Journal Pioneer

Fajardo’s late TD run earns Argos wild East final win over Riders

-

It was vintage Ricky Ray. After struggling for threeplus quarters, Ray rallied Toronto to a wild 25-21 East Division victory over Saskatchew­an on Sunday afternoon. With the Argonauts trailing 21-18 and going against a stiff 54 kilometre-an-hour wind, Ray marched his offence 67 yards to the Roughrider­s’ one-yard line, setting up Cody Fajardo’s winning one-yard TD run with 23 seconds left.

“To be put in that situation and see the guys go out and execute really well . . . and go down and score, it feels awesome right now,” Ray said. “It feels really awesome. “They (game-winning drives) are all special but just being in this moment right now, man, with everything that was on the line, this one feels pretty good.”

Ray kept the drive alive with a clutch 22-yard completion to running back James Wilder Jr. on a third-and-five gamble. That put Toronto at the Saskatchew­an 18 with 1:08 remaining.

“We got great coverage, he ran a great route and made a big catch to keep that drive going,” Ray said. Saskatchew­an’s defence had done well to that point containing Ray, who finished 28of-39 passing for 266 yards with a TD and intercepti­on. Christion Jones put the Riders ahead 19-18 with 2:45 remaining with a 79-yard punt return touchdown before Canadian Brandon Bridge hit Duron Carter on the two-point convert.

“It’s tough when you lose a ballgame of this magnitude but on top of that when you play good defence all day and it’s right there when you need it and you just can’t get a stop,” Saskatchew­an head coach/GM Chris Jones said. “We got some shots on (Ray) but he’s a tough guy, he got right back up and made the play when he needed to.

“Yeah, he made a perfect throw there to Wilder when he had to have it. That’s vintage Ricky Ray.” Christion Jones, despite registerin­g the game’s biggest play to that point, admitted he didn’t feel comfortabl­e when Toronto took possession. “You get a guy like Ricky Ray and those great receivers and that great running back (Wilder) and they’ll make you sweat,” he said. “They executed and did what they needed to do. “We didn’t.”

Toronto cemented the win when Akwasi Owusu-Ansah recovered Carter’s attempted lateral. The Argos return to the Grey Cup for the first time since winning in 2012 and will face either the Calgary Stampeders or Edmonton Eskimos on Sunday at Ottawa’s TD Place. Both offences struggled, committing a combined seven turnovers (four intercepti­ons, two fumbles, once on downs). But Toronto was opportunis­tic, scoring 17 points off the Riders’ miscues, delighting the enthusiast­ic gathering of 24,929, the Argos’ largest crowd ever at BMO Field.

Among those attending were Toronto Maple Leafs forwards Auston Matthews and Mitch Marner and head coach Mike Babcock, who donned his Riders’ apparel sitting next to Argos owner Larry Tanenbaum, who’s also the chairman of Maple Leafs Sports & Entertainm­ent, which owns the Leafs.

“We didn’t do much offensivel­y until the last drive of the game,” Toronto head coach Marc Trestman said. “We did enough to win.

“We’ve had a number of endthe-game drives whether we’ve won or lost. Vintage Ricky Ray. You can put quotes around anything you want. He’s the guy who’s driven this whole thing through the whole year.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada