CFL

Tiger-Cats move closer to playoff berth with win over Redblacks

Seth Small's 30-yard field goal on the final play of the game earned the Tiger-Cats an exciting 30-27 victory over the Ottawa Redblacks on a windy Friday night in Hamilton.

Hamilton moves ahead of Saskatchewan in battle for final East Division playoff spot

Backup Tiger-Cats quarterback Matthew Shiltz (18) celebrates after teammate Seth Small (47) kicked the game-winning field goal on the final play of the game for a 30-27 victory over the Ottawa Redblacks on Friday night at Tim Hortons Field in Hamilton. (Peter Power/The Canadian Press)

Seth Small and the Hamilton Tiger-Cats still control their playoff destiny.

Small's 30-yard field goal in a brisk wind on the final play earned the Ticats an exciting 30-27 CFL victory over the Ottawa Redblacks on Friday night in Hamilton.

Hamilton (7-10) moved ahead of Saskatchewan (6-10) in the battle for the third and final East Division playoff spot, with the Riders playing the Calgary Stampeders (10-6) on Saturday night.

Regardless of what Saskatchewan does, Hamilton can cement third with a win next week in Ottawa. The Redblacks (4-13), who were eliminated from post-season contention with the loss, are 0-8 at TD Place.

WATCH | Ticats' Small kicks game-winning field goal on final play:

Tiger-Cats Seth Small kicks winning field goal, eliminates Redblacks from a spot in the postseason

2 years ago
Duration 0:33
Hamilton's Seth Small kicked a 30 yard winning field goal giving the Tiger-Cats a 30-27 win over Ottawa.

Hamilton finishes the regular season 6-3 at Tim Hortons Field, having won six of its last seven there.

"It's exciting, I think it's something this team has earned," Small said. "We didn't start the best at the beginning of the season but we've kind of found our true self and who we are and Coach Oh (head coach Orlondo Steinauer) has led that.

"We're excited about where we're going. We're getting hot for a Grey Cup."

Small's fifth boot of the game capped a 45-yard, six-play drive into a brisk 30-kilometre wind. Veteran Matt Shiltz replaced injured starter Dane Evans (right thumb) in the fourth quarter and had a key 25-yard run on the final march.

"It was a typical Hamilton wind out there," Small said. "You can allow it to be a factor as much as you want it to be.

"I told [Ticats coaches] the 40-yard line before the game was where I felt comfortable. You just try to hit a pure ball and it will go straight."

Hamilton earned a sixth straight victory over Ottawa and third consecutive win overall. Over the three triumphs, Small has kicked 13 field goals.

"I think CFL stands for Crazy Fun League," said Small, in his first season with Hamilton. "I'm having a blast up here."

Caleb Evans breaks CFL record

Ottawa's Caleb Evans set a single-season CFL record for rushing TDs by a quarterback. He ran for two majors, giving him 15 before a Tim Hortons Field sellout of 24,062 spectators.

The previous mark was 14 set in 1991 by B.C.'s Doug Flutie and later tied in 2018 by Toronto's James Franklin.

Ottawa did all of its scoring with the wind — 21 points in the second, six in the fourth. Hamilton managed more points going into the breeze (14 in the fourth) than it did with it (13).

Dane Evans put Hamilton ahead 24-21 just 22 seconds into the fourth. After scoring on a two-yard run, Evans found Tyler Ternowski on the two-point convert but left later in the quarter with a right thumb injury following an 11-yard run.

"It's the CFL and two quarterbacks are going to have to play," Shiltz said. "We'll see how Dane is feeling and I'm praying he's going to be OK but if not, it's like any other position on the field, it's next man up. That's my mentality."

Shitlz finished three-of-four passing for 43 yards. Evans completed 16-of-29 passes for 220 yards and an interception and also lost a fumble.

Hamilton's Sean Thomas Erlington ran for a game-high 104 yards on 13 carries. Tim White had seven catches for 113 yards.

"I can't say enough," Steinauer said of Thomas Erlington. "That guy just shows up when called upon, he's steady.

"He took some shots and fell forward and was able to allow us to keep the run going."

Tiger-Cats running back Sean Thomas Erlington carries the ball during first half on Friday night in Hamilton. (Peter Power/The Canadian Press)

Evans' TD was set up by Cedric Wilcots II's sack-strip of Ottawa quarterback Nick Arbuckle that gave Hamilton possession at the Ottawa 29-yard line late in the third. Lewis Ward's 36-yard field goal at 3:48 tied the score 24-24.

Arbuckle finished 19-of-27 passing for 166 yards as Ottawa lost the contest despite winning the turnover battle 4-1.

"It's not often you're going to win a bunch of games when you lose the takeaway battle, but it just shows it can be done," said Steinauer. "We had the wind to start the half but we didn't do much with it until the very end, and that was the key thing.

"We've done a decent job throughout the season of actually moving the ball into the wind and coming away with some sort of points."

Small's 27-yard field goal at 8:52 put Hamilton ahead 27-24 before Ward made it 27-27 with a 51-yard kick at 13:17.

Brandin Dandridge had the other TD for Ottawa. Ward kicked the converts and two field goals.

Evans scored both of Hamilton's touchdowns. Small added the converts.

Ottawa led 21-13 at halftime, scoring all of its points in the second quarter with the wind. Hamilton put up 10 points in the first.

Evans' one-yard run at 10:25 of the second — he punted the ball after scoring his record-setting TD — at 10:25 gave Ottawa a 21-10 advantage. Small hit from 23 yards out at 13:02 to round out the first-half scoring.

Dandridge put Ottawa ahead 14-10 at 3:38. He scored on a 51-yard return after stripping Hamilton receiver Steven Dunbar Jr. following a 15-yard reception.

It came shortly after Evans' two-yard TD run pulled Ottawa to within 10-7 at 2:44 to finish a 10-play, 81-yard march on the Redblacks' first possession with the wind.

Hamilton opened with the breeze at its back after Ottawa won the toss and deferred. The Ticats had a lost fumble, punt and missed 53-yard field goal attempt on their first three possessions before Small opened the scoring with a 37-yard field goal at 8:05.

Evans put Hamilton ahead 10-0 with a one-yard run on third down at 13:15.

WATCH | Unknown history of the 1962 Fog Bowl:

The Unknown History of the 1962 Fog Bowl

2 years ago
Duration 15:36
The 1962 Grey Cup was historic for many reasons, mainly because most people couldn't see it. Rob Pizzo examines perhaps the weirdest 24 hours in CFL history.

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