Montreal Alouettes | The winding path of kicker Joseph Zema

(Hamilton) Attending the Gray Cup game is not that easy. Ask Nick and Antonietta Zema.


The parents of Australian Alouettes kicker Joseph Zema were due to arrive Thursday from Melbourne, after making stops in Los Angeles, Chicago and Toronto.

“It’s a long journey. But I can’t wait to see them,” said Zema, whose wife and son are also due to arrive Saturday from Texas.

Zema’s path to the Canadian Football League (CFL) was even more winding than that of his parents. The former Australian rules football player, who reached the semi-professional ranks, became interested in North America and its many versions of the game before joining ProKick Australia, a program for aspiring kickers who wish to find a niche in the university ranks.

I was trying to find another outlet. I was too old to be drafted [par l’Australian Football League]so I turned to ProKick Australia, who pointed me in the right direction.

Joseph Zema

He was at a crossroads, having completed his degree in Sport and Exercise Science from the Australian Catholic University in Melbourne.

“I had a choice between going through the ProKick Australia process and learning how to kick a football or retiring and getting a job in an office,” he recalled. I am very happy with the decision I made. »

He then joined the University of the Incarnate Word in San Antonio, Texas. The school, which operates within the Southland Association, was founded in 1881 by the Sisters of Charity of the Incarnate Word, who initially established themselves in Texas to combat a cholera epidemic.

In his only year of eligibility, in 2017, Zema acted as a kicker for the school team.

It’s been a whirlwind, to be honest. I knew I was going there in July, and I think around August 4th or 5th, if I’m not mistaken, I arrived in San Antonio and just two weeks later I was playing in front of 40 000 spectators at Fresno State University stadium.

Joseph Zema

Zema attracted interest from his first kicks, even making a 75-yard punt. He finished the season averaging 46.7 yards per punt, and 31 of his 77 attempts went 50 yards or more.

He was therefore named to the Southland Association all-star team, after pushing the opposing team inside his line 20 to 20 times.

“It was a great experience, and it changed my life, to be honest. And for the better,” he continued about his academic career.

After college, he attended the Tampa Bay Buccaneers and New York Jets mini-training camps in 2018, before getting a tryout with the Jacksonville Jaguars. In 2019, he played for the San Antonio Commanders of the now-defunct Alliance of American Football.

Zema was eventually selected seventh overall in the 2021 CFL International Draft, becoming one of four Australian kickers to go in the first round.

The Calgary Stampeders (Cody Grace), Saskatchewan Roughriders (Adam Korsak), Toronto Argonauts (John Haggerty) and Winnipeg Blue Bombers (Jamieson Sheahan) also have an Australian kicker in their ranks.

“I think they have more than one trick up their sleeve,” Blue Bombers special teams coach Paul Boudreau said of the effects Australian kickers can put on the flight of the ball.

Zema, who is 29 years old, has taken up residence with the Birds, and he takes the metro regularly.

“It reminds me a bit of Melbourne, with all these restaurants and cafes… It’s nice to be able to spend six months here working,” he said. We don’t feel like we have to work. I really fell in love with Montreal. »

He lives in Texas during the off season. It was there that he met his wife, Ariana, six years ago. A teacher, who spends June and July with Zema in Montreal.

The rest of the season, their relationship is a long distance one.

Zema, in his third season with the Alouettes, and precision kicker David Côté provide the Alouettes with a formidable tandem. Zema also imprisoned the Argonauts deep in their territory for most of the Eastern final on November 10.


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