CIAU Football 1998

Last saved: 1999/06/23 16:01:25 GMT by ac200
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1998 CIAU Football Polls

 
   PRE  S15  S21  S28  O05  O11  O19  O26  N1   N9   November 16
1  MtA  UBC  UBC  UBC  UWO  UWO  UWO  UWO  UWO  UWO  Western Ontario
2  Sask Bish UWO  UWO  MtA  Sask Sask Sask Sask Wat  Saskatchewan
3  Bish MtA  MtA  MtA  Sask UBC  Wat  Wat  Wat  UBC  Concordia
4  Wat  Sask Sask Sask UBC  MtA  Calg UBC  UBC  Sask Acadia
5  Calg UWO  Wat  Wat  Mac  Wat  SMU  Calg Conc Conc Waterloo
6  SFX  Wat  Lav  Mac  Wat  Calg UBC  MtA  MtA  MtA  British Columbia
7  Conc Quee Bish Calg Quee SMU  Mac  Conc Acad Acad Mount Allison
8  West SFX  Mac  SMU  Calg Mac  Conc WLU  WLU  Lav  Laval
9  UBC  Calg Calg Lav  SMU  Bish MtA  SMU  Lav  WLU  Wilfrid Laurier
10 Quee Gue  SMU  Quee Bish Quee WLU  Mac  Mac  Mac  McMaster






1998 CIAU STANDINGS Sun Nov 8 98

ATLANTIC F        G  W   L  T    F   A   P
Mount Allison     8  6   2  0  219 142  12
Acadia            8  5   3  0  206 168  10
Saint Mary's      8  4   4  0  153 161   8
St F Xavier       8  1   7  0  112 219   2

ONT-QUE F         G  W   L  T    F   A   P
Concordia         8  6   2  0  233 141  12
Ottawa            8  6   2  0  267 184  12
Laval             8  4   4  0  181 156   8
Bishop's          8  4   4  0  189 193   8
McGill            8  4   4  0  110 166   8
Queen's           8  3   5  0  208 170   6
Carleton          8  1   7  0  102 280   2

ONTARIO F         G  W   L  T    F   A   P
Western Ontario   8  8   0  0  295 139  16
Waterloo          8  7   1  0  297 150  14
Wilfrid Laurier   8  5   3  0  248 155  10
McMaster          8  4   4  0  278 254   8
Guelph            8  3   4  1  134 211   7
York              8  3   5  0  118 155   6
Windsor           8  1   6  1   87 275   3
Toronto           8  0   8  0  103 226   0

CANADA WEST F     G  W   L  T    F   A   P
Saskatchewan      8  6   2  0  226 168  12
UBC               8  6   2  0  262 151  12
Calgary           8  4   4  0  261 175   8
Alberta           8  4   4  0  140 223   8
Manitoba          8  0   8  0  142 314   0






1998 CIAU SCORES

Saturday Nov 28 1998

Saskatchewan 24 Concordia 17 .... Game Story

Saturday Nov 21 1998

Concordia 25 Acadia 24 .... Game Story
Saskatchewan 33 Western Ontario 17 .... Game Story

Saturday Nov 14 1998

Acadia 35 Mount Allison 28 .... Game Story
Concordia 17 Laval 12 OT3 Completed .... Game Story
.... Game suspended: darkness. Completed Sun 2:00
Western Ontario 47 Waterloo 41 .... Game Story
Saskatchewan 31 British Columbia 28 .... Game Story

Saturday Nov 7 1998

.... Atlantic
Mount Allison 30 Acadia 28 .... Game Story
St. Francis Xavier 35 Saint Mary's 22 .... Game Story
.... Ontario-Quebec Dunsmore Cup semis
Concordia 27 Bishop's 17 .... Game Story
Laval 48 Ottawa 42 .... Game Story
.... Ontario Yates Cup semis
Western Ontario 34 McMaster 32 .... Game Story
Waterloo 32 Wilfrid Laurier 10 .... Game Story
.... Canada West
Alberta 20 Manitoba 17 .... Game Story

Friday, Nov. 6, 1998
.... Canada West
British Columbia 13 Saskatchewan 11 .... Game Story

Saturday Oct 31 1998

.... Atlantic
Acadia 14 Saint Mary's 7 .... Game Story
Mount Allison 27 St F Xavier 0 .... Game Story
.... Ontario-Quebec
Bishop's 39 Queen's 20 .... Game Story
Concordia 43 Ottawa 20 .... Game Story
McGill 23 Carleton 13 .... Game Story
.... Ontario
Waterloo 36 Toronto 18 .... Game Story
Western 48 Windsor 10 .... Game Story
York 13 Wilfrid Laurier 6 .... Game Story
Guelph 47 McMaster 24 .... Game Story
.... Canada West
Saskatchewan 21 Manitoba 19 .... Game Story
Alberta 23 Calgary 20 .... Game Story

Sunday Oct 25 1998

.... Ontario-Quebec
Laval 13 Queen's 10 .... Game Story

Saturday Oct 24 1998

.... Atlantic
Acadia 48 St F Xavier 18 .... Game Story
Mount Allison 36 Saint Mary's 3 .... Game Story
.... Ontario-Quebec
Ottawa 28 Bishop's 25 OT .... Game Story
Concordia 53 Carleton 6 .... Game Story
.... Ontario
Waterloo 53 Windsor 7 .... Game Story
Western Ontario 46 Guelph 8 .... Game Story
York 15 Toronto 9 .... Game Story
Wilfrid Laurier 56 McMaster 29 .... Game Story
.... Canada West
Saskatchewan 14 Calgary 11 .... Game Story

Friday Oct 23 1998

.... Canada West
British Columbia 53 Manitoba 14 .... Game Story

Sunday Oct 18 1998

.... Ontario-Quebec
Concordia 28 Bishop's 14 .... Game Story

Saturday Oct 17 1998

.... Atlantic
Saint Mary's 29 St Francis Xavier 7 .... Game Story
Acadia 25 Mount Allison 22 .... Game Story
.... Ontario-Quebec
Ottawa 28 Queen's 21 .... Game Story
McGill 26 Laval 16 .... Game Story
.... Ontario
McMaster 53 Windsor 14 .... Game Story
Western 43 Toronto 27 .... Game Story
Waterloo 17 York 9 .... Game Story
Wilfrid Laurier 26 Guelph 15 .... Game Story
.... Canada West
Calgary 45 British Columbia 13 .... Game Story
Alberta 24 Saskatchewan 16 .... Game Story

Saturday Oct 10 1998

.... Atlantic
Saint Mary's 32 Mount Allison 4 .... Game Story
Acadia 21 St Francis Xavier 18 .... Game Story
.... Ontario-Quebec
Ottawa 47 Queen's 30 .... Game Story
Laval 23 Carleton 17 .... Game Story
Concordia 30 McGill 21 .... Game Story
.... Ontario
Guelph 19 Windsor 19 .... Game Story
Western 10 York 8 .... Game Story
Waterloo 55 McMaster 42 .... Game Story
.... Canada West
Calgary 63 Manitoba 20 .... Game Story

Friday, Oct. 9, 1998

.... Canada West
British Columbia 35 Alberta 3 .... Game Story

Thursday, Oct. 8, 1998

.... Ontario
Wilfrid Laurier 45 Toronto 15 .... Game Story

Saturday October 2, 1998

.... Atlantic
Acadia 21 St. Francis Xavier 18 .... Game Story
Mount Allison 34 Saint Mary’s 20 .... Game Story
.... Ontario-Quebec
Concordia 45 Laval 32 .... Game Story
Queen’s 40 Carleton 8 .... Game Story
Bishop’s 21 McGill 5 .... Game Story
.... Ontario
McMaster 40 Toronto 8 .... Game Story
Western Ontario 44 Waterloo 20 .... Game Story
Wilfrid Laurier 34 Windsor 6 .... Game Story
Guelph 17 York 14 .... Game Story
.... Canada West
Alberta 28 Manitoba 24 .... Game Story
Saskatchewan 38 UBC 34 .... Game Story

Sunday, Sept. 27, 1998

.... Ontario-Quebec
Carleton 19 Laval 17 .... Game Story

Saturday, Sept. 26, 1998

Saint Mary's 27 Acadia 22 .... Game Story
Mount Allison 38 St Francis Xavier 7 .... Game Story
.... Ontario-Quebec
Queen's 36 McGill 0 .... Game Story
Ottawa 41 Bishop's 10 .... Game Story
.... Ontario
Waterloo 54 York 3 .... Game Story
Western Ontario 29 Toronto 7 .... Game Story
Wilfrid Laurier 37 Guelph 6 .... Game Story
McMaster 31 Windsor 8 .... Game Story
.... Canada West
Calgary 17 Alberta 15 .... Game Story
Saskatchewan 37 Manitoba 19 .... Game Story
.... Canadian /American Exhibition
SUNY Canton 23 Concordia 6

Friday, Sept. 25, 1998

.... West Coast Exhibition ... Shrum Bowl
British Columbia 11 Simon Fraser 9 .... Game Story

Sunday, Sept. 20, 1998

.... Ontario-Quebec
Laval 37 Bishop's 10 .... Game Story

Saturday, Sept. 19, 1998

.... Atlantic
Mount Allison 28 Acadia 27 .... Game Story
Saint Mary's 13 St Francis Xavier 9 .... Game Story
.... Ontario-Quebec
McGill 9 Concordia 4 .... Game Story
Ottawa 59 Carleton 17 .... Game Story
.... Ontario
Waterloo 29 Guelph 13 .... Game Story
Western Ontario 38 Wilfrid Laurier 30 .... Game Story
McMaster 30 York 29 .... Game Story
Windsor 11 Toronto 10 .... Game Story
.... Canada West
British Columbia 33 Manitoba 15 .... Game Story
Saskatchewan 39 Calgary 24 .... Game Story
.... Exhibition
Alberta 34 Queen's 27 .... Game Story

Sunday, Sept. 13, 1998

.... Ontario-Quebec
Ottawa 27 Laval 14 .... Game Story

Saturday, Sept. 12, 1998

.... Ontario-Quebec
Bishop's 24 Queen's 19 .... Game Story
Concordia 19 Carleton 7 .... Game Story
.... Ontario
Guelph 10 Toronto 9 .... Game Story
Waterloo 33 Wilfrid Laurier 14 .... Game Story
Western Ontario 37 McMaster 29 .... Game Story
York 27 Windsor 12 .... Game Story
.... Canada West
Saskatchewan 50 Alberta 24 .... Game Story
.... Atlantic-Preseason
Saint Mary's 21 Acadia 21 .... Game Story
St. Francis Xavier 10 Mount Allison 10 .... Game Story

Friday, Sept. 11, 1998

.... Canada West
British Columbia 37 Calgary 22 .... Game Story

Monday, Sept. 7, 1998

.... Ontario-Quebec
Laval 29 McGill 2 .... Game Story

Saturday, Sept. 5, 1998

.... Ontario-Quebec
Bishop's 46 Carleton 15 .... Game Story
Queen's 32 Concordia 11 .... Game Story
.... Canada West
British Columbia 44 Alberta 3 .... Game Story
Calgary 59 Manitoba 14 .... Game Story

Wednesday, Sept. 2, 1998

.... Ontario-Quebec
McGill 24 Ottawa 17 .... Game Story






 
McGill 24 Ottawa 17
Wednesday, Sept. 2, 1998
MONTREAL - McGill running back Shawn Linden scored two four-quarter touchdowns Wednesday night as the Redmen defeated Ottawa Gee-Gees 24-17 in CIAU football. Linden, whose 1997 season ended when he broke a leg in McGill's fourth game, scored on runs of one and three yards in the OQIFC game, which kicked off the CIAU season before a crowd of 3,881 at Molson Stadium. Linden had 19 carries for 69 yards. McGill, launching its 124th football season, led 3-0 and 10-6 at the quarter breaks, before defending conference champion Ottawa tied it 10-10 in the third. Gee-Gee quarterback Phil Cote completed 24 of 41 passes for 297 yards. Those scoring passes went 35 yards to Ibraham Tounkara and 16 yards Chris Evraire. Evraire, whose touchdown came with only nine seconds left, caught 11 passes for 146 yards. Ottawa was stung by penalties, especially in the fourth quarter. It took 15 of the game's 21 penalties for 99 yards, 64 more than the total assessed the Redmen.

 
Thunderbirds 44 Golden Bears 3
British Columbia Thunderbirds won one for The Gipper on Saturday afternoon in CIAU football The reigning Vanier Cup champions, playing without their coach of a year ago, Casey Smith, defeated Alberta Golden Bears 44-3 in a Canada West game at Edmonton. Smith is battling cancer and has been replaced, on an interim basis, by Dave Johnson. Johnson was the Thunderbirds' defensive coordinator in last autumn's drive to the national title. At Edmonton, quarterback Shawn Olson completed 14 of 17 passes for 252 yards and Akbul Singh, who scored three touchdowns, had 16 carries for 129 yards. British Columbia's defence forced four fumbles. Linebacker Dan Elliott recovered one of those and also had the game's only interception. The Varsity Stadium crowd saw Mark Wojcichowsky provided Alberta's only scoring - a 31-yard field goal on the final play of the first half.

 
Gaiters 46 Ravens 15
At Lennoxville, Que., running back O.J. Burnett rushed for 184 yards on 12 carries and scored three touchdowns for Bishop's. A crowd of 1,938 at Coulter Field watched Ben Ouimet add two other rushing touchdowns for the Gaiters in the OQIFC game. Quarterback Mark Stipe completed only four of eight passes, but threw for 175 yards. Bishop's produced a net offence of 535 yards. A strong Gaiters' defence, co-starring linebacker Rob Smith and defensive back Errol Powell, frustrated Carleton. Smith was in on 13 tackles and Powell intercepted three passes, helping hold Carleton to 274 yards in net offence, only 66 of which came in its rushing game. Ravens' quarterback James Baker completed 12 of 30 passes for 179 yards. Bishop's held quarter leads of 14-1, 38-1 and 46-9.

 
Golden Gaels 32 Stingers 11
At Kingston, Ont., Queen's running back Paul Correale had 20 carries ran for 215 yards and scored two touchdowns in the OQIFC game. The Golden Gaels turned it on in the second half for a crowd of 3,547 at Richardson Stadium, outscoring Concordia 18-0. Included in that explosion was a touchdown by defensive back Max Turner, who recovered a bad snap in the end zone. Queen's had only 84 more yards than the Stingers in net offence (387-303). The Golden Gaels' defence was anchored by end Jim Aru with (13 tackles) and defensive back Andy Miners (two interceptions). and special teams came up with several big plays. Linebacker Dwayne Bromfield had a game-high 16 tackles for Concordia, whose only touchdown came on a three-yard run by sophomore quarterback Jon Kronemeyer in the final minute of the opening half.

 
Dinosaurs 59 Bisons 14
At Calgary, running back Ken Eslinger had 25 carries for 160 yards and scored five touchdowns, one of which came on special teams after he recovered a punt that had been blocked by Sean Kelly deep in Manitoba territory. All-Canadian quarterback Darryl Leason completed 10 of 19 passes for 182 yards, 80 of which came on a touchdown to Ryan Carruthers. Defensive back Brock Balog returned an interception 48 yards for another Dinosaur touchdown in the Canada West game. Calgary shut down second-team all-Canadian running back Craig Carr to 61 yards on 15 carries.

 
Laval 29 McGill 2
STE-FOY, Que. - Laval running back Mathieu Brassard sparked the offence and linebacker Jean-Vincent Audette led an impressive defence Monday afternoon as the Rouge et Or crushed McGill Redmen 29-2 in a CIAU football game. A record PEPS Stadium crowd of 7,379 saw Brassard chalk up 109 yards on five carries and also catch four passes for another 39 yards as Laval won its season opener in the O-QIFC conference. Audette had two interceptions, five tackles and a sack against the Redmen (1-1). The Rouge et Or had a balanced offence that produced a net total of 428 yards. McGill, which was stung for six sacks and losses of 67 yards, had a total of only 81 in net offence as its star running back, Shawn Linden, was held to 11 yards rushing on nine carries. Laval used three quarterbacks, the most effective of whom was Francios Chapdelaine. He completed 10 of 20 passes for 144 yards, throwing one touchdown. Middle linebacker J.P. Darche had a game-high 12 tackles for the Redmen.

 
Thunderbirds 37 Dinosaurs 22
Friday, Sept. 11, 1998 VANCOUVER - British Columbia running back Akbal Singh scored two first-quarter touchdowns Friday night to launch the Thunderbirds to a 37-22 win over Calgary Dinosaurs in a CIAU football game. Singh, who had 24 carries for 260 yards, scored on the second play from scrimmage - a 77-yard run. Later in the quarter, he took an eight-yard scoring pass from quarterback Shawn Olson as the defending national champion Thunderbirds sent their Canada West conference season record to 2-0. Olson completed only 13 of 30 passes for 200 yards, but threw for two touchdowns. Calgary, 1-1, faced a 34-4 deficit at the half, but began to cut into that early in the third quarter when slotback Sean Kelly scored on a 77-yard pass from Darryl Leason. Leason, the all-Canadian quarterback in 1997, had four of 27 passes intercepted. He completed 11 passes for 198 yards. Linebacker Stewart Scherek starred on defence for British Columbia, with five tackles, an interception and a fumble recovery.

 
Warriors 33 Golden Hawks 14
Saturday, Sept. 12, 1998 At Waterloo ON Defending Yates Cup champion Waterloo Warriors kicked off the 100th season of Ontario university football Saturday afternoon with a 33-14 win over Wilfrid Laurier Golden Hawks. Running back Eddie Kim rushed for 115 yards on 16 carries and scored a touchdown for the Warriors, who won their first Ontario title last season. The Warriors forced six turnovers and held cross-town rival Wilfrid Laurier to only 190 yards in net offence. Most of that came from quarterback Adam Lane, who threw for 134 yards. The Golden Hawks' most reliable receiver was Corey Grant, who caught seven passes for 84 yards. The victory also was the first as head coach for Chris Triantifilou.

 
Gaiters 24 Golden Gaels 19
Saturday, Sept. 12, 1998 At Lennoxville, Que., running back Ben Ouimet had 11 carries for 130 yards and scored a touchdown for Bishop's and quarterback Mark Stipe completed seven of 18 passes for 136 yards. Jean Desmarais had two interceptions for the Gaiters. Two quarterbacks combined for 374 passing yards for Queen's. Beau Howes was 13-for-34 for 192 yards, with three intereceptions, and Dustin Fallscheer went six-for-15 for 182. Linebacker Rob Smith led Bishop's tacklers with 11 and end Jim Aru had 12 for the Golden Gaels.

 
Stingers 19 Ravens 7
Saturday, Sept. 12, 1998 At Montreal, quarterback Sean Hoas completed 10 of 20 passes for 204 yards, most of which went to Dave Spence (five receptions, one a 48-yard touchdown, and a game total of 124 yards). Carleton's offence sputtered, leaving it to Jim McMillan to kick two field goals, one from 48 yards. One player who was a key factor in shutting down the Ravens' offence was linebacker Dwayne Bromfield (15 tackles).

 
Gryphons 10 Varsity Blues 9
Saturday, Sept. 12, 1998 At Guelph, running back Gerrit Stam scored on a 30-yard run at 11:29 of the fourth quarter to give the Gryphons the victory. He had 18 carries for 123 yards. Guelph quarterback Tyson Beach completed 19 of 28 passes for 200 yards. Jason Stoter had eight receptions for 108 yards for the Gryphons. Toronto quarterback Mark Dienesch clicked on 18 of 26 passes for 210 yards, including a touchdown pass to James Baskin.

 
Mustangs 37 Marauders 29
Saturday, Sept. 12, 1998 At Hamilton, McMaster pulled to within two points at 12:44 of the fourth quarter when quarterback Ben Chapdelaine hit Anthony Santosfano with a 14-yard scoring pass and Derek Livingstone added the convert. But the Marauders couldn't complete the comeback. Chapdelaine completed 20 of 35 passes for 345 yards, but one of his nemesis was Allan Wilson, who had three interceptions for the Mustangs. Quarterback Mike O'Brien starred in Western Ontario's passing game - 15-for-26 for 386 yards and four touchdowns. The game's top receivers were Dan Disley of Western Ontario (six for 142 yards and two TDs) and McMaster's Ryan Janzen (five for 140 and one touchdown).

 
Yeomen 27 Lancers 12
Saturday, Sept. 12, 1998 At Windsor, fullback Jeff Johnson had 13 carries for 94 yards and a touchdown for York, but left the game early with an injury. The 94 yards helped him rewrite the school's career rushing record. The Lancers had led 11-9 at the half.

 
Huskies 50 Golden Bears 24
Saturday, Sept. 12, 1998 At Saskatoon, Doug Rozon had 17 carries for 161 yards and scored two touchdowns for Saskatchewan. The running back also had three kickoff returns for 127 yards. Alberta quarterback Hardeep Bamara clicked on six of 11 passes for 142 yards and two touchdowns.

 
Huskies 21 Axemen 21
Saturday, Sept. 12, 1998 At Wolfville, N.S., Saint Mary's trailed 21-3 at the half, then came back for the tie that featured quarterback Ryan Jones completing nine of 17 passes for 137 yards and two touchdowns.

 
X-Men 10 Mounties 10
Saturday, Sept. 12, 1998 At Sackville NB the coaches also used this non-conference game to experiment, but the player who most came through was Mount Allison quarterback Dan Capone (15-for-27 for 250 yards).

 
Ottawa 27 Laval 14
Sunday, Sept. 13, 1998 OTTAWA - Ottawa quarterback Phil Cote threw for 323 yards and three touchdowns Sunday afternoon to lead the Gee-Gees to a 27-14 victory over Laval Rouge et Or in a CIAU football game. Cote, who completed 13 of 23 passes in the Ontario-Quebec conference game, also had 12 carries for 35 yards. Wide receiver Rob Harrod caught three passes for 161 yards and two touchdowns for the Gee-Gees, who moved into an early-season, five-school tie for second in the OQIFC. Those teams are 1-1, in a logjam behind undefeated Bishop's (2-0). Ottawa, which had a net offence of 429 yards, 204 more than the Rouge et Or, held Laval to only 72 yards rushing. Laval quarterback Francois Chapdelaine completed 15 of 37 passes for 204 yards, including a 20-yard scoring pass to Mathieu Brassard in the first quarter. Two defensive backs, Jean-Vincent Audette and Bernard Gravel, starred for Laval with 11 and eight tackles, respectively.

 
Gee-Gees 59 Ravens 17
Saturday, Sept. 19, 1998 At Ottawa, Gee-Gees quarterback Phil Cote continued to put up big numbers Saturday afternoon in CIAU football. Cote completed 17 of 28 passes for 301 yards and three touchdowns as the Gee-Gees romped to victory in the traditional Panda game, defeating their cross-town rivals, Carleton Ravens, 59-17. In three Ontario-Quebec conference games, Cote now has completed 58.6 per cent of his passes (54 of 92) for 921 yards, with eight touchdowns. Cote also had three rushing touchdowns and completed six passes apiece to Ibrahim Tounkara (146 yards) and Chris Evraire (83) for the Gee-Gees (2-1). Tounkara had two touchdowns, one on a 79-yard punt return. Quarterback James Baker completed 20 of 44 passes for 236 yards for the Ravens (0-3), but he had four interceptions.

 
Mounties 28 Axemen 27
Saturday, Sept. 19, 1998 At Wolfville NS, Eric Lapointe had 25 carries for 184 yards and scored two touchdowns for No. 3 Mount Allison (1-0). Acadia quarterback Trevor Martin combined with receiver Manny Johnson to rewrite the record for the longest pass in AUAA history. It went 103 yards, eclipsing the previous high of 96 - Bob Cameron to Jeff Willett, Acadia, 1975. Martin completed 18 of 30 passes for 306 yards and three touchdowns for the Axemen (0-1), most of that to Johnson (five receptions for 165 yards and two touchdowns). Mount Allison came back to tie the game with less than a minute remaining on fullback Frank Miscione's TD. On the ensuing kickoff a returner slipped in the end zone and was forced to concede a game-winning single. Quarterback Dan Capone clicked on 11 of 20 passes for 187 yards and a touchdown for the Mounties. Attendance: 2200

 
Huskies 13 X-Men 9
Saturday, Sept. 19, 1998 At Antigonish NS, Louis Perez, who had nine carries for 72 yards, had the game's only touchdown for Saint Mary's (1-0) in its upset of No. 8 St. Francis Xavier (0-1). The TD was set up by special teams newcomer Curtis Nash who returned a missed field goal 90 yeards to the SFX 20. The X-Men had the better afternoon in net offence (265-191) as quarterback Derek Martin completed 23 of 33 passes for 105 yards. His favorite receiver was Jermayne Baldwin, who caught nine passes for 151 yards. Attendance: 3218

 
Redmen 9 Stingers 4
Saturday, Sept. 19, 1998 At Montreal, Shawn Linden had 21 carries for 120 yards and scored the game's only touchdown for McGill (2-1). Concordia (1-2) had seven turnovers in the 12th annual Shrine Bowl, including five interceptions. The running back, second to Michael Soles in school career rushing, also had three receptions for 42 yards. The win, the eighth straight overall over the Stingers, was the 114th by McGill coach Charlie Baillie. That moved him into fifth place on the all-time CIAU list, one ahead of Frank Smith, formerly of British Columbia.

 
Warriors 29 Gryphons 13
Saturday, Sept. 19, 1998 At Waterloo, Ont., quarterback Ryan Wilkinson completed 10 of 16 passes for 145 yards and two touchdowns for the No. 6 Warriors (2-0) and Mike Bradley had 23 carries for 129 yards. Waterloo's Greg Bourne scored the game's first touchdown, returning the interception of a Tyson Beach pass 59 yards. Gerrit Stam had 24 carries for 130 yards and two touchdowns for No. 10 Guelph (1-1).

 
Mustangs 38 Golden Hawks 30
Saturday, Sept. 19, 1998 At London, Ont., No. 5 Western Ontario (2-0) needed three fourth-quarter touchdowns to upend stubborn Wilfrid Laurier (0-2). Fabian Rayne, who scored three touchdowns, had 21 carries for 131 yards, including a 15-yard scoring run with just 15 seconds left in the game. Scott Crawley, who also had 21 carries, added 119 yards rushing for the Mustangs while Dan Disley caught five passes for 94 yards, including a game-tying touchdown at 7:36 of the fourth quater. Kevin Taylor completed 10 of 21 passes for 183 yards and a touchdown for the Golden Hawks with Corey Grant catching a game-high seven passes for 94 yards. Kevin Johnson had two interceptions for Wilfrid Laurier.

 
Marauders 30 Yoemen 29
Saturday, Sept. 19, 1998 At North York ON, Derek Livingstone kicked three straight field goals in the fourth quarter, the longest from 40 yards, as McMaster (1-1) rebounded for the victory over York (1-1). Quarterback Fabio Brusco, who also had five carries for 30 yards and a touchdown, completed 22 of 35 passes for 285 yards and three touchdowns for the Yoemen, but was intercepted twice, one of which Steve Raab returned 55 yards. Nick Armstrong had an 80-yard punt return for a touchdown for McMaster.

 
Lancers 11 Varsity Blues 10
Saturday, Sept. 19, 1998 At Toronto, Windsor (1-1) ended a 12-game losing streak, dealing the Varsity Blues (0-2) their second straight one-point loss. The Lancers' last previous win was 37-0 over McMaster, Oct. 5, 1996. Windsor kicker Ken Tumak never threw in the towel through those Lancers' weeks and months - and, even season - without a victory. Then at Toronto, he kicked all Windsor's points in an 11-10 football victory over the Varsity Blues. Included was a game-winning 43-yard field goal with just over four minuts left in the game that barely had sufficient height. "I was lucky that one went in. I didn't hit it hard enough, but it was good enough for the win." Of the fifth-year Education student from Chatham, Ont., new head coach Mike Morencie said: "Kenny's been a bit of a beleaguered guy the last couple of years. But he's got great resiliency. Today, he carried us on his big shoulders. It means a lot to us." Co-starring in the win with another big play was cornerback Paul Kurantsin-Mills. He blocked a field-goal attempt in the third quarter which kept Windsor within two on the scoreboard, 10-8. Kurantsin-Mills had missed the previous game over an eligibility mixup .

 
Thunderbirds 33 Bisons 15
Saturday, Sept. 19, 1998 At Winnipeg, Akbal Singh had 24 carries for 162 yards and a touchdown and quarterback Shawn Olson completed 13 of 23 passes as No. 1 British Columbia (3-0) defeated Manitoba (0-2). Daaron McField had three of the Thunderbirds' six sacks. Bisons' quarterback Greg Korstrom, who tossed two interceptions, completed 13 of 26 passes for 146 yards, including a 13-yard touchdown pass to Adrian Huntley.

 
Huskies 39 Dinosaurs 24
Saturday, Sept. 19, 1998 At Calgary, Matt Kellett kicked five field goals, the longest from 29 yards, and Jason Sulz caught four passes for 141 yards and two touchdowns as No. 4 Saskatchewan (2-0) beat No. 9 Calgary (1-2). Quarterback Ryan Reid completed 19 of 34 passes for 310 yards and three touchdowns for the Huskies. Alan Giacalone had 12 carries for 130 yards and two touchdowns for Calgary in the Festival Bowl.

 
Golden Bears 34 Golden Gaels 27
Saturday, Sept. 19, 1998 At Kingston, Ont., Alberta, winless in Canada West (0-2), stunned Queen's, 1-1 in the OQIFC, in a non-conference game. Craig Alloway returned a fumble 24 yards for the winning touchdown, capping a 20-point fourth quarter by the Golden Bears. Alberta trailed 24-0 late in the first half, but got on the scoreboard when Derek Fink clicked on a 62-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Hardeep Bamara.

 
Laval 37 Bishop's 10
Sunday, Sept. 20, 1998 STE-FOY, Que. - Laval running back Stephane Lefebvre had 12 carries for 99 yards and a touchdown and receiver Garrick Apollon had two receptions for 87 yards and a touchdown as the Rouge et Or shocked No. 2 Bishop's Gaiters 37-10 Sunday in a CIAU football game. A crowd of 4,449 at PEPS Stadium saw the Ontario-Quebec conference game produce a net offence total of 905 yards, 459 of that by unranked Laval (2-1). The game also was an adventure in turnovers. Bishop's (2-1) had eight turnovers - four interceptions, one fumble and three on downs. The Rouge et Or, though, only coughed up the ball once - an interception. While Laval spread around the offence - it used nine rushers and seven receivers - Bishop's relied mostly on receiver Vincent Begin (six receptions, 103 yards) and running back O.J. Burnett (14 carries, 73 yards). Jean-Vincent Audette led Laval's defence with 11 tackles and an interception. All-Canadian linebacker Rob Smith had 10 tackles for the Gaiters.

 
UBC 11 Simon Fraser 9
Friday, Sept. 25, 1998 Exhibition in VANCOUVER - A 15-yard, fourth-quarter touchdown pass from No. 2 quarterback Dan Delong to slotback Greg Hallifax earned British Columbia Thunderbirds an 11-9 Shrum Bowl victory over Simon Fraser Clan on Friday night in a non-conference Canadian university football game. A crowd of 4,000 at Thunderbird Stadium saw Delong, who came on to start the second half, click on the game's only scoring pass at 10:24 of the final quarter for British Columbia, the Canada West team that is No. 1 in the CIAU's Top 10 poll. Cody Jones kicked three field goals, the longest from 37 yards, for Simon Fraser, which plays in the NAIA Columbia Football Association. Linebacker Dan Elliott had nine tackles, three assists and an interception for the Thunderbirds, who tied the Shrum Bowl series against rival SFU 10-10-1.

 
Huskies 27 Axemen 22
Saturday, Sept. 26, 1998 At Halifax, Saint Mary's Huskies flipped Acadia a tantalizing bone Saturday afternoon, then put the chomp on the Axemen in CIAU football. Saint Mary's spotted the Axemen a 21-0 lead by 13:46 of the first quarter, then used three touchdowns by Luis Perez en route to a 27-22 Atlantic conference win. Perez had 14 carries for only 53 yards for No. 10 Saint Mary's (2-0), but three of those for a total of 30 yards ended up in the end zone. The winning touchdown came on a two-yard run at 11:36 of the fourth quarter. It was the only lead Saint Mary's had against the Axemen (0-2). The Huskies now have four touchdowns this season - all by Perez. Ray Skeete had 13 carries for 119 yards for Saint Mary's while Axemen quarterback Trevor Martin completed 19 of 32 passes for 166 yards, most of that to Manny Johnson (six for 62). Acadia was awesome in the first quarter. This is the third straight game they jumped out to an early lead before letting the opponents back in the game.
Attend: 3,000 est

 
Mounties 38 X-Men 7
Saturday, Sept. 26, 1998 At Sackville NB, Eric Lapointe turned back the clock to 1996, romping for 285 yards on 16 carries for No. 3 Mount Allison (2-0). The running back, who holds the CIAU single-season rushing record (1,619 in '96), scored three touchdowns in the victory over St. Francis Xavier (0-2). Two of them were long distance (75 and 79 yards). Lapointe played only 39 minutes. Lapointe now has a career rushing total of 3,620 yards. That's only 383 yards behind the AUAA record - 4,003, Grant Keaney, Mount Allison, 1988-92. The Mounties, with Jason Dutrizac intercepting two passes, held the X-Men to only 58 yards passing and 121 yards in net offence. Paul Carty, the X-Men running back had only 47 yards on 14 carries.
Attend: 3,567

 
Golden Gaels 36 Redmen 0
Saturday, Sept. 26, 1998 At Kingston, Queen's handed McGill its worst defeat in a series that dates back to 1884. The previous worst loss by the Redmen, against the Golden Gaels, was by 35 points (46-11 in 1954). Paul Correale led Queen's (2-1) with 111 yards and three touchdowns rushing and three receptions for another 45 yards. The Golden Gaels more than tripled McGill (2-2) in net offence, 577 to 191. Queen's quarterbacks passed for 412 yards - Beau Howes was 15 of 19 for 312 yards and two touchdowns and Dustin Fallischeer seven for 10 for 100.

 
Gee-Gees 41 Gaiters 10
Saturday, Sept. 26, 1998 At Ottawa, quarterback Phil Cote, who scored three touchdowns, passed for two others for the Gee-Gees (3-1), who upset No. 7 Bishop's (2-2). The country's leading passer - 1,232 yards, 10 touchdown passes in four games - completed 19 of 30 passes for 311 yards. It's the third straight week he has passed for 300 or more yards. His favorite receiver was Chris Evraire (seven for 141, touchdown). O.J. Burnett had 23 carries for 138 yards for Bishop's and scored all its points - touchdown, convert, field goal. The game produced 970 yards in net offence, 564 by Ottawa. Rob Smith had 17 tackles for the Gaiters.

 
Marauders 31 Lancers 8
Saturday, Sept. 26, 1998 At Windsor, quarterback Ben Chapdelaine clicked on 20 of 37 passes for 319 yards and two touchdowns for No. 8 McMaster (2-1). Chris Dorrington had game-highs in yards rushing (103) and receiving (five for 135) against the Lancers (1-2). Derek Livingstone hit on three of four field-goal attempts, the longest successful one of which was 50 yards. One bright spot for Windsor was cornerback Paul Kuranstin-Mills, who intercepted two Chapdelaine passes.

 
Warriors 54 Yeomen 3
Saturday, Sept. 26, 1998 At North York, Ont., quarterback Ryan Wilkinson completed 15 of 20 passes for 320 yards and four touchdowns for No. 5 Waterloo (3-0). Andy MacGregor caught eight of those passes for 159 yards and two touchdowns against York (1-2). The Warriors allowed the Yeomen only 118 yards in net offence, 69 of it passing, as Jason Tibbits intercepted two passes.

 
Mustangs 29 Varsity Blues 7
Saturday, Sept. 26, 1998 At Toronto, Scott Crawley rushed for 133 yards and Fabian Rayne added another 105, including a 15-yard touchdown run, for No. 2 Western Ontario (2-0). The offence of the Varsity Blues (0-3) sputtered and produced only 193 yards in net offence. Toronto quarterback Mark Dienesch had three passes intercepted, two by Adam McLeod. Western Ontario's Giulio Fircano was four-for-four in field goals, one from the 31.

 
Huskies 37 Bisons 19
Saturday, Sept. 26, 1998 At Saskatoon, slotback Jason Sulz caught four passes for 123 yards and scored a touchdown for No. 4 Saskatchewan (3-0). Running back Doug Rozon added three touchdowns against Manitoba (0-3). Adrian Huntley had eight receptions for 109 yards for the Bisons, who had difficulty against linebacker Warren Muzika (five tackles, a forced turnover, constant pressure on the quarterback).

 
Dinosaurs 17 Golden Bears 15
Saturday, Sept. 26, 1998 At Edmonton, No. 9 Calgary (2-2) scored only one offensive touchdown - quarterback Darryl Leason clicking with his brother, slotback Michael, for 26 yards in the third quarter. Nathan Connor had 27 carries for 153 yards for Alberta (0-3). He also caught two passes for 12 yards. The Golden Bears rallied in the fourth quarter, scoring 13 unanswered points, on an afternoon they had a better net offence total than Calgary (349-243).

 
Ravens 19 Rouge et Or 17
Sunday, Sept. 27, 1998 STE-FOY, Que. - Carleton's Jim McMillan kicked four field goals, three in the third quarter, as the Ravens came back from a 16-3 half-time deficit to beat No. 6 Laval Rouge et Or 19-17 Sunday afternoon in a CIAU football game. The win was the first of the Ontario-Quebec conference season for Carleton (1-3), which scored 16 unanswered points in the third quarter. Also featured in that big quarter against Laval (2-2) was a touchdown pass from quarterback James Baker to Ed Joseph. Three Laval quarterbacks combined for 136 yards passing, but the Ravens intercepted four passes, two by Steve Robinson. Laval's Daniel Fleury had five punt returns to 198 yards, including a 115-yard scoring play in the second quarter. The other Rouge et Or touchdown also was an electric play - a 56-yard run by Mathieu Brassard.

Carleton lineman Cameron Legault later captured the CIAU/CFL Radically Canadian award as the defensive Player of the Week in CIAU football. Legault had six assisted tackles, two tackles for losses and three sacks. The sack total by the six-foot-one, 240-pound fourth-year player is a single-game season high this season in the OQIFC.

 
Axemen 21 X-Men 18
Saturday, Oct. 3, 1998 At Antigonish NS, Marco Picotte scored on a 10-yard run with just 24 seconds left to earn Acadia (1-2) the victory over St. Francis Xavier (0-3). It was the second touchdown of the game for the running back, who had 24 carries for 109 yards. Axemen quarterback Trevor Martin completed 22 of 32 passes for 284 yards. Eight of those receptions, for 67 yards, were to Manny Johnson. Paul Carty had 19 carries for 150 yards and scored the only touchdown for St. Francis Xavier, which had Jacob Marini go three-for-three in field-goal attempts, the longest of which was from 40 yards. Josh Thomas, an end with Acadia made the most of his first game of the AUAA season. The third-year end, six-foot-three and 260 pounds, missed the Axemen’s first two games with a training-camp injury (hand), then came back to star in this game. The 1997 all-Canadian had two sacks, two rushes, six tackles and also was in on numerous assisted tackles as Acadia won its first game of the season.

 
Mounties 34 Huskies 20
Saturday, Oct. 3, 1998 At Sackville, NB, Eric Lapointe had 19 carries for 195 yards and scored a touchdown for No. 3 Mount Allison (3-0). Cedric Lafreniere contributed five receptions for 70 yards to the victory over No. 8 Saint Mary’s (2-1) in the showdown for first place in the Atlantic conference. The Mounties’ defence came up strong, too, intercepted four passes. Ian Sinclair returned one of those 75 yards for a second-quarter touchdown that, with the convert, made it 24-0.

 
Stingers 45 Rouge et Or 32
Saturday, Oct. 3, 1998 At Montreal, Concordia wide receiver Sylvain Girard caught six passes for 153 yards and scored five touchdowns as the Stingers defeated Laval Rouge et Or 45-32. His production erased two Ontario-Quebec conference game records — touchdowns and points (30). Concordia quarterback Sean Hoas came into the game with season totals of only one TD pass and 10 interceptions, but turned it around: 12 of 20 passes for 271 yards, five touchdowns and just one interception. His touchdown pass total also was a OQIFC game record. Linebacker Dwayne Bromfield had 13 tackles and two interceptions for Concordia (2-2). Jason Casey also had two interceptions. Quarterback Mathieu Bertrand completed 14 of 24 passes for 171 yards for Laval (2-3)

 
Golden Gaels 40 Ravens 8
Saturday, Oct. 3, 1998 At Ottawa, quarterback Beau Howes completed 13 of 19 passes for 259 yards and three touchdowns for No. 10 Queen’s (3-1). All three scoring passes were to Paul DiRinaldo — his only receptions of the game. Jason Wimmer caught seven passes for 116 yards. Carleton (1-4) produced only 108 yards in net offence and had two passes intercepted, both by Andy Miners.

 
Gaiters 21 Redmen 5
Saturday, Oct. 3, 1998 At Lennoxville Que, O.J. Burnett had 18 carries for 127 yards for Bishop’s (3-2), which chalked up 426 yards in net offence against McGill (2-3). Vincent Begin scored another touchdown for the Gaiters on a 57-yard punt return late in the fourth quarter. Bishop’s linebacker Rob Smith from Nepean, Ont seems destined to repeat as an all-Canadian. The fourth-year Sociology student had 10 tackles, including two sacks, in the win over McGill. It was the fifth e straight game in which Smith has 10 or more tackles . . . McGill running back Shawn Linden needs just 130 more yards to break the Redmen all-time rushing record (2,231, Michael Soles).

 
Marauders 40 Varsity Blues 8
Saturday, Oct. 3, 1998 At Hamilton, Chris Dorrington scored three straight touchdowns for No. 6 McMaster (3-1), which scored the game’s final 33 points against Toronto (0-4). Derek Livingstone added three field goals, the longest from 35 yards.

 
Mustangs 44 Warriors 20
Saturday, Oct. 3, 1998 At London, Fabian Rayne had 18 carries for 155 yards and scored four touchdowns for No. 2 Western Ontario (4-0). Scott Crawley had 27 carries for 145 yards and Dan Disley caught three passes for 143 yards as the Mustangs ran up 557 yards in net offence against No. 1 Waterloo (3-1). The Warriors put up a big number (481), too, giving the game a net offence total of 1,038 yards. Mike Bradley turned 21 carries into 165 yards and two touchdowns for Waterloo.

 
Golden Hawks 34 Lancers 6
Saturday, Oct. 3, 1998 At Waterloo, Justin Dillon had 14 carries for 157 yards for Wilfrid Laurier (2-2). Corey Grant had only two receptions for 25 yards for the Golden Hawks, but both of those went for first-quarter touchdowns, and Kevin Johnson had a 111-yard punt return for a touchdown. Quarterback Morgan Gallagher completed 18 of 31 passes for 201 yards for Windsor (1-3), which suffered three turnovers.

 
Gryphons 17 Yeomen 14
Saturday, Oct. 3, 1998 At Guelph, Norman Nasser clicked on all three field-goal attempts, the last from 24 yards with just 21 seconds left, to give the Gryphons (2-2) the win over York (1-3). The defences sparkled in a matinee that had only 381 yards in net offence — 212 by Guelph. Bill Brown and Matt Hammer had two interceptions apiece for the Gryphons.

 
Golden Bears 28 Bisons 24
Saturday, Oct. 3, 1998 At Edmonton, quarterback Jeff Schellenberg hit slotback Steve Kabachia with a 61-yard scoring pass at 7:10 of the fourth quarter to erase a three-point lead, 24-21, by Manitoba (0-4). Craig Carr had 26 carries for 207 yards and two touchdowns for the Bisons. Alberta (1-3) won its first conference game by scoring on its first possessions in each of the first and second halves — a two-yard run by Nathan Connor in the first quarter and a 17-yard pass, quarterback Hardeep Bamara to Jamie Stoddard, in the third.

 
Huskies 38 Thunderbirds 34
Saturday, Oct. 3, 1998 At Saskatoon, running back Todd Lynden scored a touchdown on a four-yard pass with just five seconds left as No. 4 Saskatchewan Huskies (4-0) upended No. 1 British Columbia Thunderbirds (3-1) 38-34. Duncan O’Mahony had given the defending national champion Thunderbirds a 34-31 lead with an 18-yard field goal at 13:04 of the fourth quarter, his fourth of the game. Saskatchewan QB Ryan Reid of Vernon BC guided Saskatchewan’s offence 90 yards in the game’s final two minutes for the winning touchdown. He completed 20 of 34 passes for 340 yards and two touchdowns, sending his season completion percentage to 54.7 and increasing his touchdowns-to-interceptions ratio to 7:1, the best in Canada West. His passing total (1,049) makes Reid, one of only three CIAU quarterbacks this season with 1,000 or more yards. QB Shawn Olson of British Columbia was 12-for-23 for 286 yards. Huskies’ running back Tony Chad had 19 carries for 120 yards. Akbal Singh had 138 yards rushing and Brad Coutts caught six passes for 214 yards for the Thunderbirds.

 
Golden Hawks 45 Varsity Blues 15
Thursday, Oct. 8, 1998 TORONTO — Wilfrid Laurier running back Justin Praamsma had 17 carries for 172 yards and scored four touchdowns Thursday night as the Golden Hawks defeated Toronto Varsity Blues 45-15 in a CIAU football game. The Golden Hawks (3-2) scored 29 unanswered points in the second half to chalk up their third straight victory of the Ontario conference season. Praamsma had scoring runs of 41, 19, 40 and 30 yards, helping leave Toronto (0-5) without a win. James Baskin led the Varsity Blues’ ground game with 140 yards on 31 carries, two of which went for touchdowns. Wilfrid Laurier’s defence intercepted three passes by quarterback Noel Carrabs, two of them by safety Alan Ruby.

 
Thunderbirds 35 Golden Bears 3
Friday, Oct. 9, 1998 VANCOUVER — British Columbia's Akbal Singh had 18 carries for 159 yards and scored a touchdown Friday night as the No. 4 Thunderbirds defeated Alberta Golden Bears 35-3 in a CIAU football game. Quarterback Shawn Olson completed 14 of 21 passes for 219 yards and three touchdowns for the Thunderbirds (4-1). Brad Coutts had five receptions, one for a touchdown, and 71 yards receiving. The receiver also had seven punt returns for another 82 yards. Defensive lineman Tyson St. James had nine tackles and three sacks against Alberta (1-4). For the Golden Bears, linebacker Darcey Parasynchuk had 10 tackles and one sack and running back Nathan Connor had 13 carries for 55 yards.

 
Axemen 21 X-Men 18
Saturday Oct 10 1998 At Wolfville, N.S., quarterback Trevor Martin clicked on a 10-yard scoring pass to Todd Allen with just 11 seconds left to give Acadia (2-2) the win. Only 35 seconds earlier, quarterback Derek Martin had put St. Francis Xavier (0-4) ahead 18-14 with an 18-yard touchdown pass to Ron Lirette. Trevor Martin clicked on 26 of 38 passes for 362 yards, most of that to Manny Johnson (eight receptions for 114 yards).

 
Huskies 32 Mounties 4
Saturday Oct 10 1998 At Halifax, Luis Perez had 11 carries for 135 yards, including a 44-yard touchdown run, for Saint Mary’s (3-1), which moved into a tie for first place in the Atlantic with No. 2 Mount Allison (3-1). Eric Lapointe had 174 yards on 25 carries for the Mounties, who defeated Saint Mary’s 34-20 a week ago. Ray Skeete scored two rushing touchdowns for the Huskies, whose defence intercepted three passes by Mount Allison quarterback Dan Capone. Josh Labucki added another touchdown for Saint Mary’s on a blocked punt.

 
Rouge et Or 23 Ravens 17
Saturday Oct 10 1998 At Ottawa, Bernard Gravel kicked three field goals, the longest from 42 yards, to complete the game’s scoring for Laval (3-3). Gravel tied it 17-17 at the half, then added the only points of the second half against Carleton (1-5). Quarterback Francois Chapdelaine completed 15 of 27 passes for 247 yards for the Rouge et Or

 
Stingers 30 Redmen 21
Saturday Oct 10 1998 At Montreal, quarterback Sean Hoas completed 13 of 23 passes for 263 yards and two touchdowns as Concordia (3-2) defeated McGill (2-4) in the cross-town showdown for the Shaughnessy Cup. Sylvain Girard also helped Stingers’ coach Pat Sheahan to a double celebration. It was his 50th win as a university head coach and the triumph came on his 42nd birthday. Girard caught five passes for 131 yards and a touchdown as Concordia won its first against the Redmen in nine games, dating back to Sept. 2, 1994. Scott Ashworth scored two rushing touchdowns for the Stingers, a total matched by Shawn Linden of McGill. Dave Chambers had five rceptions for 107 yards for the Redmen.

 
Gee-Gees 47 Golden Gaels 30
Saturday Oct 10 1998 At Ottawa, quarterback Phil Cote completed 23 of 40 passes for 340 yards and four touchdowns for the Gee-Gees (3-1). Cote also had eight carries for 82 yards in the win over No. 7 Queen’s (3-2). Sharing the offensive spotlight with their quarterback were Ali Ajram (19-for-199 rushing, touchdown), Rob Harrod (four-for-160 receiving, four touchdowns) and Chris Evraire (11-for-143 receiving). Golden Gaels’ quarterback Beau Howes threw for 304 yards and two touchdowns, completing 15 of 24 passes, but he had three interceptions, two by Sean Quinn.

 
Gryphons 19 Lancers 19
Saturday Oct 10 1998 At Windsor, quarterback Morgan Gallagher drove the Lancers 103 yards in the game's final 63 seconds to set up a 19-19 tie with the Gryphons With no time left on the clock, Gallagher threw a 15-yard touchdown pass to Greg Schertzer to cut Guelph's lead to 19-17, then hit Joe D'Amore with another pass for the game-tying two-point convert. Guelph's Gerrit Stam had 33 carries for 277 yards for the Gryphons. Gallagher completed 22 of 33 passes for the Lancers (1-3-1). He also had 15 carries for 83 yards and scored a touchdown. Stam had two touchdowns for Guelph (2-2-1), one of which went for 64 yards.

 
Warriors 55 Marauders 42
Saturday Oct 10 1998 At Waterloo, Ont., Mike Bradley had 23 carries for 224 yards and Eddie Kim added 125 yards, on 20 carries, as the No. 6 Warriors came back to beat No. 5 McMaster (3-2) in the season’s highest-scoring game. The game produced 1,093 yards in net offence, 610 yards by McMaster. The Marauders, though, suffered through six turnovers, three of those on downs. Ben Chapdelaine completed 22 of 46 passes for 292 yards for McMaster. Dave Linton had seven catches for 106 yards and two touchdowns for the Marauders while Chris Dorrington had 13 carries for 118 yards. Kojo Aidoo, who also had two rushing touchdowns for McMaster, had nine carries for 111 yards.

 
Mustangs 10 Yeomen 8
Saturday Oct 10 1998 At North York ON, Western Ontario Mustangs, the No. 1 team in the national poll, had to sweat out a 10-8 victory over York Yeomen. A 24-yard field goal by Jesse Phillips, his second of the game, came at 12:19 of the fourth quarter as the Yeomen (1-4) threw a giant scare into Western Ontario (5-0), one of only two undefeated teams left in the CIAU. Phillips failed on three other field-goal attempts. Scott Crawley, who scored the game’s only touchdown — a four-yard run in the third quarter — had 17 carries for 109 yards for the Mustangs.

 
Dinosaurs 63 Bisons 20
Saturday Oct 10 1998 At Winnipeg, quarterback Darryl Leason completed 20 of 31 passes for 340 yards and three touchdowns for No. 8 Calgary (3-2). He also scored two touchdowns, both of which came on runs from inside the five. Also starring for the Dinosaurs were Ken Eslinger (14 carries, 198 yards, two touchdowns) and Sean Kelly (nine receptions, 138 yards, touchdown). Quarterback Greg Korstrom hit on 19 of 29 passes for 300 yards and two touchdowns for Manitoba (0-5). His favorite receiver was Adrian Huntley (six receptions, 129 yards, touchdown).

 

A dream afternoon turned into a nightmare Saturday for Mount Allison running back Eric Lapointe in CIAU football. Lapointe became the all-time leading rusher in the Atlantic conference, rolling for 153 yards during a 25-22 loss against Acadia. But it was a last-minute fumble by Lapointe, the fourth-year Arts student from Brossard, Que., which set up the game-winning field goal by the Axemen. Lapointe now has 4,142 yards. The previous record (4,003) was held by another Mountie, Grant Keaney (1988-92).

 
Axemen 25 Mounties 22
At Wolfville NS Acadia (3-2) tied it 22-22 with just 56 seconds left in the game. Trevor Martin scored on a quarterback sneak from the two, then threw a two-point convert to Ben Halpin. Then, on the first play after the ensuing kickoff, Lapointe fumbled at Mount Allison’s 35 and, from there, Acadia moved in for an 18-yard field goal by Glen Sullivan. Martin completed 16 of 27 passes for 234 yards and a touchdown. Dan Capone passed for 221 yards and three touchdowns for the Mounties, clicking on 17 of 30 passes.

A dream afternoon turned into a nightmare Saturday for Mount Allison running back Eric Lapointe in CIAU football. Lapointe became the all-time leading rusher in the Atlantic conference, rolling for 153 yards during a 25-22 loss against Acadia. But it was a last-minute fumble by Lapointe, the fourth-year Arts student from Brossard, Que., which set up the game-winning field goal by the Axemen. Lapointe now has 4,142 yards. The previous record (4,003) was held by another Mountie, Grant Keaney (1988-92).

 
Huskies 29 X-Men 7
At Halifax, running back Luis Perez had 14 carries for 193 yards and a touchdown for No. 7 Saint Mary’s (4-1). The Huskies were especially tough against the run, allowing the X-Men only 17 yards. Quarterback Derek Martin starred for St. Francis Xavier (0-5), completing 28 of 48 passes for 252 yards. His favorite receiver was Jermayne Baldwin (nine receptions, one touchdown). SMU led 27-0 late in the game.

Rookie DL Doug Borden of Saint Mary's was later named CIAU/CFL Radically Canadian offensive and defensive Player of the Week. Borden, 6-5" and 310 lb. had four tackles and eight assisted tackles, also a sack and two tackles for losses. "Borden is beginning to dominate the line of scrimmage," Coach Blake Nill said of the freshman who has played only five regular-season games for the Huskies. "He is continually double-teamed . . . (yet) is becoming an outstanding player in the AUAA."

 
Gee-Gees 28 Golden Gaels 21
At Kingston, Ont., quarterback Phil Cote threw a 13-yard touchdown pass to Rob Harrod with only 23 seconds left to give Ottawa (5-1) the win, its fifth straight and third in a row against a Top 10 team. It was one of three scoring passes by Cote, who completed 12 of 27 passes for 251 yards against the No. 10 Golden Gaels (3-3). Cote also had 14 carries for 116 yards, including a two-yard touchdown run. Paul Correale had 16 carries for 121 yards for Queen’s.

 
Redmen 26 Rouge et Or 16
At Montreal, two McGill players — running back Shawn Linden and middle linebacker J.P. Darche — rewrote school career records. Linden had 64 yards rushing to send his career total to 2,292 yards. The previous McGill record (2,231) was held by Michael Soles. Darche had 13 tackles, sending his career total to 159 — another all-time high for the Redmen (3-4). It was McGill’s first win over Laval (3-4), which came into CIAU football in 1996. Quarterback Josh Sommerfeldt rushed for 152 yards on 16 carries in only his second CIAU start and completed seven of 21 passes for 132 yards. One of his passes was a touchdown fling to Dave Chambers — the first scoring pass this season by the Redmen. Quarterback Francois Chapdelaine completed 16 of 32 passes for Laval. His favorite target was Daniel Trachy (five for 119, touchdown). Mathieu Brassard had four carries for 104 yards for the Rouge et Or.

 
Golden Hawks 26 Gryphons 15
At Guelph, Ont., Andre Talbot had an 85-yard punt return for a touchdown and Justin Dillon had 14 carries for 113 yards for Wilfrid Laurier (4-2). Only one player with Guelph (2-3-1) had more than 100 yards. That was Gerrit Stam, who had a total of 126 (20 for 74 rushing, with a touchdown and three for 52 receiving).

 
Mustangs 43 Varsity Blues 27
At London, Ont., Scott Crawley had 19 carries for 150 yards as No. 1 Western Ontario (6-0) came back to beat Toronto (0-6). The Varsity Blues, with James Baskin scoring two first-half touchdowns, led 21-7 by 1:01 of the second quarter. Fabian Rayne has 16 carries for 122 yards for Western Ontario, the only undefeated team in the CIAU, while Jim Meldrum added two touchdowns — a four-yard run and a 17-yard reception. Toronto quarterback Noel Carrabs only threw 12 passes, but he completed 10 for 179 yards, including a 78-yard scoring pass to Yurij Medwidsky. Medwidsky finished with three receptions for 179 yards.

 
Marauders 53 Lancers 14
At Hamilton, quarterback Ben Chapdelaine completed 15 of 23 passes for 315 yards and four touchdowns for No. 8 McMaster (4-2). Chapdelaine used seven receivers in the win over Windsor (1-4-1). Kojo Aidoo, who caught two of those passes for 24 yards, also had 14 carries for 129 yards. He scored three touchdowns, two on runs. Chris Philion caught seven passes for 117 yards for Windsor, which used two quarterbacks — Morgan Gallagher (14-for-27, 179 yards) and Ed Smith (11-for-15, 154 yards). Chapdelaine was later named CIAU/CFL Radically Canadian Offensive Player of the Week. He now sits No. 2 in passing yards among CIAU quarterbacks — only 17 yards behind the leader. Chapdelaine, six-one and 195 pounds, has completed 108 of 198 passes for 1806 yards, with 15 touchdowns.

 
Warriors 17 Yeomen 9
At Waterloo, Ont., Jeff Johnson had a game-high 123 yards rushing for York (1-5), which was hurt by turnovers. The Yeomen had five giveaways (two on downs, two interceptions and a lost fumble) against No. 5 Waterloo (5-1). No player produced a 100-yard game for Waterloo, rushing or receiving. The game’s big play may have been the first scoring play by Waterloo — a 74-yard touchdown pass from quarterback Ryan Wilkinson to Chris Kreibich at :48 of the second quarter.

 
Dinosaurs 45 Thunderbirds 13
At Calgary, running backs Alan Giacalone and Ken Eslinger frustrated British Columbia (4-2). Giacalone, a rookie, had 12 carries for 125 yards, with two touchdowns while Eslinger went 21 for 138 with a touchdown for No. 6 Calgary (4-2). Darryl Leason, who completed 13 of 23 passes for 279 yards, including a touchdown, also had 10 carries for 54 yards and a touchdown for the Dinosaurs. Akbal Singh, who came into the game as the nation’s leading scorer and rusher, had 22 carries for 176 yards and a touchdown for British Columbia.

 
Golden Bears 24 Huskies 16
Golden Bears 24 Huskies 16 At Edmonton, Mike Munoz had the magic touch in deep for Alberta (2-4). He had only four carries for eight yards — but scored three touchdowns against Saskatchewan (4-1). Alberta trailed by two at the half, 13-11, but won it with 13 unanswered points in the fourth quarter. Quarterback Jeff Schellenberg completed 15 of 24 passes for 203 yards for Alberta, which picked off three passes by Huskies’ quarterback Ryan Reid. Reid went 12-for-32 for 184 yards and a touchdown.

 
Stingers 28 Gaiters 14
Sunday, Oct. 18, 1998 MONTREAL — Concordia’s Evan Davis Jr touched the football only five times Sunday afternoon, but scored two touchdowns to lead the Stingers to a 28-14 win over No. 9 Bishop’s Gaiters in a CIAU game. The victory, the third in a row for Concordia (4-2), moved it into sole possession of second place in the Ontario-Quebec conference. Davis had four carries for 39 yards, including a touchdown. The running back also caught one pass from quarterback Sean Hoas, turning that into a 26-yard touchdown. Hoas only completed nine of 17 passes for 174 yards. Dave Miller-Johnston added 14 points against Bishop’s (3-3), including four field goals — the longest from 41 yards — and, on defence, Christian Cote had three interceptions. O.J. Burnett produced 102 yards on seven carries for the Gaiters and Vincent Begin returned seven punts for 116 yards.

 
Thunderbirds 53 Bisons 14
Friday, Oct. 23, 1998 VANCOUVER — British Columbia's Akbal Singh rewrote the Canada West season rushing record Friday night, rolling for 272 yards as the Thunderbirds defeated Manitoba Bisons 53-14 in a CIAU football game. Singh sent his rushing total to 1,296 — the previous record was 1,260, by Manitoba's Dominic Zagari in 1994. The record fell on Singh's third touchdown of the game, a 29-yard run in the fourth quarter. The defending Vanier Cup champion Thunderbirds still have one game remaining on their regular-season schedule. Quarterback Shawn Olson completed 19 of 23 passes for 290 yards and three touchdowns for No. 6 British Columbia (5-2). Quarterback Greg Korstrom complete 16 of 33 passes for 217 yards and two touchdowns for Manitoba (0-6). His favorite receiver was Adrian Huntley (five receptions, 88 yards, touchdown).

Akbal Singh was later named CIAU/CFL Radically Canadian offensive Player of the Week. Singh, a fourth-year Arts student from Vancouver who leads the CIAU both in scoring and rushing, previously won the national offensive award the week of Sept. 14.

 
Axemen 48 X-Men 18
Saturday, Oct. 24, 1998 At Antigonish, N.S., quarterback Trevor Martin clicked on 15 of 24 passes for 260 yards and two touchdowns for Acadia (4-2). The win was the fourth in a row for the Axemen — three of which have been against St. Francis Xavier (0-6). Stuart Venables caught six of those passes for 131 yards. For the X-Men, Jermayne Baldwin had eight receptions for 115 yards. Acadia’s David Carrington had a 20-yard interception return for a touchdown in the fourth quarter.

 
Mounties 36 Huskies 3
Saturday, Oct. 24, 1998 At Sackville, N.B., quarterback Dan Capone rode a two-horse offence — receiver Craig Fougere and running back Eric Lapointe — for No. 9 Mount Allison (4-2). Capone completed 13 of 25 passes for 281 yards and three touchdowns against No. 5 Saint Mary’s (4-2). Fougere, who scored three touchdowns, caught six passes for 171 yards. Lapointe had 25 carries for 127 yards, including a one-yard touchdown run. The Huskies had only 258 yards in net offence, 136 of which came on just five completions by quarterback Perry Marchese.

 
Stingers 53 Ravens 6
Saturday, Oct. 24, 1998 At Ottawa, the defence came up big for No. 8 Concordia (5-2), which had six interceptions, two by Greg Casey. The interception total was more than one half the number of Stingers’ completions (11). Quarterback Sean Hoas clicked on only nine passes against Carleton (1-6), but four went for touchdowns — two to Hugo Carriere. The Ravens didn’t hit the scoreboard until there were only 20 seconds left in the game — a touchdown run by Anthony Brown.

 
Gee-Gees 28 Gaiters 25 in OT
Saturday, Oct. 24, 1998 At Lennoxville, Que., Darren McNeice kicked a 15-yard field goal in overtime to give Ottawa (6-1) the victory. Bishop’s (7-3) scored 18 straight points in the fourth quarter to tie it 25-25, but missed a field goal in an overtime format used in the National Collegiate Athletic Association. When it had its turn at a possession, the Gee-Gees moved in for McNeice’s second field goal of the game. The key play in the drive which, at one stage had a third-and-20 situation, was a 39-yard pass to Rob Harrod from quarterback Phil Cote. Cote clicked on only 12 of 29 passes, but threw for 256 yards and two touchdowns, both to Ibrahim Tounkara. Most of those passing statistics involved Harrod (seven receptions, 155 yards). Cote, who also had 16 carries for 82 yards and a touchdown, was intercepted twice — both by Junior Sirivar. The Gaiters had more net offence (410 yards to 375), including a 14-for-27, 211-yard performance from quarterback Mark Stipe. The only other time the NCAA overtime format was used in the Ontario-Quebec conference, Oct. 25, 1997, Bishop’s defeated Laval 17-14, also at Coulter Field.

 
Golden Hawks 56 Marauders 29
Saturday, Oct. 24, 1998 At Waterloo, Ont., quarterback Kevin Taylor completed 15 of 23 passes for 200 yards and running back Justin Praamsma had 15 carries for 125 yards for No. 10 Wilfrid Laurier (5-2). Quarterback Ben Chapdelaine put up 323 yards passing, completing 26 of 39 passes, for No. 7 McMaster (4-3). But he suffered three interceptions, one by Donnie Ruiz — a Golden Hawk record seventh of the season. Chris Dorrington also starred for the Marauders — 18 carries, 115 yards, touchdown and seven receptions, 91 yards. In terms of net offence, it was a split decision — Wilfrid Laurier, 487 to 454 — but McMaster had five turnovers.

 
Warriors 53 Lancers 7
Saturday, Oct. 24, 1998 At Windsor, No. 3 Waterloo (6-1) burst from the gate, scoring on six of its first seven possessions en route to a 42-1 lead at the half against Windsor (1-5-1). Tailback Mike Bradley had 18 carries for 242 yards and scored four touchdowns, one on a 98-yard run in the first quarter, and Chris Amey caught six passes for 172 yards and scored two touchdowns for the Warriors. Waterloo ran up 647 yards in offence. Windsor chalked up 251.

 
Mustangs 46 Gryphons 8
Saturday, Oct. 24, 1998 At Guelph, No. 1 Western Ontario (7-0) clinched first place in the Ontario conference as quarterback Mike O’Brien passed for 268 yards, completing 11 of 17 passes. Fabian Rayne had only 11 carries for 68 yards, but scored three touchdowns for the Mustangs. Gerrit Stam starred for Guelph (2-4-1), with 24 carries for 206 yards. He now has a school-record 953 yards.

 
Yeomen 15 Varsity Blues 9
Saturday, Oct. 24, 1998 At Toronto, Jeff Johnson had 19 carries for 109 yards for York (2-5) before an announced crowd of 3,800 on closing day at Varsity. Quarterback Fabio Brusco, who had seven carries for 26 yards and a touchdown, passed for 138 more, completing 11 of 19 passes against Toronto (0-7).

The game was the last to be played at Varsity Stadium, the site of the intercollegiate game on the Toronto campus since 1898. It has played host to 30 Grey Cup games, as well as 21 Vanier Cup showdowns. The stadium's final TD was scored by Toronto's James Baskin on a one-yard run at 7:50 of the fourth quarter. The last point was a single on an unsuccessful 38-yard field-goal by York's Jesse Phillips.

 
Huskies 14 Dinosaurs 1
Saturday, Oct. 24, 1998 1 At Saskatoon, Matt Kellett kicked a 12-yard field goal with only two seconds remaining to move No. 2 Saskatchewan (5-1) into a tie for first in Canada West with No. 6 British Columbia, but the Huskies have played one less game than the Thunderbirds (5-2). Kellett had three field goals in the win over No. 4 Calgary (4-3). Saskatchewan quarterback Ryan Reid completed 17 of 25 passes for 271 yards, much of that to Kelly McNairn (seven receptions for 114 yards). Calgary quarterback Darryl Leason, who had 10 carries for a club-high 84 yards and a touchdown, completed 12 of 28 passes for 190 yards.

 
Rouge et Or 13 Golden Gaels 10
Sunday, Oct. 25, 1998 STE.-FOY, Que. — Laval quarterback Dominik Goulet scored a touchdown on a one-yard run with only 53 seconds left in the game Sunday afternoon as the Rouge et Or came back to defeat Queen’s Golden Gaels 13-10 in a CIAU football game. A crowd of 4,867 watched Laval (4-4) win the Ontario-Quebec conference game with 10 unanswered points in the fourth quarter against Queen’s (3-4). Ironically, Goulet finished the game with a negative rushing total (minus one) on two carries. He aso completed nine of 17 passes for 203 yards for the Rouge et Or, who got two field goals from Bernard Gravel, the longest of which was from 32 yards. Queen’s quarterback Beau Howes, who had seven carries for 20 yards and a touchdown, clicked on 20 of 32 passes for 264 yards. Also starring for the Golden Gaels were James Maclean (six catches, 105 yards) and Andrew Tewsley (two interceptions). Laval scored 10 unanswered points in the fourth quarter to earn its first playoff berth since joining the Ontario-Quebec conference in 1996.

Rouge et Or linebacker Bernard Gravel was later named CIAU/CFL Radically Canadian defensive Players of the Week. Gravel, a fifth-year player from St-Georges, Que., had a memorable final home game Sunday afternoon in a 13-10 win over Queen’s Golden Gaels. The 6'1" 210 lb. linebacker chalked up six tackles and added five assists. He also had a sack and an interception which he returned 32 yards.

 
Axemen 14 Huskies 7
Saturday, Oct. 31, 1998 At Wolfville, N.S., Acadia (5-2) scored nine unanswered points in the fourth quarter to bounce No. 9 Saint Mary's (4-3) in a showdown between two teams which, along with Mount Allison, came into the day in a three-way tie for first place in the Atlantic. Ben Halpin took a 40-yard scoring pass from quarterback Trevor Martin to put the Axemen ahead 11-7 at 4:35 of the fourth quarter and Glen Sullivan added a field goal, his second of the game, at 10:03. Kyle Zurba, who also caught two passes, had 23 carries for 121 yards for the Axemen. Martin completed 14 of 27 passes for 153 yards. Saint Mary's offence had no success — it produced only 96 yards, 80 rushing.

 
Mounties 27 X-Men 0
Saturday, Oct. 31, 1998 At Antigonish, N.S., in a game played in a quagmire, No. 6 Mount Allison (5-2) made the most of its limited opportunities against St. Francis Xavier (0-7). Eric Lapointe had 31 carries for 150 yards and a touchdown for the Mounties and Vince Baraniecz also scored on a 30-yard interception return in the fourth quarter. It was one of four interceptions by Mount Allison, for whom Dave Bradford added 15 points, including four field goals. The conditions ripped up the game plans — the teams combined for only 299 yards, 215 by the Mounties.

 
Stingers 43 Gee-Gees 20
Saturday, Oct. 31, 1998 At Ottawa, quarterback Sean Hoas threw two touchdowns, both to Sylvain Girard, for No. 7 Concordia (6-2), which finishes first in the Ontario-Quebec conference. Both were long passes, 71 and 50 yards, helping Hoas put up 185 yards in passing. Also starring for the Stingers were Evan Davis (10 carries, 137 yards) and Dave Miller-Johnston (five field goals). The Gee-Gees (6-2) didn't use first-string quarterback Phil Cote, flipping the game plan to Trevor Monaghan. The sophomore shared the spotlight with receiver Rob Harrod, who caught 10 passes, three for touchdowns, for 200 yards. Chris Evraire caught 11 others passes for 73 yards for Ottawa. Monaghan completed 23 of 47 passes for 295 yards — but the Stingers read him for four interceptions.

 
Gaiters 39 Golden Gaels 20
Saturday, Oct. 31, 1998 At Kingston, Ont., running back Ben Ouimet had 10 carries for 182 yards and O.J. Burnett added another 140 on 22 carries as Bishop's (4-4) defeated Queen's (3-5) in the showdown for the final playoff berth in the OQIFC. Ouimet and Burnett scored two touchdowns apiece — for each, it was one rushing and another receiving. The Gaiters rolled up 413 yards rushing, to offset a big passing game by Queen's quarterback Beau Howes (nine -for-21, 252 yards, two touchdowns). Three of those passes for 109 yards and a touchdown were to Jason Wimmer. Two others, though, ended up as interceptions by Jean Desmarais. Ouimet 6'0", 192 lbs. carried the ball 10 times for 182 yards and 1 TD. He also caught a 26-yard TD pass to give him 208 all-purpose yards and 2 TDs. His efforts were instrumental in helping Bishop's run up 413 yards of rushing and a net offense of 513 yards. He was later named CIAU Offensive player of the week.

 
Redmen 23 Ravens 13
Saturday, Oct. 31, 1998 At Montreal, rookie quarterback Josh Sommerfeldt had another effective matinee for McGill (4-4). He passed for 188 yards and ran another 33, including 11 yards for touchdown in the second quarter. At times, Carleton (1-7) moved the yardsticks, rolling for more net offence than the Redmen (250 to 229), but turned the ball over seven times. That same success-frustration story covered quarterback James Baker. He completed 21 of 39 passes for 242 yards with two touchdowns, but had four passes intercepted, two by Sal Brohi. Those were Nos. 14 and 15 of Brohi's career, a McGill high. Stephen Hadley was Baker's No. 1 receiver — seven for 131 yards, including a touchdown. McGill's Brohi 5th Year 5'9", 168 lbs. a graduating senior playing in his last game, had 11 tackles, 2 interceptions and a knockdown in addition to the two interceptions. He was part of a defensive unit that caused seven turnovers and held the opposition to 250 yards of offense. Brohi was later named Defensive player of the week.

 
Gryphons 47 Marauders 24
Saturday, Oct. 31, 1998 At Hamilton, Gerrit Stam had 21 carries for 178 yards and scored two touchdowns for Guelph (3-4-1), which bounced No. 10 McMaster (4-4). Ben Chapdelaine, the country's leading passer, padded his numbers (24-for-46, 299 yards, two touchdowns).

 
Yeomen 13 Golden Hawks 6
Saturday, Oct. 31, 1998 At North York, Jeff Johnson, who scored the only touchdown, had a huge game for the Yeomen (3-5). He had 27 carries for 188 rushing yards against No. 8 Wilfrid Laurier (5-3) and also caught four Fabio Brusco passes for another 94 yards. The touchdown came on a six-yard run with just one minute left in the game. Brusco went nine-for-21 for 159 yards. Wilfrid Laurier had only 216 net yards on offence and that total didn't put anyone over 100 yards.

 
Warriors 36 Varsity Blues 18
Saturday, Oct. 31, 1998 At Waterloo, Ont., quarterback Ryan Wilkinson threw four touchdown passes for the No. 3 Warriors (7-1). Wilkinson, who also had five carries for 39 yards, completed 10 of 20 passes for 260 yards. Mike Bradley had 18 carries for 101 yards against Toronto (0-8), which suffered five turnovers, three of those on downs, and didn't have a player with 100 or more yards. The only touchdown by the Varsity Blues came on a pass by running back James Baskin. A little razzle-dazzle in the final minute of the first half, eight yards to — wait for it — quarterback Noel Carrabs.

 
Mustangs 48 Lancers 10
Saturday, Oct. 31, 1998 London, Ont Western Ontario's Scott Crawley and Fabian Rayne drove in the last spike Saturday afternoon as the Mustangs became the only undefeated regular season in team 1998 in CIAU football. Rayne, who scored four touchdowns, and Crawley combined for 306 rushing as Western Ontario derailed Windsor Lancers 48-10 at J.W. Little Stadium in London, Ont. Crawley romped for 172 yards on 22 carries while Rayne, who also caught one pass for 12 yards, went 19-for-134 for Western Ontario (8-0) against Windsor (1-6-1). The touchdowns by Rayne came from 10, four, 15 and four yards. Quarterback Mike O'Brien, who didn't have to air it out (seven-for-16, 187 yards), had a huge matinee punting, another key component as October is ripped off the wall calendar. He averaged 45.2 yards on six punts. Windsor had more yards passing (240 yards), but only one of its seven receptions reached the end zone — a 92-yard bomb from slotback Reid Cockburn to another slotback, David Fuerth, in the third quarter.

 
Huskies 21 Bisons 16
Saturday, Oct. 31, 1998 At Winnipeg, Manitoba (0-7) came up tough against No. 2 Saskatchewan (6-1). The Bisons had both players with game highs — Ron Arnold, 16-for-147 rushing, including a 100-yard touchdown, and Cory Larsen, eight receptions for 130 yards. But, with the heat on, it was the Huskies who made the plays. Linebacker Warren Muzika had two sacks, six tackles and blocked a field goal in the fourth quarter. And Matt Kellett didn't make any mistakes in placement kicking (two-for-two in field goals, one from 42 yards). Both quarterbacks passed for more than 200 yards — Sheldon Ball, Saskatchewan, 17-for-28, 230 yards and Greg Korstrom, Manitoba, 17-for-33, 220.

 
Golden Bears 23 Dinosaurs 2
Saturday, Oct. 31, 1998 At Calgary, Alberta (3-4) ended the chances of the No. 5 Dinosaurs (4-4) advancing to the postseason. Defensive back Dustin Edwards starred as Alberta forced six turnovers. Edwards had two of the Golden Bears' four interceptions, logged a sack and had six tackles. Alberta outscored Calgary 17-8 in the fourth quarter, including two touchdowns within 56 seconds — a four-yard run by Mike Spencer, then a 14-yard run by Nathan Connor. Ken Eslinger (19-for-122) and Michael Leason (seven-for-131), both of Calgary, put up game highs. Dinosaurs' quarterback Darryl Leason completed only 16 of 36 for 269 yards.

 
Thunderbirds 13 Huskies 11
Friday, Nov. 6, 1998 VANCOUVER — British Columbia running back Abkal Singh led the Thunderbirds to a 13-11 win over Saskatchewan Huskies on Friday night in a CIAU football game, but the two-point triumph wasn’t enough to earn the defending Vanier Cup champions first place in Canada West. The No. 4 Thunderbirds (6-2) needed to defeat No. 2 Saskatchewan (6-2) by four points to unfurl the conference’s pennant. The Huskies, who defeated the Thunderbirds 38-34 Oct. 3 at Saskatoon, now will play host to British Columbia next Saturday in the CW final. Singh had 16 carries for 81 yards, including a 10-yard touchdown run, and caught seven passes for another 80 for the Thunderbirds. British Columbia quarterback Shawn Olson completed 22 of 36 passes for 224 yards, but had two interceptions — both were by defensive back Colin Dutton, including one on the game’s last play. Duncan O’Mahony clicked on only one of five field-goal attempts for the Thunderbirds. Huskies’ quarterback Ryan Reid completed 11 of 22 passes for 224 yards. He also had passes intercepted.

 
Mounties 30 Axemen 28
Saturday, Nov. 7, 1998 At Sackville, N.B., running back Eric Lapointe had 247 yards on 30 carries and scored two touchdowns as No. 6 Mount Allison (6-2) defeated No. 7 Acadia (5-3) to unfurl the Atlantic pennant. David Bradford kicked three field goals for Mount Allison, the last from 11 yards with only 12 seconds left to win the game. Lapointe now has 4,666 career rushing yards — only 29 behind CIAU leader Dominic Zagari (Manitoba, 1991-95) — and has one more regular season of eligibility. Against the Axemen, Lapointe also caught four passes for 51 yards. Acadia quarterback Trevor Martin completed 21 of 35 passes for 352 yards and two touchdowns. Seven of those receptions, for 112 yards and a touchdown, were by Ben Halpin. Quarterback Dan Capone clicked on 20 of 31 passes for 290 yards for the Mounties. Craig Fougere caught five of those for 102 yards.

Eric Lapointe was later named Canadian offensive Player of the Week. The 1996 Hec Crighton Trophy winner, six-foot-one and 210 pound native of Brossard, Que., sent his season rushing total to 1,515 yards — No. 1 in the country.

 
X-Men 35 Huskies 22
Saturday, Nov. 7, 1998 At Halifax, St. Francis Xavier (1-7) closed out its season with a victory as quarterback Derek Martin threw three touchdown passes and its defence registered four interceptions, two by Mark Royale. Jason Elliott returned another of those interceptions 99 yards for a third-quarter touchdown. Martin completed 21 of 28 passes for 210 yards against Saint Mary's (4-4). Jermayne Baldwin caught two touchdown passes from Martin and Ron Lirette, who had eight receptions for 100 yards, another. Quarterback J.W. Thompson had 239 yards passing for the Huskies, completing 12 of 24 passes. Luis Perez had a game-high 113 yards rushing, with a touchdown, for Saint Mary's.

 
Stingers 27 Gaiters 17
Saturday, Nov. 7, 1998 Dunsmore Cup semifinals At Montreal, Bishop’s led by seven, 17-10, after three quarters before quarterback Sean Hoas threw a 36-yard scoring pass to Sylvain Girard, then added a touchdown on a four-yard run for No. 5 Concordia. The net offence story was a virtual tie — the Stingers, 418 to 414. Hoas completed only seven of 18 passes for 123 yards, but two went for touchdowns. Bishop’s Mark Stipe, who had nine carries for 89 yards, completed 13 of 27 passes for 181 yards and a touchdown. But he also had three interceptions. Sean Field had eight catches for a game-high 122 yards for the Gaiters.

Concordia LB Dwayne Bromfield was later named Canadian defensive Player of the Week. Bromfield made five solo tackles, four assisted tackles, two tackles for losses and added a sack. That earned the Toronto native his fourth conference defensive Player of the Week award of the season and set the stage for his winning a second Radically Canadian honor. Bromfield, six-foot-one and 225 and in his fourth season with the Stingers, is the OQIFC nominee for the Presidents’ Trophy as the top defensive player, other than a down lineman, in the CIAU.

 
Rouge et Or 48 Gee-Gees 42
Saturday, Nov. 7, 1998 At Ste.-Foy, Que., a crowd of 5,457 saw No. 9 Laval build a 35-7 lead by the end of the first quarter, then hang on for the victory. The game produced 35 penalties for 357 yards — most of that to Ottawa (19-190). Two Gee-Gees were ejected, receiver Rob Harrod and linebacker Steve Alexandre. Quarterback Phil Cote tried to bring Ottawa back from its stumbling start, completing 20 of 36 passes for 358 yards and three touchdowns. But Cote, who had 86 yards rushing and a touchdown on 15 carries, was frustrated by two interceptions, both by Philippe Lamarre. Harrod had nine receptions for 152 yards and Ibraham Tounkara six for 121 for Ottawa. It almost was a student body matinee for Laval — two quarterbacks directed an offence that featured seven rushers and six receivers.

 
Mustangs 34 Marauders 32
Saturday, Nov. 7, 1998 Yates Cup semifinals At London ON, Western Ontario running back Fabian Rayne scored four touchdowns Saturday afternoon, two in the fourth quarter, as the No. 1 Mustangs, rebounded for a 34-32 win over the Marauders in an Ontario playoff game. Rayne rushed for 136 yards on 13 carries against No. 10 McMaster and Scott Crawley added another 189 on 24 carries, including a touchdown on a 14-yard run. Other than on the scoreboard, though, McMaster chalked up the bigger, game-high numbers. Running back Chris Dorrington had 27 carries for 205 yards and two touchdowns; quarterback Ben Chapdelaine completed 21 of 29 passes for 261 yards and two touchdowns and Ryan Janzen had four receptions for 100 yards. The Marauders had 532 yards in net offence, 83 more than Western Ontario.

 
Warriors 32 Golden Hawks 10
Saturday, Nov. 7, 1998 At Waterloo, Ont., Mike Bradley had 24 carries for 158 yards and scored a touchdown as the Warriors warmed up for their showdown with Western Ontario. The Waterloo played a starring role in the triumph, creating six turnovers — that included two interceptions, two by Jason Tibbits. Wilfrid Laurier’s most effective player was running back Justin Praamsma with 21 carries, one for a touchdown, and 178 yards.

 
Golden Bears 20 Bisons 17
Saturday, Nov. 7, 1998 At Winnipeg, rookie Nathan Connor had a game-high 106 yards rushing for Alberta (4-4) and Mitch Sutherland cracked through for two sacks. The victory was the Golden Bears third in a row and gave them third place, on point differential, in head-to-head games against Calgary (38-37). Manitoba (0-8) finished as one of two CIAU teams without a win this season, but at least three Bisons went out with a bang. Quarterback Greg Korstrom threw for a conference season-high 372 yards (23-for-33) and receiver Cory Larsen had a CIAU season-high 12 receptions (207 yards).

 
Stingers 17 Rouge et Or 12 OT3
Saturday, Nov. 14, 1998 AND Sun Nov 15
Tackle Jeff Anderson stripped the ball from Laval QB Dominik Goulet, and Concordia LB Jason Casey recovered the fumble and ran it in 22 yards for for a touchdown in Sunday's first overtime period to send the Stingers to a 17-12 win. Goulet wrapped up the two-day final with 460 yards passing, completing 31 of 61 passes. Quarterback Sean Hoas, who completed only nine passes and had six interceptions, led Concordia in rushing with 106 yards on 18 carries. Mathieu Brassard, who had 45 yards rushing, caught six passes for 163 yards for the Rouge et Or. Laval's Stephane Lefebvre had a game-high 147 yards rushing.

Casey, six-foot-one and 225 pounds and a fourth-year Geography student from North Bay, Ont. was later named CIAU Defensive player of the week. He had seven solo tackles in the extended game, three more of the assisted variety and an interception, which ended a threatening drive by the Rouge et Or late in regulation time.

Prior Report
Laval quarterback Dominik Goulet emerged from the Twilight Zone on Saturday afternoon in CIAU football. The Dunsmore Cup, though, was left in the dark. Goulet threw for 429 yards as the Rouge et Or tied Concordia Stingers 10-10 in overtime, an Ontario-Quebec conference final that was suspended by darkness. The game at Concordia Stadium, a facility without artificial lights, was to be completed the next day at 2:00

At Montreal, Goulet, who began the season as Laval’s No. 3 quarterback, completed 29 of 53 passes in a game that wasn’t decided, even with two, five-minute overtimes. But Goulet, who led the nation in passing two seasons ago when he played at Concordia, wasn’t able to put the football into the end zone in a game before a crowd of 5,000. Concordia’s defence bent, but did not break, allowing only three field goals and a single by Bernard Gravel. The game’s only touchdown came on the second play from scrimmage — running back Scott Ashworth bounced in from the one after a Laval fumble deep in its zone on its first play. Mathieu Brassard also starred for the Rouge et Or, in only the school’s third season in football. He caught six passes for 163 yards and had 11 carries for another 45. Concordia quarterback Sean Hoas had a miserable matinee passing (nine-for-25 for 128, six interceptions). But he more than made up for that on option runs (14 carries for a game-high 123 yards). Wayne Dunn, a rookie end, had two sacks and eight other tackles for Concordia. But, when the second overtime ended at 4:46 pm nightfall had set in and referee Ron Morin met with the coaches — Jacques Chapdelaine of the Rouge et Or and Concordia’s Pat Sheahan — to discuss the options. “It was very difficult,” Morin said. “Ultimately, it was that safety factor.” In scenes reminiscent of the 1961 Fog Bowl — the two-day Grey Cup Game between Winnipeg and Hamilton at CNE Stadium in Toronto — a decision, also involving OQIFC commissioner Harry Zarins, latter was made to break the tie today. First there will be two 10-minute halves. Then if the tie still exisits, the conference’s overtime rule kicks in. Team A scrimmages at Team B’s 35-yard line and attempts to score, in any manner. Team B then gets the football at Team A’s 35 and does its thing. They alternate possessions — until the game is decided.

 
Axemen 35 Mounties 28
Saturday, Nov. 14, 1998 JEWETT TROPHY, Acadia 35 Mount Allison 28 Acadia's defence came up huge in the final 26 seconds as the Axemen hung on to defeat Mount Allison Mounties 35-28 in the Jewett Trophy game at Sackville, N.B. The quarterbacks put up some dizzying numbers in the Atlantic conference final before a crowd of 3,264. Mount Allison’s Dan Capone completed 30 of 49 passes, four of which for touchdowns, and 448 yards — but the offence ground to a stop in the final seconds, in the shadows of the goalposts, failing to put it into the end zone on three plays from the 10. Acadia QB Trevor Martin wasn’t terribly far off those numbers, 22-for-39 for 320 yards and four touchdowns. The Mounties, who never held the lead, completed the game’s scoring at 5:31 of the fourth quarter, a 10-yard touchdown pass to Cedric Lafreniere, but Acadia dug in after that. Craig Fougere caught seven passes for 128 yards and Lafreniere seven for 117 for Mount Allison. The most effective receiver for Martin, who also had three carries for 43 yards, was Manny Johnson (five receptions for 138 yards and three touchdowns). The fact the game would be close almost was guaranteed. During the regular season, Acadia defeated the Mounties by three points and lost by one and two points.

Acadia's Manny Johnson was later named CIAU Offensive player of the week. A six-foot-one, 210-pound wide receiver from Chicago, he was particularly sure-handed with nine receptions, three TD's, for 138 yards. He also returned punts and kickoffs for another 97 yards, sending his all-purpose game total to 235 yards. Johnson also played some defence — and even made a tackle against the Mounties.

 
Mustangs 47 Warriors 41
Saturday, Nov. 14, 1998 YATES CUP, Western Ontario 47 Waterloo 41 Western Ontario Mustangs, the No. 1 team in the country, broke to a 29-0 in the first 20 minutes, but only escaped with a six-point win, 47-41, over Waterloo Warriors in the 100th edition of the Yates Cup at London, Ont. At London, Ont., a crowd of 5,532 at J.W. Little Stadium saw two games for the price of one. Mostly, it was ol’ fashioned football, featuring teams with punishing ground games. It also was a game featuring one team with character to burn. The No. 2 Warriors had to get up off the canvas after falling into that 29-to-zilch hole. Scott Crawley had 20 carries for 240 yards and scored a touchdown for the Mustangs. Fabian Rayne, who had 17 carries for 150 yards, added three touchdowns. The Warriors’ big bangers were Mike Bradley (112 yards, two touchdowns) and Eddie Kim (101 yards, one touchdown). Waterloo’s Chris Amey had a game high eight receptions for 169 yards as quarterback Ryan Wilkinson went 15-for-24 for 240 yards. In addition burning out the scoreboard’s lights with 88 points, the teams combined for 1,083 yards (572 by Western Ontario).

 
Huskies 31 Thunderbirds 28
Saturday, Nov. 14, 1998 HARDY TROPHY Saskatchewan Huskies outscored British Columbia 10-7 in the fourth quarter to upend the reigning Vanier Cup champion Thunderbirds 31-28 in the Hardy Trophy showdown at Saskatoon. At Saskatoon, Matt Kellett went three-for-three in field-goal attempts for the Huskies. The last, a 27-yard kick at 11:56 of the fourth quarter, earned Saskatchewan its second Canada West title in three seasons before a crowd of 3,500. British Columbia, though, didn’t quit and Frank Luisser took a 21-yard scoring pass from quarterback Shawn Olson in the final minute to pull the Thunderbirds to within three, 31-28. It was Luisser’s third touchdown of the afternoon. He caught six passes for 120 yards and scored two touchdowns in that department. He also had 33 yards rushing, including a 25-yard touchdown. Jaret Rennie had six receptions for 105 yards for the Huskies as quarterback Ryan Reid clicked on 22 of 29 passes for 302 yards and two touchdowns. Akbal Singh had 11 carries for 120 yards for the Thunderbirds and Olson went 23-for-36 for 311 yards.

 
Huakies 33 Mustangs 17
Saturday, Nov. 14, 1998 CHURCHILL BOWL: Saskatchewan's Doug Rozon rushed for 214 yards as the Huskies earned their fifth trip to the Vanier Cup in the last 10 seasons with a 33-17 victory over Western. The Saskatoon crowd of more than 6,000 saw 5'-11" 221 lb. Rozon blast through some huge holes against the No. 1-ranked Mustangs, the last undefeated CIAU team. “Our offensive line really was into it,” said the fourth-year Kinesiology student from Victoria, B.C. He had averaged just under 100 yards in seven games this season. Rozon averaged 9.3 yards per carry against Western, well over his 6.2 season average.

The Huskies rocked the Mustangs’ defence with 558 yards, 306 on the ground. At times the UWO defence came up with big plays, giving the offence an opportunity to get its act together. Western Ontario LB Justin Anania (2nd year Social Sciences, Montreal) had 10 tackles, and on one play stripped the ball from Rozon and then made the recovery. Fabian Rayne with 151 yards rushing was the only Mustang to consistently crack a tough Saskatchewan defence, featuring several Vanier veterans like Warren Muzika, James Repesse, Trevor Ludtke and Mike Stewart. Saskatchewan QB Ryan Reid completed 15 of 21 passes for 252 yards using seven different receivers. Western's Mike O’Brien clicked on 12 of 22 for 195, but almost half of those totals were chalked up by Dan Disley (five receptions, 86 yards). Kelly McNairn was the game’s leading kick-returner (five for 136). Rozon got into that act, too — a kickoff return of 31 yards. He also had three receptions for 37 yards.

 
Stingers 25 Axemen 24
Saturday, Nov. 14, 1998 ATLANTIC BOWL: At Huskies Stadium in Halifax, Concordia's Dave Miller-Johnston kicked four field goals — the last from 45 yards at 13:39 of the fourth quarter — as the Stingers came back to defeat Acadia Axemen 25-24 in the Atlantic Bowl. It was Concordia's first-ever bowl win, and now gives them their first trip to the Vanier Cup.

A rain-drenched Halifax crowd of 5,723 saw the Stingers register a miracle finish with two big plays in the fourth quarter before Miller-Johnston's winning kick. The first featured Loan Duong of Concordia. Acadia’s Manny Johnson fumbled a towering punt by Miller-Johnston deep in Axemen territory, and Duong fielded it on the second bounce and sprinted into the end zone. With the convert, the Stingers trailed by only a point. Earlier Duong had been penalized for unnecessary roughing on Johnson when both were clearly out of bounds. That helped set up a touchdown that put Acadia up by 11, 17-6. The other big play came midway through the fourth when Evan Davis Jr. made a good play just to catch an option pitch from backup quarterback Jon Kronemeyer, then zipped 75 yards down the sideline and into the Axemen end zone. Kronemeyer had come on for No. 1 QB Sean Hoas, who was injured and left the game in the second quarter after being tackled by Acadia's Joshua Thomas.

Miller-Johnson’s game-winning field goal was the only time Concordia led. Acadia had 368 total yards vs Concordia's 349. Axemen QB Trevor Martin completed 30 of 46 passes for 329 yards. His favorite receivers were Manny Johnson (10 for 118) and Stuart Venables (eight for 127). Concordia's passing was 17-26 for 181 yards; Jon Kronemeyer clicked on 11 of 16 passes for 108, and Hoas had 6 for 9 and 73 yards before leaving.

 
Huskies 24 Stingers 17
Saturday Nov. 28, 1998 SkyDome, Toronto: Saskatchewan turned a botched Stingers' option play into the winning touchdown late in the fourth quarter of Vanier Cup XXXIV. Linebacker Trevor Ludtke recovered an ensuing fumble in the end zone as the Huskies defeated Concordia 24-17 before 15,157. On the play, Huskies linebacker Michael Milo crashed through to hurry and bump quarterback Jon Kronemeyer, whose pitch to RB Evan Davis Jr was well behind him and into the end zone. Davis turned back, scooped it up, and decided to run it out over the goal-line to try to give the Stingers possession on the 20. He never made it. Stretching to place the ball outside the goal line, Davis had it knocked loose by Huskies tackle Brent Dancey. Ludtke recovered to bring Canada West its fourth straight national title.

Until then the option had worked well for coach Pat Sheahan's Stinger offence. An earlier option play provided Concordia with its only offensive TD, as Davis zipped 54 yards early in the second half. A week earlier in the Atlantic Bowl burned Acadia for 75 yards on a similar play.

Early-on Saskatchewan repeatedly left Concordia in the game with dropped passes. Two looked like sure TDs. Wide open in the end zone, RB Doug Rozon dropped one on the Huskies' first offensive sequence. On their third series, wide receiver Derek Malinchuk dropped one while in behind the defence near the sideline. A 56-yard interception return TD by Stingers' Greg Casey late in the third quarter put the Huskies down by three going into the fourth quarter. Each QB threw 32 passes. Ryan Reid completed 14 for 272 yards and Jon Kronemeyer, in his first ever start for Concordia, completed 13 for 201 but had three passes intercepted — all by rookie Kurtis Albers, a Vanier Cup record. Ludtke received the Ted Morris Memorial Trophy as MVP.
Other Game-high stats:
Rozon led in rushing (23 carries, 140 yards);
Saskatchewan's Jaret Rennie was leading receiver with five,
while Stingers' Sylvain Girard led in receiving yards (100).
Punting, Matt Kellett of the Huskies averaged 49.4 yards,
Concordia's Dave Miller-Johnston had 43.9.
Kellett went three-for-four in field goals, the longest from 40 yards.
Miller-Johnston was one-for-two and clicked from 35 yards.








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1998 Individual Stats

National leaders compiled for games through Sunday Nov 8 98
SCORING                 TD     C     *C   FG    S   P
Fabian Rayne, Wes       15     0      0    0    0  90
Akbal Singh, UBC        14     0      1    0    0  86
Matt Kellett, Sas        0    22      0   18    6  82
Mike Bradley, Wat       13     0      1    0    0  80
D Miller-Johnston, Con   0    25      0   15    7  77
Rob Harrod, Ott         12     0      2    0    0  76
Derek Livingstone, McM   0    30      0   13    5  74
David Bradford, MtA      0    22      0   16    3  73
Kojo Aidoo, McM         11     0      2    0    0  70
Duncan O’Mahony, UBC     0    23      0   13    6  68
*/two-point converts

RUSHING                  C   Yds    Avg  Lgt   TD
Eric Lapointe, MtA     191  1515    7.9   79   10
Akbal Singh, UBC       156  1377    8.8   77   13
Mike Bradley, Wat      153  1147    7.5   98   12
Gerrit Stam, Gue       188  1131    6.0   64    9
Scott Crawley, Wes     154  1026    6.7   54    3
O.J. Burnett, Bis      127   913    7.2   83    7
Fabian Rayne, Wes      116   821    7.1   49   15
Ken Eslinger, Cal      119   817    6.9   88    8
Jeff Johnson, Yor      128   773    6.0   58    2
Luis Perez, StM        107   743    6.9   89    7

PASSING                  A     C    Yds  Int   TD Lgt
Ben Chapdelaine, McM   283   158   2428   15   18  73
Trevor Martin, Aca     245   151   2117    8   12 103
Phil Cote, Ott         218   120   2079    4   18  77
Shawn Olson, UBC       200   124   1877    4   10  95
Beau Howes, Que        185   102   1821    9   11  65
Darryl Leason, Cal     206   102   1747   14    9  80
Ryan Reid, Sas         185    98   1728    7    9  68
Greg Korstrom, Man     219   120   1638   14    9  54
Mike O’Brien, Wes      149    79   1607    7   10 108
Sean Hoas, Con         147    78   1535   13   15  71

RECEIVING (Receptions)   R   Yds    Avg  Lgt   TD
Chris Evraire, Ott      54   753   13.9   45    2
Cory Larsen, Man        52   736   14.2   50    2
Jermayne Baldwin, SFX   48   574   12.0   48    5
Rob Harrod, Ott         47   936   19.9   77   12
Manny Johnson, Aca      46   676   14.7  103    3
Brad Coutts, UBC        38   727   19.1   95    3
Corey Grant, WLU        34   455   13.4   45    4
Mike Linton, McM        33   591   17.9   54    4
Jason Stoter, Gue       33   382   11.6   34    1
Jamie Stoddard, Alb     32   500   15.6   42    2
Chad Gautreau, Aca      32   423   13.2   37    0

RECEIVING (Yards)        R   Yds    Avg  Lgt   TD
Rob Harrod, Ott         47   936   19.9   77   12
Chris Evraire, Ott      54   753   13.9   45    2
Cory Larsen, Man        52   736   14.2   50    2
Brad Coutts, UBC        38   729   19.2   95    3
Dan Disley, Wes         30   695   23.2   60    4
Manny Johnson, Aca      46   676   14.7  103    3
Ryan Janzen, McM        31   666   21.5   59    2
Mike Linton, McM        33   591   17.9   54    4
Jermayne Baldwin, SFX   48   574   12.0   48    5
James Maclean, Que      28   565   20.2   64    3
 
PUNTING                  P   Yds    Avg  Lgt
John Baunemann, Man     60  2585   43.1   80
Mike O’Brien, Wes       48  1994   41.5   64
Mark Irvin, MtA         73  3023   41.4   65
Jimmy McMillan, Car     60  2470   41.2   84
Jacob Marini, SFX       76  3041   40.0   70
Bentley Harris, McG     81  3206   39.6   70
Matt Armstrong, Wat     55  2158   39.2   70
Chris Sak, Win          78  3058   39.2   65
Ed Becker, WLU          56  2172   38.8   75
Matt Kellett, Sas       66  2548   38.6   61
(Min 1,000 yards)

INTERCEPTIONS            I   Yds    Avg  Lgt   TD
Donnie Ruiz, WLU         7   140   20.0   50    0
Kevin Johnson, WLU       6    25    4.2   14    0 
John Fleming, McM        5   128   25.6   63    0
Adam McLeod, Wes         5    67   13.4   47    0
Jean Desmarais, Bis      5    58   11.6   20    0
Allan Wilson, Wes        5     7    1.4    7    0
Andrew Tewsley, Que      4    62   15.5   43    0
Errol Powell, Bis        4    56   14.0   44    0
Andy Miners, Que         4    50   12.5   20    0
Jeff Lewis, Cal          4    45   11.3   41    1
Christian Cote, Con      4    43   10.8   22    0
Jason Dutrizac, MtA      4    42   10.5   15    0
Dan Elliott, UBC         4    39    9.8   13    0
Dwayne Bromfield, Con    4    26    6.5   10    0
Luke Shaver, Ott         4     0    0.0    0    0

PUNT RETURNS             R   Yds    Avg  Lgt   TD
Ibrahim Tounkara, Ott   33   511   15.5   79    1
Daniel Fleury, Lav      21   426   20.3  115    1
Kevin Johnson, WLU      28   419   15.0  111    2
Brad Coutts, UBC        32   377   11.8   35    0
Jason Tibbits, Wat      37   339    9.2   50    0
David Murza, Sas        30   333   11.1   48    0
Vincent Begin, Bis      33   318    9.6   57    1
Dave Smith, Gue         32   310    9.7   38    0
Andre Talbot, WLU       15   281   18.7   85    1
Curtis Nash, StM        17   281   16.5   90    0

KICKOFF RETURNS          R   Yds    Avg  Lgt   TD
Ron Arnold, Man         20   531   26.6   92    1
Derek Fink, Alb         18   326   18.1   31    0
Andy Miners, Que        17   318   18.7   28    0
Craig Carr, Man         17   293   17.2   48    0
Doug Rozon, Sas         10   262   26.2   57    0
Jason Tibbits, Wat       7   258   36.9  111    1
Matt Stenson, Car       14   247   17.6   33    0
Jeff Johnson, Yor        6   230   38.3  105    1
George Karkas, Yor      12   228   19.0   35    0
Paul Paterson, Win      11   227   20.6   36    0






1998 Single-Game Highs

compiled for games through Sun Nov 1 98
National leaders listed first; then leaders in other conferences

SCORING Points:
30 Ken Eslinger, Calgary Sept. 5 vs Manitoba
Sylvain Girard, Concordia Oct. 3 vs Laval
OU: 24 Mike Bradley, Waterloo (2) Oct. 10 vs McMaster
....and Oct. 24 at Windsor
Fabian Rayne, Western Ontario (2) Oct. 3 vs Waterloo
....and Oct. 31 vs Windsor
Justin Praamsma, Wilfrid Laurier Oct. 8 at Toronto
AU: 18 Eric Lapointe, Mount Allison Sept. 26 vs St. Francis Xavier
Luis Perez, Saint Mary’s Sept. 26 vs Acadia

Touchdowns:
5 Ken Eslinger, Calgary Sept. 5 vs Manitoba
Sylvain Girard, Concordia Oct. 3 vs Laval
OU: 4 Mike Bradley, Waterloo (2) Oct. 10 vs McMaster
....and Oct. 24 at Windsor
Fabian Rayne, Western Ontario (2) Oct. 3 vs Waterloo
....and Oct. 31 vs Windsor
Justin Praamsma, Wilfrid Laurier Oct. 8 at Toronto
AU: 3 Eric Lapointe, Mount Allison Sept. 26 vs St. Francis Xavier
Luis Perez, Saint Mary’s Sept. 26 vs Acadia

RUSHING Carries:
33 Gerrit Stam, Guelph Oct. 10 at Windsor
CW 27 Nathan Connor, Alberta Sept. 26 vs Calgary
AU: 31 Eric Lapointe, Mount Allison Oct. 31 at St. Francis Xavier
OQ: 23 O.J. Burnett, Bishop’s Sept. 26 at Ottawa

RUSHING Yards:
285 Eric Lapointe, Mount Allison Sept. 26 vs St. Francis Xavier
OU: 277 Gerrit Stam, Guelph Oct. 10 at Windsor
CW: 272 Akbal Singh, British Columbia Oct. 23 vs Manitoba
OQ: 215 Paul Correale, Queen’s Sept. 5 vs Concordia

RUSHING Longest:
100 Ron Arnold, Manitoba Oct. 31 vs Saskatchewan
OU: 98 Mike Bradley, Waterloo Oct. 24 at Windsor
AU: 89 Luis Perez, Saint Mary’s Oct. 17 vs St. Francis Xavier
OQ: 83 O.J. Burnett, Bishop’s Sept. 5 vs Carleton
Evan Davis, Jr., Concordia Oct. 31 at Ottawa

RECEIVING Receptions:
12 Cory Larsen, Manitoba Oct. 7 vs Alberta
OQ: 11 Chris Evraire, Ottawa Sept. 1 at McGill
AU: 9 Jermayne Baldwin, St. Francis Xavier (2) Sept. 19 vs Saint Mary’s
....and Oct. 17 at Saint Mary’s
OU: 8 Jason Stoter, Guelph Sept. 12 vs Toronto
Andy MacGregor, Waterloo Sept. 26 at York

RECEIVING Yards:
214 Brad Coutts, British Columbia Oct. 3 at Saskatchewan
OQ: 200 Rob Harrod, Ottawa Oct. 31 vs Concordia
AU: 171 Craig Fougere, Mount Allison Oct. 24 vs Saint Mary’s
OU: 160 Ray Krumme, Western Ontario Sept. 12 at McMaster

RECEIVING Longest:
108 Ray Krumme, Western Ontario Sept. 12 at McMaster
AU: 103 Manny Johnson, Acadia Sept. 19 vs Mount Allison
CW: 95 Brad Coutts, British Columbia Oct. 3 at Saskatchewan
OQ: 77 Rob Harrod, Ottawa Sept. 13 vs Laval

PASSING Attempts:
48 Derek Martin, St. Francis Xavier Oct. 17 at Saint Mary’s
OU: 46 Ben Chapdelaine, McMaster (2) Oct. 10 at Waterloo
....and Oct. 31 vs Guelph
OQ: 47 Trevor Monaghan, Ottawa Oct. 31 vs Concordia
CW: 36 Darryl Leason, Calgary Oct. 31 vs Alberta
Shawn Olson, British Columbia Nov. 6 vs Saskatchewan

PASSING Completions:
28 Derek Martin, St. Francis Xavier Oct. 17 at Saint Mary’s
OU: 26 Ben Chapdelaine, McMaster Oct. 24 at Wilfrid Laurier
OQ: 24 Phil Cote, Ottawa Sept. 1 at McGill
CW: 23 Greg Korstrom, Manitoba Nov. 7 vs Alberta

PASSING Yards:
386 Mike O’Brien, Western Ontario Sept. 12 at McMaster
CW: 375 Greg Korstrom, Manitoba Nov. 7 vs Alberta
AU: 362 Trevor Martin, Acadia Sept. 10 vs St. Francis Xavier
OQ: 340 Phil Cote, Ottawa Oct. 10 vs Queen’s

PASSING Longest:
108 Mike O’Brien, Western Ontario Sept. 12 at McMaster
AU: 103 Trevor Martin, Acadia Sept. 19 vs Mount Allison
CW: 95 Shawn Olson, British Columbia Oct. 3 at Saskatchewan
OQ: 77 Phil Cote, Ottawa Sept. 13 vs Laval

PASSING Touchdowns:
5 Sean Hoas, Concordia Oct. 3 vs Laval
OU: 4 Ryan Wilkinson, Waterloo (2) Sept. 26 at York
....and Oct. 31 vs Toronto
Mike O’Brien, Western Ontario Sept. 12 at McMaster
Ben Chapdelaine, McMaster Oct. 17 vs Windsor
AU: 3 Dan Capone, Mount Allison (2) Oct. 17 at Acadia
....and Oct. 24 vs Saint Mary’s
Trevor Martin, Acadia Sept. 19 vs Mount Allison
Derek Martin, St. Francis Xavier Nov. 7 at Saint Mary's
CW: 3 Shawn Olson, British Columbia (2) Oct. 9 vs Alberta
....and Oct. 23 vs Manitoba
Ryan Reid, Saskatchewan Sept. 19 at Calgary
Darryl Leason, Calgary Oct. 10 at Manitoba

Converts:
9 Jimmy Hartley, Calgary Oct. 10 at Manitoba
OQ: 7 Darren McNeice, Ottawa Sept. 19 at Carleton
Dave Miller-Johnston, Concordia Oct. 24 at Carleton
OU: 7 Tony Riha, Waterloo Sept. 26 at York
Jon Gardner, Waterloo Oct. 10 vs McMaster
Derek Livingstone, McMaster Oct. 17 vs Windsor
Scott O’Hara, Wilfrid Laurier Oct. 24 vs McMaster
AU: 6 Glen Sullivan, Acadia Oct. 24 vs Saint Mary’s

Field goals Made:
5 Matt Kellett, Saskatchewan Sept. 19 at Calgary
Dave Miller-Johnston, Concordia Oct. 31 at Ottawa
AU: 4 David Bradford, Mount Allison Oct. 31 at St. Francis Xavier
OU: 4 Giulio Fircano, Western Ontario Sept. 26 at Toronto
Norman Nasser, Guelph Oct. 31 at McMaster

Field goals Longest:
50 Derek Livingstone, McMaster Sept. 26 at Windsor
Matt Kellett, Saskatchewan Oct. 3 vs British Columbia
OU: 45 Jim McMillan, Carleton Sept. 12 at Concordia
AU: 43 Jacob Marini, St. Francis Xavier Sept. 19 vs Saint Mary’s

Punts Longest:
84 Jim McMillan, Carleton Sept. 5 at Bishop’s
CW: 80 John Baunemann, Manitoba Sept. 5 at Calgary
AU: 75 Jason Currie, Saint Mary’s Oct. 31 at Acadia
OU: 75 Ed Becker, Wilfrid Laurier Oct. 17 at Guelph

Kickoffs Longest:
90 Dave Miller-Johnston, Concordia Oct. 24 at Carleton
OU: 85 Giulio Fircano, Western Ontario Sept. 19 vs Wilfrid Laurier
CW: 70 Jimmy Hartley, Calgary Sept. 5 vs Manitoba
AU: 67 Jacob Marini, St. Francis Xavier Sept. 19 vs Saint Mary’s

Punt returns Longest:
115 Daniel Fleury, Laval Setp. 27 vs Carleton
OU: 111 Kevin Johnson, Wilfrid Laurier Oct. 3 vs Windsor
CW: 92 Jeff Lewis, Calgary Oct. 31 vs Alberta
AU: 90 Curtis Nash, Saint Mary’s Sept. 19 at St. Francis Xavier

Kickoff returns Longest:
111 Jason Tibbitts, Waterloo Oct. 10 vs McMaster
OQ: 96 Paul Correale, Queen’s Oct. 10 at Ottawa
CW: 92 Ron Arnold, Manitoba Nov. 7 vs Alberta
AU: 35 Dean Adams, Saint Mary’s Sept. 19 at St. Francis Xavier

Interception returns Longest:
99 Jason Elliot, St. Francis Xavier Nov. 7 at Saint Mary's
OU: 72 Justin Anania, Western Ontario Oct. 3 vs Waterloo
OQ: 55 Adam Macdonald, Carleton Sept. 27 at Laval
CW: 48 Brock Balog, Calgary Sept. 5 vs Manitoba


Best Defence through Nov 8 98
Least Scored Upon Teams                     AVGE
TEAM             GP  W   L  T    F   A   P AGAINST
Western Ontario   8  8   0  0  295 139  16    17.4
Concordia         8  6   2  0  233 141  12    17.6
Mount Allison     8  6   2  0  219 142  12    17.8
Waterloo          8  7   1  0  297 150  14    18.8
UBC               8  6   2  0  262 151  12    18.9
Wilfrid Laurier   8  5   3  0  248 155  10    19.4
York              8  3   5  0  118 155   6    19.4
Laval             8  4   4  0  181 156   8    19.5
Saint Mary’s      8  4   4  0  153 161   8    20.1
McGill            8  4   4  0  110 166   8    20.8
Acadia            8  5   3  0  206 168  10    21.0
Saskatchewan      8  6   2  0  226 168  12    21.0
Queen’s           8  3   5  0  208 170   6    21.3
Calgary           8  4   4  0  261 175   8    21.9
Ottawa            8  6   2  0  267 184  12    23.0
Bishop’s          8  4   4  0  189 193   8    24.1
Guelph            8  3   4  1  134 211   7    26.4
St F Xavier       8  1   7  0  112 219   2    27.4
Alberta           8  4   4  0  140 223   8    27.9
Toronto           8  0   8  0  103 226   0    28.3
McMaster          8  4   4  0  278 254   8    31.8
Windsor           8  1   6  1   87 275   3    34.4
Carleton          8  1   7  0  102 280   2    35.0
Manitoba          8  0   8  0  142 314   0    39.3


Best Offence through Nov 8 98
Highest scoring Teams                        AVGE
TEAM             GP  W   L  T    F   A   P     FOR
Waterloo          8  7   1  0  297 150  14    37.1
Western Ontario   8  8   0  0  295 139  16    36.9
McMaster          8  4   4  0  278 254   8    34.8
Ottawa            8  6   2  0  267 184  12    33.4
UBC               8  6   2  0  262 151  12    32.8
Calgary           8  4   4  0  261 175   8    32.6
Wilfrid Laurier   8  5   3  0  248 155  10    31.0
Concordia         8  6   2  0  233 141  12    29.1
Saskatchewan      8  6   2  0  226 168  12    28.3
Mount Allison     8  6   2  0  219 142  12    27.4
Queen’s           8  3   5  0  208 170   6    26.0
Acadia            8  5   3  0  206 168  10    25.8
Bishop’s          8  4   4  0  189 193   8    23.6
Laval             8  4   4  0  181 156   8    22.6
Saint Mary’s      8  4   4  0  153 161   8    19.1
Manitoba          8  0   8  0  142 314   0    17.8
Alberta           8  4   4  0  140 223   8    17.5
Guelph            8  3   4  1  134 211   7    16.8
York              8  3   5  0  118 155   6    14.8
St F Xavier       8  1   7  0  112 219   2    14.0
McGill            8  4   4  0  110 166   8    13.8
Toronto           8  0   8  0  103 226   0    12.9
Carleton          8  1   7  0  102 280   2    12.8
Windsor           8  1   6  1   87 275   3    10.9


Most Powerful through Nov 8 98
Margin of Victory                            AVGE
TEAM             GP  W   L  T    F   A   P  MARGIN
Western Ontario   8  8   0  0  295 139  16    19.5
Waterloo          8  7   1  0  297 150  14    18.4
UBC               8  6   2  0  262 151  12    13.9
Wilfrid Laurier   8  5   3  0  248 155  10    11.6
Concordia         8  6   2  0  233 141  12    11.5
Calgary           8  4   4  0  261 175   8    10.8
Ottawa            8  6   2  0  267 184  12    10.4
Mount Allison     8  6   2  0  219 142  12     9.6
Saskatchewan      8  6   2  0  226 168  12     7.3
Acadia            8  5   3  0  206 168  10     4.8
Queen’s           8  3   5  0  208 170   6     4.8
Laval             8  4   4  0  181 156   8     3.1
McMaster          8  4   4  0  278 254   8     3.0
Bishop’s          8  4   4  0  189 193   8    -0.5
Saint Mary’s      8  4   4  0  153 161   8    -1.0
York              8  3   5  0  118 155   6    -4.6
McGill            8  4   4  0  110 166   8    -7.0
Guelph            8  3   4  1  134 211   7    -9.6
Alberta           8  4   4  0  140 223   8   -10.4
St F Xavier       8  1   7  0  112 219   2   -13.4
Toronto           8  0   8  0  103 226   0   -15.4
Manitoba          8  0   8  0  142 314   0   -21.5
Carleton          8  1   7  0  102 280   2   -22.3
Windsor           8  1   6  1   87 275   3   -23.5


Best Record through Nov 8 98
By Winning Percentage                         W/L
TEAM             GP  W   L  T    F   A   P PERCENT
Western Ontario   8  8   0  0  295 139  16   1.000
Waterloo          8  7   1  0  297 150  14   0.875
Mount Allison     8  6   2  0  219 142  12   0.750
Concordia         8  6   2  0  233 141  12   0.750
Ottawa            8  6   2  0  267 184  12   0.750
Saskatchewan      8  6   2  0  226 168  12   0.750
UBC               8  6   2  0  262 151  12   0.750
Acadia            8  5   3  0  206 168  10   0.625
Wilfrid Laurier   8  5   3  0  248 155  10   0.625
Saint Mary’s      8  4   4  0  153 161   8   0.500
Laval             8  4   4  0  181 156   8   0.500
Bishop’s          8  4   4  0  189 193   8   0.500
McGill            8  4   4  0  110 166   8   0.500
McMaster          8  4   4  0  278 254   8   0.500
Calgary           8  4   4  0  261 175   8   0.500
Alberta           8  4   4  0  140 223   8   0.500
Guelph            8  3   4  1  134 211   7   0.438
Queen’s           8  3   5  0  208 170   6   0.375
York              8  3   5  0  118 155   6   0.375
Windsor           8  1   6  1   87 275   3   0.188
St F Xavier       8  1   7  0  112 219   2   0.125
Carleton          8  1   7  0  102 280   2   0.125
Toronto           8  0   8  0  103 226   0   0.000
Manitoba          8  0   8  0  142 314   0   0.000