2018 U Sports football season

The 2018 U Sports football season began on August 24, 2018 with the St. Francis Xavier X-Men visiting the Saint Mary's Huskies in Halifax, Nova Scotia.[1] The Quebec Student Sport Federation teams played an hour later with the Laval Rouge et Or visiting the Sherbrooke Vert et Or and the McGill Redmen playing the Montreal Carabins.[2] The Ontario University Athletics teams began play on August 25, 2018 and the Canada West teams opened their season one week later on August 31, 2018.[3]

2018 U Sports football season
Regular season
DurationAugust 24, 2018 – October 27, 2018
Playoffs
Start dateOctober 27, 2018
Hardy CupSaskatchewan Huskies2018-11-10
Yates CupWestern Mustangs2018-11-10
Dunsmore CupLaval Rouge et Or2018-11-10
Loney BowlSt. Francis Xavier X-Men2018-11-10
Mitchell BowlWestern Mustangs2018-11-17
Uteck BowlLaval Rouge et Or2018-11-17
Vanier Cup
DateNovember 24, 2018
SiteQuebec City, Quebec
ChampionsLaval Rouge et Or
U Sports football seasons

The conference championships were played on November 10 and the season will conclude on November 24 with the 54th Vanier Cup championship at PEPS Stadium in Quebec City, Quebec.[4][5] 27 university teams in Canada are scheduled to play U Sports football, the highest level of amateur Canadian football.

Regular season

Standings

2018 AUS standings
TeamW L PF PA PtsPly
Saint Mary's71 188141 14
St. FX62 224156 12X
#10 Acadia53 236146 10X
Mount Allison26 162220 4
Bishop's08 91238 0
† – Conference Champion
Rankings: U Sports Top 10
TeamW L PF PA PtsPly
#2 Laval80 30754 16
#4 Montréal62 25646 12X
McGill26 109233 4X
Sherbrooke26 84228 4X
Concordia26 109304 4
† – Conference Champion
Rankings: U Sports Top 10
TeamW L PF PA PtsPly
#1 Western80 38489 16
#5 Ottawa62 211179 12X
#6 Guelph53 236175 10X
#8 Carleton53 255224 10X
McMaster53 151163 10X
Waterloo44 263272 8X
Laurier44 248222 8
Queen's35 244226 6
York35 172297 6
Windsor17 168292 2
Toronto08 122315 0
† – Conference Champion
Rankings: U Sports Top 10
TeamW L PF PA PtsPly
#3 Calgary80 313133 16
#9 British Columbia53 174190 10X
#7 Saskatchewan53 258174 10X
Manitoba35 195224 6X
Alberta26 103212 4
Regina17 107217 2
† – Conference Champion
Rankings: U Sports Top 10
*The Regina Rams forfeited three wins due to use of an ineligible player. Those games were then awarded as 1–0 wins to Alberta, UBC, and Manitoba.[6]

Post-season awards

Award-winners

Quebec Ontario Atlantic Canada West NATIONAL
Hec Crighton Trophy Hugo Richard (Laval) Tre Ford (Waterloo) Kaion Julien-Grant (St. Francis Xavier) Adam Sinagra (Calgary) Adam Sinagra (Calgary)
Presidents' Trophy Marc-Antoine Dequoy (Montreal) Fraser Sopik (Western) Brad Herbst (Saint Mary's) Ben Hladik (UBC) Fraser Sopik (Western)
J. P. Metras Trophy Mathieu Betts (Laval) Kene Onyeka (Carleton) Thomas Grant (Acadia) Joel Van Pelt (Calgary) Mathieu Betts (Laval)
Peter Gorman Trophy Vincent Forbes-Mombleau (Laval) Jack Hinsperger (Waterloo) Shedler Fervius (Saint Mary's) Tyson Philpot (Calgary) Tyson Philpot (Calgary)
Russ Jackson Award Jeremie-Billal Lardi (Sherbrooke) Mackenzie Ferguson (Western) Cameron Davidson (Acadia) Jayden McKoy (Manitoba) Mackenzie Ferguson (Western)
Frank Tindall Trophy Glen Constantin (Laval) Greg Marshall (Western) Gary Waterman (St. Francis Xavier) Wayne Harris Jr. (Calgary) Greg Marshall (Western)

All-Canadian Team

Offence
First Team Second Team
Quarterback Adam Sinagra (Calgary) Hugo Richard (Laval)
Running Back Cedric Joseph (Western)

Tyler Chow (Saskatchewan)

Jordan Socholotiuk (St. Francis Xavier)

Gabriel Polan (Sherbrooke)

Inside Receiver Tyler Ternowski (Waterloo)

Trivel Pinto (UBC)

Dylan Schrot (Manitoba)

Gordon Lam (Waterloo)

Wide Receiver Kurleigh Gittens Jr. (Laurier)

Kaion Julien-Grant (St. Francis Xavier)

Regis Cibasu (Montreal)

Hunter Karl (Calgary)

Centre Samuel Lefebvre (Laval) Jonathan Zamora (St. Francis Xavier)
Guard David Brown (Western)

Samuel Thomassin (Laval)

Mattland Riley (Saskatchewan)

Jacob Czaja (St. Francis Xavier)

Tackle Ketel Asse (Laval)

Logan Bandy (Calgary)

Jesse Gibbon (Waterloo)

Carter O'Donnell (Alberta)

Defence
First Team Second Team
Defensive Tackle Evan Machibroda (Saskatchewan)

Vincent Desjardins (Laval)

Trevaughn James (Laurier)

Thomas Grant (Acadia)

Defensive End Mathieu Betts (Laval)

Kene Onyeka (Carleton)

Joel Van Pelt (Calgary)

Tristian Koronkiewicz (Saskatchewan)

Linebacker Fraser Sopik (Western)

Ben Hladik (UBC)

Brian Harelimana (Montreal)

Boston Rowe (Calgary)

Brad Herbst (Saint Mary's)

Lukas Korol (Guelph)

Free Safety Stavros Katsantonis (UBC) Daniel Valente Jr. (Western)
Defensive Halfback Marc-Antoine Dequoy (Montreal)

Will Amoah (Laurier)

Shae Weekes (Manitoba)

Nate Rostek (Mount Allison)

Cornerback Jamie Harry (Ottawa)

Deane Leonard (Calgary)

Emile Chenevert (Laval)

Bleska Kambamba (Western)

Special Teams
First Team Second Team
Kicker Niko DiFonte (Calgary) David Cote (Laval)
Punter Brad Mikoluff (Manitoba) Marc Liegghio (Western)
Returner Kurleigh Gittens Jr. (Laurier) Trivel Pinto (UBC)[7]

Post-season

The Vanier Cup is played between the champions of the Mitchell Bowl and the Uteck Bowl, the national semi-final games. In 2018, according to the rotating schedule, the Canada West Hardy Trophy championship team will visit the Yates Cup Ontario championship team for the Mitchell Bowl. The winners of the Atlantic conference's Loney Bowl will visit the Québec conference Dunsmore Cup championship team for the Uteck Bowl.[4]

Atlantic University Sport

  November 3
Semi-final
    November 10
Loney Bowl
                 
    1 Saint Mary's 9
  2 St. Francis Xavier 33     2 St. Francis Xavier 33
  3 Acadia 10  

Réseau du sport étudiant du Québec

November 3
Semi-finals
November 10
Dunsmore Cup
      
1 Laval 40
4 Sherbrooke 0
1 Laval 14
2 Montreal 1
2 Montreal 48
3 McGill 2

Ontario University Athletics

  October 27
Quarter-finals
    November 3
Semi-finals
    November 10
111th Yates Cup
                           
        1 Western 39  
  4 Carleton 30     4 Carleton 13    
  5 McMaster 25         1 Western 63
      3 Guelph 14
        2 Ottawa 22    
  3 Guelph 45     3 Guelph 27  
  6 Waterloo 34  

Canada West Universities Athletic Association

November 3
Semi-finals
November 10
82nd Hardy Trophy
      
1 Calgary 37
4 Manitoba 13
1 Calgary 18
3 Saskatchewan 43
2 British Columbia 28
3 Saskatchewan 31

National Semifinals

Uteck Bowl
1 2 34Total
St. Francis Xavier 0 0 000
Laval 16 23 17763

at Telus Stadium, Quebec City, Quebec

  • Date: November 17
  • Game time: 12:30 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: 0°C, cloudy
  • Game attendance: 5747
  • Referee: Stephane Roy
  • TV announcers (Sportsnet 360, TVA Sports): Arash Madani, Andy Baechler
  • Boxscore
Mitchell Bowl
1 2 34Total
Saskatchewan 7 10 0724
Western 7 10 92147

at TD Stadium, London, Ontario

National Championship

1 2 34Total
Laval 10 7 10734
Western 0 13 0720

at Telus Stadium, Quebec City, Quebec

  • Date: November 24
  • Game time: 1:00 p.m. EST
  • Game weather: Cloudy, -3°C
  • Game attendance: 12,380
  • Referee: Walter Berry
  • TV: Sportsnet, TVA Sports
  • Boxscore

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.