The Alouettes lose to the Argonauts and miss the final

The Alouettes had a two-part game, with a very good second half. But in the end, the Montreal squad came up short, losing 34-27 to the Toronto Argonauts, who will represent the East in the Gray Cup final next week.

Although Danny Maciocia’s team led the last two quarters 24-10 in scoring, the largesse on defense in the first half ultimately proved too costly.

“It’s not just the fourth quarter. I think this sequence sums up the whole game, said the man who led his last game at the head of the Alouettes. They made plays, but we weren’t able to execute our defence. We couldn’t stop them. »

“In the second half, I thought that with a turnover, or if we could have stopped them a few times, given the way our offense was working, I thought we could have picked up a few more points to make the difference. »

Noel Thorpe’s troops looked particularly bad on the Argos’ third touchdown of the game, which made it 21-3 in favor of the hosts.

Posted at the Montreal 46 line for a second down and a yard, substitute quarterback Chad Kelly, usually used for sneaking, decided instead to pass the ball to DaVarius Daniels, left alone on the left side by the Alouettes defense . An awkward game at this stage of the season. Daniels easily crossed the rest of the court to register the middle finger.

“We had lost [Wesley Sutton] a few plays before, and the staff in place didn’t cover the receiver well,” Maciocia said of the blunder.

The Argonauts only needed five plays to cross 82 yards on this sequence, which illustrates well the first half of the Alouettes, who had also conceded touchdowns to Andrew Harris and AJ Ouellette before that of Daniels.

The Alouettes saved the day by scoring 10 points on their next two streaks, including the touchdown on a 36-yard play by Tyson Philpot — the Alouettes’ best element with Trevor Harris in this game — so that the visitors only returned to the locker room 11 points behind. Trifles in the Canadian League.

The Alouettes’ offense revived the debate on the first possession of the third quarter, while William Stanback, quiet until then, carried the ball for 52 yards to bring his team closer to three points after the two-point conversion successfully completed.

“I thought we could come back to this game,” Maciocia said. We also scored as soon as we returned from the break. But we needed to counter them, to stop them. We couldn’t do it. »

After Boris Bede and David Côté traded field goals, McLeod Bethel-Thompson delivered the final blow to the Alouettes by joining Kurleigh Gittens Jr. on a 31-yard play for the hosts’ fourth touchdown, restoring a 10-point priority to the Alouettes. Argos.

Côté made his fourth field goal of the game to bring the Alouettes back to a touchdown, but the defense was unable to stop the Argos attack.

“It sums up our season a bit, with ups and downs,” Maciocia said of the game. I felt that we were going to be able to get out of it, make a few more plays in the second half. Unfortunately, it is not the case. You have to give them credit: they’re a well-managed team, and they beat us. »

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