March 29th, 2024

Rourke’s control of the game an echo of Doug Flutie


By Graham Kelly - INSIDE THE CFL on August 18, 2022.

Halfway through the fourth quarter last Saturday, the B.C. Lions were trailing the hometown Stampeders 33-24. They had the ball on the Calgary 53, a perfect time for a quarterback sneak. Instead, Nathan Rourke fired a 33 yard strike to Bryan Burnham who continued to the end-zone. After Sean Whyte’s convert the Lions were two points behind. It was a tremendously gutsy call by offensive coordinator Jordan Maksymic (from St. Albert) and head coach Rick Campbell (raised in Edmonton) perfectly executed by Rourke (born in Victoria, B.C.). He was protected by his superb offensive line coached by Kelly Bates from Humboldt, Saskatchewan.

On the ensuing kick-off Calgary restored their nine point advantage when Peyton Logan ran 69 yards to the enemy end-zone. Not to worry. Rourke marched his cohorts down the field but the drive stalled at Calgary’s 49. On third and nine, eschewing conventional wisdom to punt the Stamps in deep, Rourke again threw to Burnham for 33 yards, another gutsy call. Three plays later they were again trailing by two.

With the clock running down, Calgary scrimmaged at their 43. Bo Levi Mitchell to Reggie Begelton for two yards, then to Kamar Jorden for 15. Then another two yarder to Jorden, an incomplete pass and a punt that hemmed the Lions in at the five. Aided by an undeserved roughing the passer call on Cameron Judge, Rourke moved his team into field goal range for the victory.

On both gutsy completions, defensive coverage on Burnham was like a blanket. Campbell could make those calls because he had a quarterback and receiver who were able to execute perfectly.

On the other side, Calgary’s Dave Dickenson didn’t have that luxury and had to be conservative. He has no receiving corps. Begelton, one of the highest paid receivers in the league is currently ranked 19th overall. Jorden is 25th. Their leading pass-catcher Malik Henry is hurt. To take up the slack, Dickenson turned to Canadians Jake Philpot and Rick Sindani. Both were injured in the second quarter after performing well. The fans were calling for Mitchell’s head but he has no reliable targets to throw to.

Rourke, on the other hand, has the best group in the league with Burnham,(8 for 165 yards and a touchdown), Dominique Rhymes (7 for 101 yds.) Jevon Cottoy (5-69 yds) Keon Hatcher (6 for 61) and Lucky Whitehead (7 for 57) yards. Whitehead is the highest paid Lion receiver but Burnham is by far the best.

The underperforming Begelton and Jorden each had four receptions for 27 yards.

Russ Jackson told me that an outstanding quarterback must have above average peripheral vision, as if he has eyes in the back of his head. This, along with a sixth sense, tells him when defenders are coming at him from the side or behind. Nathan Rourke possesses those gifts which allow him to be calm in the pocket and wait, if need be, to the last minute to release the ball. He has a great sense of the space he occupies in the pocket. He doesn’t decide which play to call but after the ball is snapped he is flawless in his execution. I did not see him throw an errant pass. All I saw was tremendous arm strength and accuracy.

The only other CFL quarterback I’ve seen in over 50 years who was so completely in control of his gifts and the game was Doug Flutie.

Rourke makes about $80,000, $670,00 less than the Lions were paying Mike Reilly. The 24 year old Canadian will be a free agent at season’s end. If B.C. truly wants to restore the franchise to the days of its former glory(the mid-eighties when they averaged over 40,000 fans a game), owner Amar Doman had better be prepared to shell out a million dollars to keep Rourke in the Lions’ den.

Calgarys’ three losses have been to the Bombers and Lions. They were in all of them until the end. They’ve fought tooth and nail despite having 10 starters in sick bay. The games have been great entertainment.

Meanwhile, Saskatchewan ended their two game losing streak with a 34-23 win over the Elks. Next up for the 5-4-Riders? Home and home series against B.C. and Winnipeg, followed by a rematch with Edmonton and another game in Winnipeg. Ouch!

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