Stampeders erase huge deficit to beat Tiger-Cats in overtime

Hamilton took a 24-0 lead in their home opener, but Bo Levi-Mitchell led the comeback with two touchdown passes to force overtime, where the Calgary Stampeders would defeat the Tiger-Cats 33-30.

HAMILTON — Bo Levi Mitchell wanted to sprinkle his Calgary Stampeders teammates with praise after his team overcame a 24-point deficit to defeat the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in overtime on Saturday.

The Stampeders (2-0) found themselves behind 24-0 late in the first half before they kicked into gear to score a 33-30 victory against the Ticats (0-2) in their home opener before 22,711 fans at Tim Hortons Field.

"I know a lot of people will be talking about our offence and me turning things around," said Mitchell, who completed 28 of 42 for 313 yards, two touchdowns and an interception.

"But the defence stepped up. We had an interception to win the game, a strip on a quarterback sneak for a touchdown and Rene, that guy doesn't get enough credit. He's the best kicker in the game."

Paredes went a perfect 4-for-4, including a game-tying 39-yard field goal as regulation time expired and a 35-yarder on Calgary's offensive possession to begin overtime.

Calgary linebacker Jameer Thurman picked off Hamilton quarterback Dane Evans at the Calgary 17-yard line to end the game. Stampeders safety Titus Wall also had an interception in the third quarter and stripped Evans on a quarterback sneak in the fourth quarter.

Wall scampered in for a 45-yard score to tie the game at 30-30 with 4:12 remaining.

"We just kept preaching resiliency and making a play at the right time," Wall said.

"Everybody showed up at the right time," Mitchell added. "It sucked to be in that position, and a good team shouldn't be in that position. But all the guys stepped up and made the plays."

Evans didn't want to make a commotion on the disastrous third and inches, but he felt the whistle should have been blown before Wall made his big play.

"I've done those a million times, and that play was over," Evans said. "Every one of them, always. As soon as the quarterback gets the first, it's over. They never let it linger. It is what it is. That was definitely a big turning point. That was probably the biggest momentum shift."

Evans vowed to be better after the Ticats' fourth-quarter collapse in their season opener in Regina against the Saskatchewan Roughriders last week. That appeared to be the case in the first half, playing behind a revamped offensive line.

He tossed three touchdowns in the opening two quarters and finished with 425 throwing yards, completing 36 of 51.

But the Ticats were badly outscored in the fourth quarter for the second game in a row. The Roughriders put together an 18-7 rally last week, and the Stampeders outplayed Hamilton by a 23-6 margin in the fourth quarter and overtime on Saturday.

"It's disappointing," Ticats head coach Orlondo Steinauer said. "It's going to sting, and it should. We didn't finish. We had opportunities and didn't do it."

Wall picked off Evans in the end zone early in the third quarter. On Hamilton's next possession, they were stopped on third down at Calgary's nine-yard line when Thurman stopped a quarterback sneak from Matt Shiltz.

The Stampeders lost running backs Charlie Power and Peyton Logan to injuries in this outing.

After Evans' first-half touchdown passes to Sean Thomas Erlington, Steven Dunbar and Tim White, Mitchell pulled aside his receiving corps in the locker room to talk about a comeback.

The bid stalled early in the third quarter when Ticats defensive back Javon Santos-Knox intercepted Mitchell.

"I lit a fire in myself after the pick," said Mitchell, who tossed touchdowns to Reggie Begelton and Luther Hakunavanhu in the third quarter.

Hamilton kicker Michael Domagala booted field goals of 21, 18 and 39 yards in his three attempts.

When submitting content, please abide by our  submission guidelines, and avoid posting profanity, personal attacks or harassment. Should you violate our submissions guidelines, we reserve the right to remove your comments and block your account. Sportsnet reserves the right to close a story’s comment section at any time.
We use cookies to improve your experience. Learn More or change your cookie preferences. By continuing to use this site, you agree to the use of cookies.
close