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CIS football: Queen's Gaels claim 2009 Desjardins Vanier Cup
QUEBEC CITY (CIS) – The Queen’s Gaels scored 26
unanswered points to turn a 25-7 halftime deficit into a 33-31
victory over the Calgary Dinos in the 45th Desjardins Vanier Cup on
Saturday at Université Laval’s PEPS Stadium before a
standing-room crowd of 18,628.
The win is the Gaels’ fourth Vanier Cup championship,
emblematic of Canadian university football supremacy, and their
first since 1992. The game was a rematch of the 1983 final when
Calgary prevailed 31-21 in the only previous meeting between the
two schools.
After trailing by 18 at the break, Queen’s scored 12
third-quarter points and proceeded to add a pair of touchdowns
driving against a fierce wind in the fourth stanza. It marked the
largest comeback from a halftime deficit in Vanier Cup history, and
only the eighth time a team won after trailing at the midway point
of the title match.
The Dinos drew within two points on a 15-yard touchdown reception
by Anthony Parker of Okotoks, Alta., with 6:38 remaining in
regulation, but quarterback Erik Glavic of Pickering, Ont., was
unable to complete a two-point convert pass that would have tied
the score.
“I’m so proud of the guys, there’s no quitting in
this group,” said winning head coach Pat Sheahan, who had led
the Concordia Stingers to a Vanier Cup appearance in 1998 and has
been at the helm of the Gaels since 2000. “At halftime, I was
direct with them, I just told them we didn’t play very well
in the first half and had to play better.”
“Winning a Vanier Cup is an opportunity that doesn’t
present itself every year. You have to take advantage of these
opportunities when they come,” added Sheahan, who hoisted the
trophy as offensive coordinator of the McGill Redmen in 1987.
Gaels’ pivot Danny Brannagan of Burlington, Ont., playing the
final game of his five-year CIS career, earned the Ted Morris
memorial trophy as the game MVP by completing 17 of 33 passes for
286 yards. He threw three touchdown passes and was intercepted
once.
“We had a couple of close games lately. I think it really
helped us stick through this one,” said Brannagan, who led
the Gaels to a 43-39 win over Western in the OUA Yates Cup final
and a 33-30 victory over 2008 national champion Laval in the
Mitchell Bowl. “We were down 18 points and we really needed
to come back quickly in the third otherwise it would have led to a
snowballing effect. We went out there and executed well.”
Brannagan completed two of his TD tosses to fifth-year senior and
first-team all-Canadian Scott Valberg of Kingston, Ont., who led
all Queen’s receivers with 109 yards on seven receptions.
Queen’s fourth-year linebacker Chris Smith of Toronto earned
the Bruce Coulter award as the top defensive player of the game.
Smith posted 4.5 tackles, a 15-yard sack, one forced fumble and a
fumble recovery.
The Queen’s defence generated five turnovers from Calgary,
including two fumbles, two interceptions and one blocked field
goal.
Running back Marty Gordon of Kingston led the OUA champions’
ground attack with 102 yards on 19 carries. He scored the
game-winning touchdown on a 15-yard run 6:26 into the final
frame.
Glavic, who received the second Hec Crighton trophy of his career
on Thursday night, amassed 354 yards on 23-of-35 passing in the
losing effort, throwing for one score and being intercepted twice.
Parker snagged nine of Glavic’s passes for 187 and one
touchdown. On the ground, Matt Walter of Calgary added 108 yards of
offence on 19 carries, including one major score.
Walter opened the scoring for the Dinos at the 10:34 mark of the
first frame, capping an eight-play, 54-yard drive with a one-yard
TD run.
Queen’s equalized the tally three minutes later with
Brannagan connecting with Valberg on a nine-yard passing play.
Taking the wind in the second quarter, Calgary piled up 18
unanswered points. Aaron Ifield booted three field goals,
establishing a single-quarter Vanier Cup record. Glavic later added
a one-yard rushing major, and Queen’s conceded a safety touch
in the dying seconds of the quarter rather than punt into the
driving breeze.
Queen’s reasserted itself on the third play of the third
quarter with Brannagan connecting with Devan Sheahan of Kingston
for a 60-yard pass-and-run score.
The Gaels defence dominated play in the third quarter, generating
three crucial turnovers through a fumble recovery deep in Calgary
territory, a blocked field goal and an interception in the end
zone. While robbing Calgary of a potential 10 points, Queen’s
offence found difficulty capitalizing on these turnovers, emerging
with one field goal and still trailing 25-19 going into the final
period.
Driving against the wind to open the fourth quarter, the Gaels
mounted a six-play, 51-yard campaign, capped with a 17-yard
touchdown toss from Brannagan to Valberg at the 2:23 mark. The
ensuing convert gave the Gaels a 26-25 lead, their first of the
afternoon.
Trailing 33-25 following Gordon’s touchdown, Calgary
responded on its next possession, capping a 70-yard drive with
Glavic’s 15-yard pass to Parker to bring the Dinos within two
points. Glavic’s two-point convert attempt, directed at
Walter, was unsuccessful, as the all-Canadian couldn’t hold
on to the ball when he hit the ground.
Calgary’s final drive was stifled by a fumble recovered by
Smith, solidifying Queen’s victory.
“We knew it was going to be important to have a good start in
the third quarter, and we didn’t,” said Blake Nill, who
guided Saint Mary’s to four Vanier Cup appearances and two
championships before taking over the Calgary program in 2006.
“We had two opportunities to score in the third and came away
with nothing. We lost on turnovers.”
The Vanier Cup returns to Quebec City next year, when the 46th
edition of the championship will be hosted again at PEPS
Stadium.
GAME NOTES: The victory makes Queen’s the
first team to win a Vanier Cup in four different decades, having
claimed national titles in 1968, 1978, 1992 and now 2009…
Queen’s also appeared in the 1983 Vanier Cup game, making it
the only school to have competed in a national final in each decade
of the championship’s existence… The 2009 Vanier Cup
marked the first time the national championship was hosted in the
Province of Quebec, and just the second time the final has been
held outside of Ontario. The 2006 game was hosted by the University
of Saskatchewan in Saskatoon… Calgary was appearing in the
Vanier Cup for the first time since 1995, when the Dinos captured
their fourth banner…
SCORING
SUMMARY
Queen’s – 7-0-12-14:33
Calgary – 7-18-0-6:31
First Quarter
Cgy – TD Matt Walter 1 rush (Aaron Ifield kick) 10:34
Que – TD Scott Valberg 9 pass from Danny Brannagan (Dan
Village kick) 13:39
Second Quarter
Cgy – FG Aaron Ifield 40 4:07
Cgy – FG Aaron Ifield 12 7:49
Cgy – FG Aaron Ifield 35 10:46
Cgy – TD Erik Glavic 1 rush (Aaron Ifield kick) 13:47
Cgy – Safety Team, Jimmy Allin concedes 14:34
Third Quarter
Que – TD Devan Sheahan 60 pass from Danny Brannagan (Dan
Village kick) 1:08
Que – Safety Team, Aaron Ifield concedes 2:07
Que – FG Dan Village 12 5:13
Fourth Quarter
Que – TD Scott Valberg 17 pass from Danny Brannagan (Dan
Village kick) 2:23
Que – TD Marty Gordon 15 rush (Dan Village kick) 6:26
Cgy – TD Anthony Parker 15 pass from Erik Glavic (2pt Glavic
pass incomplete) 8:22
Attendance: 18,628
-CIS-










