straight 3 pointer and his 7th overall in the match to seal the victory for the Blue and Gold in this final Taylor Field Labour Day battle. And so after earlier this season tying a long time Bernard Ruoff club record with a 58 yard field goal, Mr. Medlock matched another Bomber great, Trevor Can-ard, with 7 field goals in the game, and who knows, maybe he will catch Troy Westward and his single season scoring record too. So because of the record, because of the streak, because he was truly the most important player all night long, because he's a kicker who usually only gets mentioned when he misses, and because the game came down to his play, Justin Medlock is my Happy Honker award winner tonight.
  5. Actually, it was Paul Edmonds, TSN morning show phone-in segment, circa 2015. Maybe he got it from there.
  6. Regina......the city that smells like its name sounds like.
  7. Since I'm at 4 strikes I can't just follow the crowd, so Tiger Cat Luke Tasker for me.
  8. Well friends, tonight's game was not the prettiest affair, but in the end the Bombers parlayed another stout defensive effort and the perfect kicking of Justin Medlock to a victory in La Belle Province. Of course, there are many elements that go into securing a win, but there can be only one Happy Honker, the player who did that something extra special in the game. Now, I enjoyed the efforts of lineman Travis Bond, drawing a rough play penalty with the Bombers backed up in their own end with the greatest acting display seen in these parts since a gruff Joe Mack effectively portrayed a competant evaluator of football talent in his interview and conned the Bombers board of directors into hiring him as GM a few years ago, and then provided a key block on Macho Harris, as the fine folks at TSN know him, game clinching touchdown run. But my Happy Honker winner goes to a more unsung hero. With 8 minutes left and backed up on their own 16 yard line, this club did what they so often have failed to do in the past. What good teams like Calgary seem to do all the time when the chips are down with the game on the line - they took control of their destiny with a methodical drive that put the game away. And the architect of that drive way QB Matthew Nicholls, who went 5/5 and spread the ball around, mixing runs and passes in a brilliantly sequence that salted the match away for our Blue and Gold warriors. After struggling for long stretches of this contest, Nicholls came through in the clutch, and that makes him worthy of tonight's Happy Honker award.
  9. I believe Pederson may honestly think that himself....part of his schtick will be prodding other reporters "playfully" because he knows he has to be over the top with the 'Riders and gets some bite back from fans and other media who are not on the "'Rider nation" bandwagon. But when an opposing editor like Drew Edwards feels compelled to write a piece in defence of his reporter against Pederson's attack, that looks from the outside to go beyond the wrestling fakery and a line has been crossed. Especially when other reporters chime in and take their shots too. Pederson's been around long enough that I'm surprised even he would have thought it was a good tactic to boost his profile in this way.
  10. Bowman seems too obvious, but why overthink things?
  11. OK, I know he's a paid shill for the Green and White, so I get (but have little respect for) his over-the-top 'Rider Pride and suspect that his whole "League is out to get us because we're so great" tripe is about page hits and fan love as much as his true belief in it. But I was genuinely surprised at his bashing other reporters (Justin Dunk, Scott Mitchell, and a shot at Arash Madani too just for good measure) when they broke the roster scandal, suggesting they may be fabricating it and that the "riders could sue if it was false and how far Drew Edwards went to call out Pederson in return. Then reading the weekly picks and seeing John Hodge and Santino Filoso also slide in shots about how the Ticats would lay waste to the 'Riders "conspiracy or not" in an obvious shot back at Pederson. So the question is, "what is this feud all about?" Seems to be more than just professional rivalry, and you don't usually see reporters calling each other out for unprofessionalism in public like this. Bryan Hall was a huge homer for the Eskies, but I don't recall people taking shots at him in print. Is Pederson not respectful of others because "they are just bloggers" (some media types seem to have a thin skin about their 21st Century competition because they didn't attend the true journalism school of hard knocks and just picked up a laptop and started typing one day and earned instant cred - or is that just my incorrect perception?) Is he that disliked by other journalists, and if so, why? Is it due to solely just because of his homerism, which is kind of his job and others get a pass on? Or is it something more? Asking legitimately; I have no desire to defend Pederson, as he makes himself look ridiculous with his ranting (Mike Reilly pretty much got it right with his pre-season tweet), but this seems out of character for the media to engage in public smears against each other, and Pederson sure looks like he has a number of detractors in his own profession and not just amongst the fan site peeps. Opinions and insight welcomed.
  12. "CFLNews .@dariandurant - "They're (#CFL) after us a little bit" rodpedersen.com/2016/08/durant… #Riders via @rodpedersen #Riders have adopted an 'Us Against The World' mentality of late. - @dariandurant #CFL via @rodpedersen " Note to self - Call Vegas, bet the World, and take the points and the over.
  13. Yeee-esss!!!!!! Since he scored 2, do I get an existing strike removed? :-D
  14. Taking a flier on Chad Owens.
  15. Out of the country until tomorrow night so won't see game tape until Sunday. Unless you want a delayed Happy Honker write-up, someone else could take a run at it. I will say the Harris TD breaking 6 tackles would be HH worthy usually
  16. The NFL salary cap is about 30 times the size of the CFL's, so this fine would equate to $1.8 million in that league. And the whole Spygate fiasco cost the team only $250,000 (the league maximum, by the way) and $500K for Belicheat personally, and that was by far the biggest in NFL history, so comparatively this is a big hit. No way we'd ever see a high 6-figure fine.
  17. Manny Arceneaux
  18. Remember that he would have had an extra 2.5 hours of pre-game drinking, and it kind of operates like Barney from "How I Met Your Mother" where there more he drinks, he more he evolves. Barney would go from happy to lush to "Jabba the Hutt-speak" to "Truth Barney" where he would be so drunk he'd actually act more sober. So Cactus would become more coherent with more time to drink. And I purposely just write "Roberts" for the INT rather than the full name, because Cactus would take that shortcut rather than butcher the name sometimes.He Had many quirks, got to roll them out piece by piece rather than doing the same schtick every week - this week was "hyperbole" Cactus. But thanks all for reading. I don't know how he did it after losses though, I had little motivation to do it after the Edmonton and Calgary losses. Which reminds me, kudos to Do or Die for his Odds and Sods, win or loss.
  19. I must admit I "hear" his voice in my head when I am typing it out. Kind of like hearing "I see a little silhouett-o of a man" and not being able to read it without singing along in the voice of Freddie Mercury in your head.
  20. [Channelling my inner Cactus - a.k.a. getting my drink on]: Well fans, that was quite a game we saw tonight, and the fireworks literally started before the opening kickoff, when a classic Prairie storm rolled through Investor's Group Field and delayed the start of affairs with a spectacular lightning storm and downpour the likes of which has not been seen since Noah paired up all those animals for a cruise so many years ago [writer's aside- ol' Jack never shied away from hyperbole]. But it was definitely worth the wait for the Bombers and their fans, who did some storming of their own, blasting out of the gates with a pick 6 interception 2 minutes into the game and we were on our way. And before you could blink, there was another touchdown, and another, and a fumble recovery, and a blocked punt, and when you add it all up it was 34-0 at halftime and all that was left was the salute to Milt Stegall and seeing how long his kids could stay awake throughout the second half. Now the Happy Honker award has always been about the player or players who did that little something extra special that made a difference in the game, made it just that extra bit memorable in some way. well, we had no shortage of candidates today all all aspects of the club were on full display. We had Matt Nicholls going 17 of 19 in the first half with 2 touchdown passes as he secured his spot as the new #1 quarterback, so he deserves a small honk. We had Roberts with that interception that got the whole thing rolling for the defence, so he gets a honk from the crowd as well. We had a blocked punt but the special teams and Justin Medlock was perfect again, so they get a honk. And of course Milt Stegall will always be an honorary Happy Honker award winner, and he once again delivered on his promise that when the Bombers honour him, he guarantees and comes through with a home win every time, so a big honk to him. But there are 3 separate things that stood out to me tonight that deserve extra mention, that rise above as it were and each deserve our accolades, although only one can truly claim the Happy Honker Award. Kevin Fogg had his second unofficial punt return for a touchdown tonight - I say unofficial because of course he got robbed of his first one by a careless penalty, so I was all set to give it to him, when once again a late penalty flag after he had already crossed the goal line denied him once again. So he will have to wait until he actually gets one that counts before I can give him the award. And Clarence Denmark on any other night would win this hands down, coming out of a forced absence after being unceremoniously cut from Winnipeg and then Saskatchewan, sitting at home when the injury-depleted Bombers came calling, and on one a a half days practice not only suited up and didn't look out of place, but also scored a touchdown, not any touchdown but the winning points no less, in a triumphant return to River City. So special mention to him…BUT…none of those people will win the Happy Honker tonight, even if all were deserving candidates. No, tonight was about one thing, and that was the weather. In all my years I have witnessed many things, and seen games delayed for various reasons, from fog at the Grey Cup in 1962, to torrential downpours and lightning strikes in 1984 and 1986 in Winnipeg, to franchises folding in 1987 that forced the league to re-create it's schedule, to those dreaded and horrible terrorists attacks in 2001. But I have never seen three games delayed by weather for one club at home in one season, much less in 4 games. And this one was especially unique in that it held up the start of the game over 2 and a half hours on a weeknight, and opening kickoff occurred when most people would be ready to get in their cars to head home and tune in to me on the radio to give the Happy Honker award at the game's end. But instead we had to wait, and wait we did, with Bob Irving ably stretching the pre-game show from 2 to 4 and a half hours in his usual seamless and brilliant fashion, and then staying on to field calls for an hour after the game was done. And not only did the majority of fans who arrived before the game, whose numbers totalled over 24,000 at the start and were estimated to still be around 17,000 once kickoff actually arrived, stick around through all of that inclement weather, but many fans who actually were still at home when the game was first delayed, rather than just pack it in and call it a night with the game on TV at home, chose to drive out to the stadium at 10:00 p.m. and arrive for the modified start time, and once everyone was in the stands, they brought a noise and energy that was louder than anyone could imagine a crowd could deliver after such a long wait. And the club rewarded their patience and their passion with the most complete home game this club may have ever seen since they moved into IGF some 3 years ago. So for all of those fans who stuck around for that long delay, for all of those fans who made a point of coming out to the stadium to watch the game at 10:00 p.m. after the delay, and especially for all of those volunteers in the stadium at the vendors, in the parking lots, on the cheer squad and the ticket booths, to the bus drivers getting people home at this late, or is it early hour, this game was truly about the great support that all of you give to this club, no matter what. And you all deserve the Happy Honker Award tonight. So for everyone still at the game at 1:00 a.m. when it ended, either fan or employee, this Happy Honker goes to you. Give yourselves a honk!!!
  21. I don't remember that one, and I never missed a game in those years, but there was a game against the other Roughriders (Saskatchewan) in 1986 I believe where lightning hit the northwest corner roof at the old stadium - THAT cleared the field fast and they waited for about 15-20 minutes and a downpour and then played on.
  22. Chris Williams - OTT
  23. I stand corrected. My apologies.
  24. OK, I'll give this another go (maybe this will be my schtick): Well folks, the Blue Bombers limped into this game with a record of one win and four losses, and if you listened to the experts all week, they didn't stand much of a chance against the Edmonton Eskimos, who were coming into this game having lost a game to the Hamilton Tiger-Cats where they gave up a 25 point lead, and were in a bad mood because of it, no doubt. Well wouldn't you know that the Bombers, led by new quarterback Jeff Nicholls (sic) took the ball on the opening drive and put up a major score thanks to a big catch from Winston Dressler (sic) and a touchdown run on a 3rd down gamble by running back Trevor Harris that really set the tone for the kind of game it was going to be. And we had a big night from kicker Trevor Kennard, er, Justin Medlock who was a perfect 5 for 5. And we saw Harris run for over 100 yards and that touchdown he scored. And we saw a couple of sacks from the defensive line tonight that helped the cause. But the big plays I saw tonight came from the Bomber secondary, who because of injury were hastily cobbled together and facing maybe the best passer in the league in Mike Reilly, not to be confused with ex-Bomber coach Mike Riley, who led this club to glory the last time they won the Grey Cup so many years ago. BUT I DIGRESS........... This unit played hard all night, breaking up passes and covering the dangerous duo of Adarius Bowman and Darrell Walker (sic) all night long like a blanket, We saw Bruce Johnson return and make some key plays knocking down passes, and Kevin Fogg had the task of covering Bowman most of the night and did a wonderful job of keeping him at bay and more than once delivering a big hit to break up the pass and leaving Bowman lying on the ground in pain. And he returned punt to boot, not to be forgotten. But as you know, the Happy Honker Award goes to the player who did that something extra special during the game, and with the way the secondary played tonight after being thrown together so quickly and against an opponent so ready for redemption, the Happy Honker Award comes from a member of this group. In the second quarter of this game Eskimo receiver, what's his name??? #3 - Nattee Ad-jay, did I say that right [Bob Irving injecting "yes, Natey Adjai, Cactus"] went up for a pass that was high but in his hands, and would have been a big first down catch for Edmonton at that point. But Bomber defender #35 Terrence Frederick timed his hit perfectly and broke up the pass, and hitting Adjai so hard he was a non-factor the rest of the contest. And then again, late in the 4th quarter with the Eskimos coming on and looking like they might score to get close to the Bombers, Fredericks again appeared in front of a Mike Reilly pass intended for Derel Walker (writer's note: he'd usually get the name right after a few chances) and intercepted it 43 yards to cap things off and snuff out the threat, and the Bombers were on their way to their first win at Commonwealth stadium in a decade. So for those two big plays and for being a part of a secondary which controlled the game so well all night long, the Happy Honker Award goes to #35 Terrence Frederick. Let's hear you fans! (forgetting that it is a road game and no Eskimo fans driving home will be honking, or even tuned in to the CJOB broadcast).
  25. I give the o-line a lot of credit for this win (and the kicking of Medlock, and the defensive secondary's punishing style, and the d-line for it's pressure, etc. - all played a factor) as I haven't seen that passion and aggression form that group all year, and I believe it had a major effect on the psyche of Drew Willy and his comfort in the pocket. My enduring memory of Willy's play this year so far was the second half of the Edmonton home game where he was skipping four yard passes into the turf at the receiver's feet, surely a sign of his lost confidence to complete even a simple pass. What Nicholls offered in this game was a decisive QB who trusted his reads and got the ball off strong and fast. Early on there was no time for the Eskimos to get to him because of a quick read and release. He threw 12 yard routes consistently instead of "4 and go get the other 6 we need", spotted the open man in zone coverage and got the ball there decisively quite often, knew when to throw it away, knew when to take the sack, bought himself time with scrambling, and didn't beat himself up when he missed on an overthrow. He continued to follow the game plan and hit the deep ball a couple of times quite well. No underthrown balls, none without zip on them, maybe only one dangerous pass into multiple coverage that I can recall. He looked confident. That is what Willy's game has been missing, and that's why you can say (despite all of the other aspects that assisted in this win) that Nicholls was the difference.
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