Manitoba

Bombers, Collaros hoping to emerge from early season slump as they prepare to host B.C. Lions

Winnipeg (0-2) hosts the B.C. Lions (1-1) on Friday night following an uncharacteristic slow start to the 2024 campaign. Not since 2016 have the Blue Bombers — who've reached the Grey Cup four straight years — been two games below .500.

Winnipeg hasn't been 2 games under .500 since 2016

A quarterback in a blue uniform throws a football.
Like the rest of his team, Winnipeg Blue Bombers quarterback Zach Collaros, shown here against the Montreal Alouettes on June 6, has gotten off to a slow start this season. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)

It's only the third game of the season but it is an important one for Zach Collaros and the Winnipeg Blue Bombers.

Winnipeg (0-2) hosts the B.C. Lions (1-1) on Friday night following an uncharacteristic slow start to the 2024 campaign. Not since 2016 have the Blue Bombers — who've reached the Grey Cup four straight years — been two games below .500.

Again, it's early, but what's been very surprising has been the lack of production from a Winnipeg offence that last season averaged a CFL-high 31.7 points per game. Through two games, the unit is last in both offensive scoring (13.5 points per game) and net offence (296.5 yards, compared to a league-high 414.7 last year).

A ground attack that was the league's best last year (139.1 yards per game) has averaged just 67 yards thus far. Brady Oliveira, last year's rushing leader who was the CFL's top Canadian and a finalist for its outstanding player award — ran for 38 yards in 11 carries in Winnipeg's opening 27-12 loss to Montreal before sitting out last week's 23-19 defeat to Ottawa with a knee ailment.

Johnny Augustine had 31 rushing yards and a TD on seven carries against Ottawa as Winnipeg ran for 42 yards on 13 attempts (three-yard average). And the Bombers were six-of-18 on second-down conversions.

It's also been an uncharacteristically slow start for Collaros, who threw for a career-high 4,252 yards last season and league-best 33 TDs. The two-time CFL MVP has completed just 54.7 per cent of his passes and has more interceptions (three) than scoring strikes (none).

A telling statistic thus far has been Winnipeg's offence converting a league-low 34.1 per cent of second-down chances.

But Winnipeg's defence — which is without starting linemen Jackson Jeffcoat (retired) and Ricky Walker (signed with Calgary as free agent but currently not playing) and cornerback Demerio Houston (Calgary, free agent) — has also had its ups and downs. While the Bombers are tied for fourth in fewest offensive points allowed (25 per game), they've only forced one turnover.

Last year, Houston had a CFL-high 10 turnovers himself (league-best seven interceptions, three fumble recoveries) and already has an interception with Calgary.

Kicker Sergio Castillo — who made over 90 per cent of his field goals last year — is two-for-four so far. Myron Mitchell is averaging 5.6 yards on 11 punt returns while his predecessor Janarion Grant, now with Toronto, is averaging a CFL-best 14.3 yards although the Argonauts have only played once this season.

Winnipeg faces a B.C. team coming off a 26-17 home win over Calgary. Quarterback Vernon Adams Jr. threw for 277 yards and two TDs while rushing four times for 16 yards and a touchdown.

The contest is also an important one for B.C., which has lost to Winnipeg in the West Division final the last two years. The Lions have been picked by some to play in the Grey Cup, which will be held at B.C. Place Stadium in November.

The Bombers have won eight of the last 10 matchups although B.C. was victorious in Winnipeg last year.

Collaros is 6-1 as a Bomber versus B.C. and Winnipeg hasn't started 0-3 since 2012.