WINNIPEG ā Brady Oliveira wants to extinguish any spark the Hamilton Tiger-Cats might get from a coaching change.
The Winnipeg Blue Bombers running back is well aware Hamiltonās new senior defensive assistant Chris Jones might inspire the visiting clubās defence in Fridayās game.
āHeās a bit of a defensive mastermind when it comes to that side of the ball,ā Oliveira said of Jones after Winnipegās walk-through practice on Thursday.
āIt doesnāt matter even though heās been there for a short amount of time, thereās a good chance heās going to put in his playbook.ā
After its third consecutive loss last week, Hamilton (2-8) parted ways with assistant head coach and defensive co-ordinator Mark Washington and hired Jones, who was fired as the Edmonton Elksā head coach/general manager and defensive co-ordinator in mid-July.
Jones will do the defensive play calling.
āWeāll see what the flavour of the week is going to be,ā Oliveira said. āYou never really know what youāre going to get with Jones, but he does bring some funky looks so weāre ready for it.
āWeāve been studying it all, every single look, even from years ago Jonesās defences. Weāre ready. This is a smart offence so weāll be all right.ā
Oliveira leads the league in rushing yards with 689. Seven of his 117 carries have gone for more than 20 yards.
The Blue Bombers (4-6) are on a bit of a heater, winning their last two games.
Winnipegās eight points is tied for third in the West Division with the Calgary Stampeders, who are on a bye week. Hamilton is at the bottom of the CFL standings.
Tiger-Cats linebacker Kyle Wilson said Jones is āintentionalā about what he wants to bring to the defence. Heās simplifying what they do already and making players move faster.
āI feel like guys are buying into that,ā Wilson told reporters after practice earlier this week.
Thereās optimism the change will bring a positive outcome.
āAny change is always a spark,ā said Wilson, who is second in the league for defensive tackles (59). āGuys see it as a spark and just another opportunity to go out and do what we love.ā
Hamilton head coach Scott Milanovich said this week he hopes his teamās offence takes some pressure off its defence as they adapt to Jones.
āWeāve got to hold the ball. Weāve got to put points on the board,ā Milanovich said. āWe canāt turn it over and give them short fields.ā
Both teams have struggled with turnovers. Hamiltonās turnover ratio is a league-worst minus-12, while Winnipegās is next at minus-six.
The Bombersā defence is moving toward its longtime reputation as an elite force.
Itās only allowed one touchdown over the past three games (42 opponent possessions). Itās also the stingiest, allowing a league-low 197 points.
However, Winnipegās defence will be without star middle linebacker Adam Bighill, who was put on the six-game injured list (hamstring). Veteran Shayne Gauthier takes his spot.
Quarterback Bo Levi Mitchell gets the start for Hamilton after new starter Taylor Powell suffered a concussion in last weekās loss and was put on the six-game injured list.
While Mitchell is tops in the league with 2,816 passing yards and 19 touchdowns, he also has a dozen interceptions.
Bombers cornerback Tyrell Ford has an interception in each of his teamās past two games, giving him four this season. He and teammate Evan Holm have also knocked down six passes apiece.
āI donāt care how many yards heās thrown for or touchdowns, it doesnāt really matter to me,ā Ford said of Mitchell. āBut I do care about interceptions, so you know I like to get those when I can.ā
Winnipeg head coach Mike OāShea said he thinks Hamiltonās defence will be āfired upā under Jones. He doesnāt view the Ticats as easy pickings.
āTheyāve put up a ton of yards offensively, it just hasnāt amounted to wins,ā OāShea said. "So theyāre not a team you can afford to take lightly. We wouldnāt. Our record is not good, either. I donāt think thereās any danger in that.ā
HAMILTON TIGER-CATS (2-8) AT WINNIPEG BLUE BOMBERS (4-6)
Friday, Princess Auto Stadium
HOME ADVANTAGE: The last time Hamilton won in Winnipeg was Sept. 27, 2019.
SLOW STARTS: The Ticats are on a three-game run of being held scoreless in the first quarter.
CLOSE CALLS: Prior to Thursdayās league action, 19 games this season have been decided by four or fewer points. Last year, a total of 19 games ended in the same scenario.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 22, 2024.
Judy Owen, The Canadian Press