It is time for Chris Jones to deliver
The pre-season of 2017 was a change of pace for the Saskatchewan Roughriders, who typically save their meaningless games for October.
But now that the latest spasm of exhibition games is over, the Roughriders have an opportunity to make amends for two-plus years of rarely interrupted horror.
Many of the players who, er, contributed to Saskatchewan’s 10-35 tailspin are gone. So are the excuses.
This is Chris Jones’ team now.
The Roughriders’ second-year head coach, defensive co-ordinator, general manager and vice-president of football operations has built the roster as he sees fit.
Write off 2016 as a transitional year for the Roughriders, who severed ties with several veterans — most notably slotback Weston Dressler and defensive end John Chick — after Jones inherited a team that had posted a 3-15 record in 2015.
Last year, the Roughriders’ one remaining marquee veteran was Darian Durant, who quarterbacked the team to West Division titles in 2009, 2010 and 2013 and a home-field Grey Cup championship in the latter year.
Jones eventually sent him packing, too.
Now it is time to shed the losing label as well.
The Roughriders should be the CFL’s flagship franchise in every sense.
They have a pristine pigskin palace — a $278-million shrine to the Green and White — and an adoring fan base.
However, they have become the free space on the CFL’s bingo card. (For more free space, check out the commissioner’s office.)
For all the talk of the figurative 13th man, and of how Mosaic Stadium (pick a version) is a forbidding environment for opponents, it has become ridiculously easy to pull a victory out of the Queen City since mid-September of 2014. The key to the entire process is typically a successful landing at Regina International Airport.
Jones was brought to Regina, at considerable expense, only eight days after coaching and co-ordinating the Edmonton Eskimos to a Grey Cup victory in 2015.
Roughriders president-CEO Craig Reynolds handed Jones the keys to Saskatchewan’s football kingdom. He is the CFL’s unrivalled pace-setter in job descriptions.
Jones’ first major move as Mr. Everything was to hire player-personnel guru John Murphy away from the perennial powerhouse that is the Calgary Stampeders.
The twin hirings seemed like a coup for the Roughriders — a point that was repeatedly, perhaps excessively, made in this cherished space at the time.
After all, Reynolds had just landed the CFL’s hottest head-coaching commodity and a highly reputable personnel expert while, in theory, weakening divisional rivals.
Those moves were such a smashing success that
the Roughriders of 2016 erupted for one victory in their first 11 games. We still await the release of the highlight DVD.
Along with the chronic losses, there were repeated, league-issued fines and other forms of controversy.
The Jones-led Roughriders did win four games in succession after the 1-10 start but, by then, it was strictly for show.
In fairness to Jones, the 2016 Roughriders weren’t entirely his team, and he was continually sifting through prospects in search of keepers.
It is reasonable to expect a well-managed team to be competitive, and then some, after one year of retooling and experimentation.
That one year has elapsed. Jones turned the final page by trading Durant to the Montreal Alouettes in January after contract talks proved to be futile. It was an inevitable transaction after Jones, during a season-ending interview, affectionately referred to Durant as “moderately successful.”
Last season’s Roughriders didn’t even meet that modest standard, going 5-13 and sharing the CFL’s cellar with the Toronto Argonauts.
Saskatchewan’s sorry slate was an improvement over the 3-15 nadir of 2015, but not to the extent where it could be definitively stated that the new regime was charting a certain course to glory.
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It is time for Chris Jones to deliver | Regina Leader-Post