St. Clair Saints take home Canadian Bowl title
It’s been 25 years since the Canadian Bowl was won by a team from Ontario, but the drought is over.
The St. Clair College football team made an electric comeback during the Canadian Junior Football League (CJFL) national championship game Saturday and brought home the title with a 37-22 win over the Okanagan Sun.
“Didn’t go right for us right away,” said head coach Mike Lachance, who was an assistant coach when the AKO Fratmen (Alpha Kai Omega Fraternity, started by Windsor high school students) won the title in 1999.
His Saints could not find their groove in the first half and trailed 22-9 at the break. Lachance admitted to being a little worried, but a talk with quarterback Maurice Sodja calmed the situation down.
“He said, coach, just trust me, I trust you. You trust me, we'll win this game. Let me just take the game over,” said Lachance.
Sodja did just that. He opened the second half with a 51-yard strike to Cameron St. Kitts-Park, that landed St. Clair inside the five-yard line.
Sodja took matters into his own hands and punched it in to cut the deficit to 22-16.
Billy Patterson Junior made a clutch interception on defense, which led to another Sodja touchdown on the next series. Just like that, the tide had turned with St. Clair no longer playing catch up, leading 23-22.
“We were moving the ball all through the first half. We just weren't finishing,” Sodja said.
“We came out, in second half came back, we started finishing. When we started finishing, we kept our foot on the gas, and we put it away.”
Early in the fourth quarter, Anthony Adams pounced on a botched snap that eluded Okanagan quarterback Liam Kroeger.
That set St. Clair up on the Suns’ four-yard line. Sodja followed up by carrying home his third touchdown of the night.
Later in the quarter, he hit Tai Colquhoun with an 11-yard slant pass for the final touchdown of the game, as St. Clair ascended to the top of the Canadian junior football mountain.
“This team deserves it,” said St. Kitt’s-Park.
“Everyone all year saying Ontario wasn’t this, Ontario wasn’t that. I’m just thankful. Words can’t explain it.”
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
'I recognize these footsteps': How Trump and 'coyote' smuggling changed life at the border
Bent signs bolted to the rail threaten fines and imprisonment should violators cross the boundary into the United States, a warning many people are choosing to ignore simply by walking around the barrier.
She took a DNA test for fun. Police used it to charge her grandmother with murder in a cold case
According to court documents, detectives reopened the cold case in 2017 and then worked with a forensics company to extract DNA from Baby Garnet's partial femur, before sending the results to Identifinders International.
Danielle Smith announces new team to patrol Alberta-U.S. border
Premier Danielle Smith says her government will create a team of specially-trained sheriffs tasked with patrolling the Alberta-U.S. border.
McDonald's employee who called 911 in CEO's shooting is eligible for reward, but it will take time
More than 400 tips were called into the New York Police Department's Crime Stoppers tip line during the five-day search for a masked gunman who ambushed and fatally shot UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson last week.
Doug Ford says cutting off U.S. energy supply amid tariff threats a 'last resort'
Premier Doug Ford says that cutting off the energy supply to the U.S. remains a “last resort” amid the threat of a promised 25 per cent tariff on Canadian goods but he is warning that his government is ultimately prepared to use “every tool” in its toolbox “to protect the livelihoods of the people of Ontario.”
Man who set fires inside Calgary's municipal building lost testicle during arrest: ASIRT
Two Calgary police officers have been cleared of any wrongdoing in an incident that saw a suspect lose a testicle after being shot with an anti-riot weapon.
Ho ho, oh no: Man sought by police goes down chimney and gets stuck
A Massachusetts man trying to escape from police shimmied down the chimney. And got stuck.
Law firm warns $47.8B First Nations child welfare reforms could be lost with election
A legal review commissioned by the Assembly of First Nations is warning a $47.8-billion deal to reform the First Nations child welfare system could be moot if there's a change in government in the upcoming year.
Housing unaffordability still rising despite billions in government measures: PBO
The Parliamentary Budget Officer says the number of households in need is still rising even though Canada is spending billions of dollars a year to address housing affordability,