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Awards and All-Canadians
2009 MAJOR AWARDS
HEC CRIGHTON
TROPHY - Erik Glavic (Calgary)
Glavic became the third Dino to claim the Hec Crighton trophy,
following receiver Don Blair in 1995 and Greg Vavra in 1983, both
of whom led Calgary to a Vanier Cup victory a few days after being
named CIS player of the year. Vavra is Glavic's offensive
coordinator with the 2009 Dinos.
Glavic was sensational in his first season at U of C in leading the
Dinos to a 7-1 conference record - the program's best since 1988, a
second consecutive Canada West championship, a Uteck Bowl victory
over his former team, Saint Mary's, and a first Vanier Cup
appearance since 1995. Under his leadership, the Dinos set
single-season team records for overall offence (4,651 yards) and
first downs (234) while tying a team mark with 39 total touchdowns
on offence.
The 6-foot-6, 230-pound social sciences student set a new U of C
standard completing 67.5 per cent of his passes, led the Canada
West with 14 touchdown tosses and finished second with 2,186 yards
through the air. He added six scores and 503 yards on the ground,
tying him for the fourth best tally in the conference.
Should Calgary win on Saturday, Glavic would become only the fifth
player in history to claim the Hec Crighton trophy and the Vanier
Cup in the same year after Laval quarterback Benoît Groulx
last season, UBC running back Mark Nohra in 1997, as well as Blair
and Vavra.
"Erik is a tremendous athlete and he added so much to our offence
this season," said Calgary head coach Blake Nill. "He is a true
leader on this team, and with him at the controls we were able to
finish at or near the top in almost every offensive category. He
brought a new excitement to our program."
Fourth-year Mount Allison receiver and kick returner Gary Ross of
Windsor, Ont.; fifth-year Laval quarterback Benoît Groulx of
Laval; and fifth-year Western Ontario quarterback Michael Faulds of
Eden Mills, Ont., were the other nominees for the Hec Crighton
trophy.
PRESIDENTS'
TROPHY - Cory Greenwood (Concordia)
Greenwood became the fourth Concordia linebacker in six years to
receive the Presidents' trophy. Brothers Mickey (2004) and Patrick
Donovan (2005, 2006) claimed the award three consecutive years from
2004 to 2006.
The 6-foot-2, 235-pound Stingers captain led the Quebec conference
and was third in the nation with 62 regular-season tackles,
including five for losses and a pair of quarterback sacks. On
September 19 against Sherbrooke, the human environment major racked
up 14 tackles, the fifth-best single-game performance in QUFL
history. The three-time all-star is the top CIS prospect and ranks
third overall on the CFL Scouting bureau's list for the 2010 CFL
Draft, and has already received interest from the NFL's
Indianapolis Colts.
"Cory is the type of athlete that only comes around once in a
while. He has tremendous speed and size for his position," said
Concordia head coach Gerry McGrath. "He is very athletic and very
fast. His gap responsibility isn't A to B Gap - it's sideline to
sideline. He is definitely a professional prospect."
A trio of linebackers - St. Francis Xavier's Tom Lynch of Escott,
Ont., Western's John Surla of Niagara Falls, Ont., and
Saskatchewan's Taylor Wallace of Unity, Sask. - were also in the
running for the Presidents' Trophy.
J.P. METRAS
TROPHY - Matt Morencie (Windsor)
Morencie is the first Lancer in history to receive the Metras
trophy as CIS top down lineman.
Over the course of his five-year university career, the human
kinetics major started every game since he joined Windsor as a
17-year-old freshman in September of 2005, and has played all five
positions on the offensive line, as well as stints at slot back in
2006 and a number of snaps on the defensive line over the past two
years. After being named an OUA all-star last season, the 6-foot-3,
290-pound senior made the switch to centre this fall and didn't
miss a beat, earning a spot on the first all-Canadian team.
Morencie was one of the big reasons former Windsor teammate Daryl
Stephenson graduated in 2008 as the CIS all-time leading rusher
with 5,163 career yards. After he was selected 21st overall in the
2009 CFL Entry Draft by the BC Lions, Morencie chose to return to
school to finish his degree and was recently signed by the Hamilton
Tiger Cats for the 2010 season.
Saint Mary's defensive end Devon Hicks of Dade City, Fla., Laval
offensive tackle David Bouchard of Trois-Rivières, Que., and
Alberta defensive end Craig Gerbrandt of Sherwood Park, Alta., were
also vying for leading-down-lineman honours.
PETER GORMAN
TROPHY - Linden Gaydosh (Calgary)
Gaydosh is the second Dino in four seasons to win CIS
rookie-of-the-year honours after former quarterback Dalin
Tollestrup in 2006. Gord Goodwin was the only other UofC player to
claim the Gorman trophy, in 1977.
The 6-foot-4, 320-pounder started every game along the defensive
line as a freshman. He finished with 10 tackles on the campaign,
including a pair for losses. He moved to the defensive tackle spot
in Week 2 and thrived there for the rest of the season, playing
virtually every snap until sitting out the second half of the final
conference game at Alberta.
Gaydosh helped lead the Dinos to the best run defence in the Canada
West and the third-best in the nation, allowing more than 100 yards
on the ground on just two occasions and finishing with 94.2 yards
allowed per game. Calgary only gave up four rushing touchdowns in
conference play.
Gaydosh attended Ross Sheppard High School in Edmonton for this
senior year and represented Canada at the World Junior Football
Championship over the summer in Canton, Ohio, where the national
team reached the final against the United States.
"Linden was our top recruit in 2009," said Nill. "He possesses
great quickness for a young man who weighs 320 pounds, and he will
be a key part of our defence for the next several years."
St. Francis Xavier defensive lineman Nate Annan of St. Thomas,
Ont., McGill quarterback Jonathan Collin of Greenfield Park, Que.,
and McMaster defensive back Cody Lynch of Stoney Creek, Ont., were
the other finalists for the rookie-of-the-year award.
RUSS JACKSON
AWARD - Thomas Hall (Manitoba)
Hall is the first Bison to receive the prestigious Russ Jackson
award since its inception in 1986.
On the field, Hall shone in his first full season as a starter at
the linebacker position, leading the team with 38.5 total tackles.
The 6-foot-3, 223-pound junior scored on a 59-yard interception
return, had 3.5 tackles for losses, recovered a fumble and forced
two more while starting every conference game.
In the classroom, he earned CIS Academic All-Canadian status in
2008-09 with a 4.00 GPA in the Faculty of Kinesiology and
Recreation Management.
Hall was instrumental in creating a new annual event called "The
Challenge for Life" for CancerCare Manitoba that has increased
awareness for all cancers while raising over $2 million to date
after only two years. Over the last two seasons, he has been
involved with "Bison Against Bullying" and this year is the
co-chair of the program. Hall has also been the football
representative on the University of Manitoba Athletes Council
(UMAC) over the last two campaigns, has volunteered his time at the
Siloam Mission, a food shelter for the city's homeless and
disadvantaged people, and with a pilot program called "Reading and
Running".
Hall was recognized as the 2008-09 Male Student-Athlete Leadership
and Community Development Award winner for Bison Sports. Earlier
this fall, he was the first recipient of the Nick Laping Memorial
award, which symbolizes the spirit of former Bison Nick Laping and
his commitment to the community while being a true leader on and
off the field.
"Thomas is a special person for not only what he brings to the
football team but his passion and dedication in the community,"
said Manitoba head coach Brian Dobie. "He has an amazing work ethic
and commitment level that reflects his desire to improve on and off
the field. I am extremely proud of Thomas as a student-athlete and
believe he was one of the strongest candidates I have seen for the
Russ Jackson award in my time at Manitoba."
Acadia offensive lineman and kinesiology student Greg Knight of
Halifax, McGill inside receiver and physical education student
Charles-Antoine Sinotte of Trois-Rivières, Que., and Queen's
linebacker and life sciences student T.J. Leeper of London, Ont.,
were also nominated for the Jackson award.
2009 CIS
FOOTBALL ALL-CANADIANS
FIRST
TEAM
Offence
Pos. - Athlete - University - Year - Hometown - Academic
Program
QB Erik Glavic Calgary 4 Pickering, Ont. Social Sciences
RB Pascal Fils Sherbrooke 4 Montreal, Que. Open Studies
RB Matt Walter Calgary 3 Calgary, Alta. Science
WR Nathan Coehoorn Calgary 3 Redcliff, Alta. Social Sciences
WR Akeem Foster StFX 3 Ajax, Ont. BA
IR Gary Ross Mount Allison 4 Windsor, Ont. BSC
IR Scott Valberg Queen's 5 Kingston, Ont. Education
C Matt Morencie Windsor 5 Windsor, Ont. Human Kinetics
T Matthew O'Donnell Queen's 3 Kingston, Ont. Kinesiology &
Health Studies
T David Bouchard Laval 5 Trois-Rivières, Que. Masters
Finance
G Justin Glover McMaster 4 Hamilton, Ont. Comm. Studies
G Pascal Baillargeon Laval 3 St-Anselme, Que. Arts
Defence
DT Jean-Philippe Gilbert Laval 5 St-Victor-de-Beauce, Que. Masters
Law
DT Gregory Alexandre Montreal 3 Montreal, Que. Undecided
DE Mathieu Brossard Montreal 5 Montreal, Que. Management
DE Osie Ukwuoma Queen's 4 Mississauga, Ont. Business
LB Cory Greenwood Concordia 4 Kingston, Ont. Human Environment
LB John Surla Western 3 Niagara Falls, Ont. Social Sciences
LB Henoc Muamba StFX 3 Mississauga, Ont. BIS
FS Anthony Deslauriers Simon Fraser 3 Surrey, B.C. Arts
HB Maxime Bérubé Laval 4 Valleyfield, Que. Business
Administration
HB James Savoie Guelph 3 Niagara Falls, Ont. Landscape
Architecture
CB Olivier Turcotte-Létourneau Laval 3 Quebec City, Que.
Business Administration
CB James Allin Queen's 5 Belleville, Ont. Arts & Science
Special Teams
P Hugh O'Neill Alberta 3 Edmonton, Alta. Arts
K Perri Scarcelli Regina 5 Calgary, Alta. Continuing Education
KR Dillon Heap Laurier 3 Waterloo, Ont. Business
SECOND
TEAM
Offence
QB Michael Faulds Western 5 Eden Mills, Ont. GS
RB Nathan Riva Western 2 London, Ont. King's College
RB Nick FitzGibbon Guelph 4 Puslinch, Ont. Sociology
WR Julian Feoli Gudino Laval 3 San José, Costa Rica
Industrial Relations
WR Cyril Adjeitey Ottawa 4 Ghana, Africa Biochemistry
IR Anthony Parker Calgary 3 Okotoks, Alta. Open Studies
IR Cory Watson Concordia 4 Dollard-des-Ormeaux, Que.Independent
C Derek Weber Saint Mary's 5 Whitby, Ont. Arts
T Kristian Matte Concordia 4 St-Hubert, Que. Leisure Sciences
T Kirby Fabien Calgary 1 Calgary, Alta. Social Sciences
G Terriss Paliwoda Alberta 4 Edmonton, Alta. Native Studies
G Matthew Norman Western 2 Montreal, Que. Social Sciences
Defence
DT Sébastien Tétreault Ottawa 4 Granby, Que. Human
Kinetics
DT Eddie Steele Manitoba 3 Winnipeg, Man. Arts
DE Craig Gerbrandt Alberta 4 Sherwood Park, Alta. Physical
Education &Recreation
DE David Skillen StFX 5 Fredericton, N.B. Business
Administration
LB Andrea Bonaventura Calgary 4 Hamilton, Ont. Social Sciences
LB Tommy Lynch StFX 3 Escott, Ont. BSc HN
LB Giancarlo Rapanaro Laurier 4 Niagara Falls, Ont. Kinesiology
FS Courtney Stephen Laurier 2 Brampton, Ont. Comm. Studies
DH Mike Miller Acadia 3 Riverview, N.B. Kinesiology
DH Mark Holden Saint Mary's 3 Halifax, N.S. Arts
CB Grant Shaw Saskatchewan 4 Edmonton, Alta. Arts & Science
CB Dylan Hollohan StFX 2 Moncton, N.B. Engineering
Special Teams
P Christopher Milo Laval 3 Montreal, Que. Arts
K Justin Palardy Saint Mary's 4 Truro, N.S. Arts
KR Gary Ross Mount Allison 4 Windsor, Ont. BSC

















