2009 Winnipeg Blue Bombers season

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2009 Winnipeg Blue Bombers season
Head coachMike Kelly
Home fieldCanad Inns Stadium
Results
Record7–11
Division place3rd, East
Playoff finishdid not qualify
Uniform

The 2009 Winnipeg Blue Bombers season was the 52nd season for the team in the Canadian Football League and their 77th overall. The Blue Bombers were in the playoff hunt until the last game of the season, at home, against the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, but lost the game and failed to qualify for the playoffs for the first time since 2005, finishing the season with a disappointing 7–11 record.

Off-season[edit]

On February 18, Milt Stegall announced his retirement from the Blue Bombers.[1]

New coach Mike Kelly made many roster moves to re-shape the team that lost the 95th Grey Cup in 2007 and slid to an 8 win and 10 loss record in the 2008 season.[2]

CFL draft[edit]

The 2009 CFL Draft took place on May 2, 2009. Due to trades, the Blue Bombers did not have a selection until the third round, when they chose lineman Mike Morris from UBC.[3]

Round Pick Player Position School/Club Team
3 19 Mike Morris OL UBC
4 27 Adam Bestard OL Wilfrid Laurier
5 35 Peter Quinney FB Wilfrid Laurier
6 45 Thaine Carter LB Queen's

Notable transactions[edit]

  • On February 18, Riall Johnson was acquired by the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, from the Toronto Argonauts for import middle linebacker Zeke Moreno and a conditional draft pick.[4]

Pre-season[edit]

Date Opponent Score Result
June 17 Hamilton Tiger-Cats 32–22 Win
June 24 @ Montreal Alouettes 31–27 Loss

Regular season[edit]

Division standings[edit]

Team GP W L T PF PA Pts
Montreal Alouettes 18 15 3 0 600 324 30 Details
Hamilton Tiger-Cats 18 9 9 0 449 428 18 Details
Winnipeg Blue Bombers 18 7 11 0 386 508 14 Details
Toronto Argonauts 18 3 15 0 328 502 6 Details

Season schedule[edit]

Week Date Opponent Score Result Attendance Record
1 July 2 at Edmonton Eskimos 19–17 Loss 30,650 0–1
2 July 10 Calgary Stampeders 42–30 Win 29,533 1–1
3 July 18 at Hamilton Tiger-Cats 25–13 Loss 24,292 1–2
4 July 24 Toronto Argonauts 19–5 Loss 28,466 1–3
5 August 1 at Toronto Argonauts 13–12 Win 23,821 2–3
6 August 8 at Calgary Stampeders 31–23 Loss 35,650 2–4
7 August 15 Montreal Alouettes 39–12 Loss 25,053 2–5
8 August 21 at BC Lions 37–10 Win 27,983 3–5
9 Bye
10 Sept 6 at Saskatchewan Roughriders 29–14 Loss 30,945 3–6
11 Sept 13 Saskatchewan Roughriders 55–10 Loss 29,533 3–7
12 Sept 20 at Montreal Alouettes 33–14 Loss 20,202 3–8
13 Sept 26 Toronto Argonauts 29–24 Win 22,446 4–8
14 Oct 2 Edmonton Eskimos 27–17 Win 21,965 5–8
15 Oct 12 at Hamilton Tiger-Cats 38–28 Win 19,562 6–8
16 Oct 18 BC Lions 24–21 Loss 24,048 6–9
17 Oct 24 Montreal Alouettes 41–24 Win 21,378 7–9
18 Nov 1 at Montreal Alouettes 48–13 Loss 20,202 7–10
19 Nov 8 Hamilton Tiger-Cats 39–17 Loss 29,038 7–11

Roster[edit]

2009 Winnipeg Blue Bombers roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Slotbacks

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Inactive List

Practice Roster


Italics indicate Import player
Roster updated 2009-10-08
Depth ChartTransactions
46 Active, 8 Inactive, 8 PR

More rosters

Statistics[edit]

Offence[edit]

Passing[edit]

Player Att Comp % Yards TD INT Rating
Michael Bishop 404 204 50.5 3035 15 19 68.3
Stefan LeFors 88 41 46.6 459 2 2 60.8
Bryan Randall 20 6 30.0 58 0 4 (−44.2)
Richie Williams 10 3 30.0 30 0 1 39.6
Casey Bramlet 14 2 14.3 18 0 3 (−70.0)

[5]

Rushing[edit]

Player Att Yards Avg. TD Fumbles
Fred Reid 238 1371 5.8 7 2
Yvenson Bernard 53 336 6.3 0 4
Brock Ralph 22 135 6.1 0 2
Michael Bishop 19 84 4.4 0 6
Stefan LeFors 15 68 4.5 0 2
Lavarus Giles 14 54 3.9 2 0
Mike Renaud 1 25 25 0 0
Ricky Santos 7 24 3.4 1 0
Bryan Randall 4 23 5.8 0 0
Romby Bryant 4 12 3.0 0 1
Richie Williams 2 9 4.5 0 0
Gavin Walls 1 9 9.0 0 0
Jon Oosterhuis 1 0 0.0 0 0

[6]

Receiving[edit]

Player No. Yards Avg. Long TD
Adarius Bowman 55 925 16.8 55 6
Terrence Edwards 52 816 15.7 57 5
Brock Ralph 43 559 13.0 32 2
Titus Ryan 8 285 35.6 65 3
Romby Bryant 20 232 11.6 36 0
Otis Amey 18 188 10.4 47 0
Fred Reid 21 157 7.5 24 1
Yvenson Bernard 17 153 9.0 29 0
Aaron Hargreaves 14 142 10.1 17 0
Dudley Guice, Jr. 6 76 12.7 33 0
Arjei Franklin 5 53 10.6 18 0
Jon Oosterhuis 4 41 10.3 19 0
Craphonso Thorpe 2 27 13.5 14 0
Steve Morley 1 8 8.0 8 0
Riall Johnson 1 8 8.0 8 0
Daryl Stephenson 1 1 1.0 1 0

[7]

Awards and records[edit]

Playoffs[edit]

The Blue Bombers finished third in the East Division with a record of 7 wins and 11 losses. The BC Lions, who finished fourth in the West, had a better record of 8 wins and 10 losses, and under the cross-over rule eliminated Winnipeg from the playoffs. The Lions went on to play the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in the East semi-final at Ivor Wynne Stadium, winning 34-27 in overtime before losing to the Montreal Alouettes in Montreal in the East Final.

References[edit]

  1. ^ [1][usurped]
  2. ^ Owen, Judy (2009-06-09). "New Bombers coach Mike Kelly has wasted no time putting stamp on CFL club". Winnipeg Sun. Archived from the original on June 26, 2009. Retrieved 2009-06-10.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  3. ^ Penton, Kirk (2009-05-02). "Bombers draft four Canucks". Winnipeg Sun. Retrieved 2009-05-03.
  4. ^ [2][usurped]
  5. ^ "CFL.ca". Archived from the original on 2009-06-27. Retrieved 2009-03-16.
  6. ^ "Rushing 2009 | Statistics | CFL.ca | Official Site of the Canadian Football League". Archived from the original on 2015-03-23. Retrieved 2017-08-23.
  7. ^ "Receiving 2009 | Statistics | CFL.ca | Official Site of the Canadian Football League". Archived from the original on 2015-10-02. Retrieved 2017-08-23.