Sean Stenger’s 10-yard chip shot on the second possession of overtime gave
the Saskatchewan Huskies a 41-39 win over the University of Regina Rams on
Friday night at Griffiths Stadium in what was both teams’ first conference game
of the season.
The loss was a heartbreaking one for the Rams, who were playing their first
Canada West game under the guidance of first-year head coach Steve Bryce.
“Overall, I thought we played well for 90% of the game but 10% of bad play
will kill you and that’s what happened to us tonight,” Bryce said. “There were
a whole lot of mistakes, a whole lot of penalties, way too many dropped balls,
and some blown coverages when it mattered the most. Noah (Picton) was awesome
tonight and is delivering the ball exactly where he needs to, and moving
forward we’ll build on what did work and try to eliminate some of those
mistakes.”
Picton was brilliant in Friday’s game, becoming just the second player in
Rams history to throw for at least 400 yards and rush for more than 100. He
completed 29 of his 41 pass attempts and set career highs with 471 passing
yards, four touchdown passes, and 108 rushing yards.
But it wasn’t enough to put one in the win column for the Rams (0-1). After
the Rams went ahead 31-28 with 1:36 to go following a four-play, 75-yard drive
that featured a 56-yard completion to Mitchell Picton up the left sideline and
a completed two-point convert, they had a chance to win the ball game after
Saskatchewan (1-0) had a third-and-20 situation from their own 20-yard line.
But Saskatchewan quarterback Kyle Siemens found Yol Piok for a 35-yard
completion to midfield, and Stenger’s 20-yard field goal on the last play of
regulation sent the Rams into their first overtime game in nearly 11 years.
The teams traded touchdowns on the first possession of overtime, but the
Rams had to settle for a rouge on the second possession after a 37-yard field
goal attempt was pulled left. That set the stage for Saskatchewan’s
game-winning drive, which was aided by a 15-yard face mask penalty that brought
the Huskies down to the 12-yard line.
Siemens finished 28-for-42 for Saskatchewan and threw for 338 yards and
three touchdowns in the win. Mitch Hillis, Yol Piok, Colton Klassen, and Chad
Braun each had at least five receptions for the Huskies, with Piok catching
seven for a team-high 105 yards and Hillis finishing with a team-leading eight
catches for 78 yards including a touchdown. Tyler Chow was credited with 23
rushes for a game-high 147 yards.
Rams second-year slotback Ryan Schienbein was the game’s top receiver,
finishing with career highs of eight catches and 151 receiving yards as well as
catching the second and third touchdowns of his career. Khalid Kornegay had
four catches for 132 yards in his Rams debut, including an 85-yard touchdown on
the team’s first drive of the second half. Riley Wilson (eight catches for 79
yards) and Mitchell Picton (six catches for 85 yards and a touchdown) also had
big games for Regina.
For the Rams defensively, Braedy Will had six solo and two assisted tackles
in his first game as a Ram. Danny Nesbitt had five solo tackles, four assisted
tackles, and forced a fumble, while Cord Delinte had the team’s lone sack of
the contest.
The Rams will now prepare for their home opener, set for next Thursday
against Manitoba (0-1) at Mosaic Stadium. Kickoff is set for 7 p.m.
NOTES: Leason is the only other Rams quarterback to throw for over
400 yards and run for at least 100, collecting 416 and 121 in the team’s Hardy
Cup win over Manitoba in 2000 … the Rams lost running back Atlee Simon to a
lower-body injury in the second quarter … the team also lost defensive lineman
Eric Wicijowski, who was injured in the second half and did not return ... the
Rams are now 1-2 in their three overtime games at the CIS level.
(Braden Konschuh/U of R)
4 comments:
Pictons must have it in their blood to sling it. Dare I say junior is better than the old man.
Didn't take long for Bryce to see you need to beat the opposition and the stripes when playing in Saskatoon. A lot of very "questionable" calls, especially in overtime.
Not the first time, won't be the last.
Reffing you say. Huskies deep in their zone they are 3rd and 20 with a minute to go, they convert and go on to win the game. Ya let's go with that. (Poor reffing is the cause of the Rams losing.) I'm thinking they should of stopped them on that 3rd and 20. That's the reason the Rams lost that game.
Not as long as it took you to blame the refs again.
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