Photo credit Corey Stanford
OTTAWA (CIS) – A plethora of CIS and OUA football records fell on Saturday as the regular season came to an end in the Ontario conference.
It was a historic day in London, where the nationally top-ranked Western Mustangs completed their first 8-0 campaign since 1998 and secured first place in the OUA standings thanks to a convincing 50-10 victory over visiting York (2-6).
Thanks to their seventh 50-plus-point performance of the fall – a new CIS record, the Mustangs finished the regular schedule with 458, easily surpassing the previous single-season OUA mark of 424 set by the Greg Marshall-coached McMaster Marauders in 2003. Their tally ranks third on the all-time CIS list behind Laval’s 481 points in 2003 and Saint Mary’s 480 in 2001.
Laval had four 50-point outings in 2003, Saint Mary’s had five in 2001 and McMaster six a decade ago.
Individually, a pair of Western standouts had record-breaking afternoons.
Playing in his final regular season game, senior Lirim Hajrullahu of St. Catharines, Ont., scored 20 points and was a perfect 5-for-5 on field goal attempts to become the highest-scoring player in CIS history and the most prolific kicker in OUA annals, with 422 points and 77 field goals over his five-year career.
The previous national mark for most points in a career was 410 by Ottawa’s Neil Lumsden (1972-1975), while Matthew Falvo (2008-2012), also a former Ottawa great, had set the OUA standard of 75 field goals last fall.
Hajrullahu, who finishes second on the CIS career field goal list behind Sherbrooke’s William Dion (82 from 2008 to 2012), also tied the single-season OUA mark with 22. McMaster’s Michael Ray had accomplished the feat in 2003.
Meanwhile, thanks to a personal-best 547 passing yards, Hajrullahu’s teammate Will Finch set a CIS season record with 3,047, eclipsing the 3,033 yards amassed in 2009 by Michael Faulds, also in a Mustang uniform. With 32 completions in 48 attempts, the sophomore quarterback from Burlington, Ont., also set an OUA mark for best completion percentage in a campaign with 69.7, slightly better than McMaster’s Kyle Quinlan’s success rate from a year ago (68.9).
Finch’s 547 yards, the best performance in the country this fall, ranks seventh in CIS history and fourth on the OUA list.
It was the fifth 500-yard effort this season by CIS pivots, also a new record for a single year. Other members of the 500 Club in 2013 include Bishop’s Jordan Heather (538), McGill’s Pierre-Luc Dussault (538), Ottawa’s Aaron Colbon (523) and Calgary’s Andrew Buckley (512).
Finch’s new season standard for passing yards might be short-lived however as Heather had a 465-yard day against Concordia on Saturday, giving him 2,648 on the year with one game left on the Gaiters’ RSEQ schedule. Heather averages 378.3 yards through the air per outing this fall, compared to Finch’s CIS-leading 380.9.
While all eyes were on the Mustangs and their two all-stars on the final day of OUA league play, another prestigious CIS record fell, this one in Toronto.
In a 50-18 loss by his Warriors to the Varsity Blues, Waterloo receiver Nick Anapolsky, a product of Guelph, Ont., hauled in 11 balls to finish the campaign with 74 catches. The previous CIS and OUA marks were held by McGill’s Charles-Antoine Sinotte (72 in 2007) and Windsor’s Jordan Brescacin (68 in 2012), respectively.
Finally, history was also made Friday night in Calgary, where Dinos running back Mercer Timmis had three touchdowns on the ground in a 46-27 home win over Regina.
With one contest remaining on Calgary’s schedule, the sophomore from Burlington now holds the single-season Canada West standards for both all-purpose (18) and rushing (17) majors. He broke the old conference mark of 17 all-purpose scores set by Calgary receiver Don Blair in 1995 and took sole possession of the league record for most rushing touchdowns as he was tied with former UBC standout Chris Ciezki (2006) going into yesterday’s match-up.
NOTE: With a combined 649 passing yards against York, Finch and Western backup Blake Huggins set a single-game OUA record. The previous conference mark of 603 had been set by Wilfrid Laurier versus McMaster on Oct. 8, 1992.
CIS FOOTBALL RECORD BOOK
CIS CAREER LEADERS:
Scoring
422 Lirim Hajrullahu, Western
(2009-2013)
410 Neil Lumsden, Ottawa
(1972-1975)
392 Frank Jagas, Western
(1990-1994)
Field goals
82 William Dion,
Sherbrooke (2008-2012)
77 Lirim Hajrullahu,
Western (2009-2013)
75 Matthew Falvo, Ottawa
(2008-2012)
CIS SINGLE-SEASON
LEADERS:
Scoring (team)
481 (Laval – 2003)
480 (Saint Mary’s – 2001)
458 (Western – 2013)
424 (McMaster – 2003)
Passing yards
3047 Will Finch, Western (2013)
3033 Michael Faulds, Western (2009)
3001 Tommy Denison, Queen’s (2002)
Receptions
74 Nick Anapolsky,
Waterloo (2013)
72 Charles-Antoine
Sinotte, McGill (2007)
68 Jordan Brescacin,
Windsor (2012)
Completion percentage
75.2 Benoit Groulx, Laval (2008)
73.2 Benoit Groulx, Laval (2009)
70.6 Eric Dzwilewski, Calgary (2012)
70.4 Garry Smith, Alberta
(1962)
69.7 Will Finch, Western
(2013)
Scoring
150 Paul Brule, StFX (1967)
148 Neil Lumsden, Ottawa (1975)
144 Mike Murphy, Ottawa (1976)
130 Lirim Hajrullahu, Western
(2013)
126 Jesse Lumsden, McMaster
(2004)
All-purpose touchdowns
25 Paul Brule, StFX
(1967)
21 Jesse Lumsden,
McMaster (2004)
20 Paul Brule, StFX
(1966)
20 Kojo Aidoo, McMaster
(2000)
20 Jesse Lumsden,
McMaster (2003)
18 Mercer Timmis, Calgary
(2013)
Rushing touchdowns
21 Paul Brule, StFX
(1967)
21 Jesse Lumsden,
McMaster (2004)
20 Paul Brule, StFX
(1966)
20 Kojo Aidoo, McMaster
(2000)
19 Jesse Lumsden,
McMaster (2003)
17 Mercer Timmis, Calgary
(2013)
About Canadian Interuniversity Sport
Canadian Interuniversity Sport is the national governing body of university sport in Canada. Every year, 11,000 student-athletes and 700 coaches from 55 universities and four regional associations vie for 21 national championships in 12 different sports. CIS also provides high performance international opportunities for Canadian student-athletes at Winter and Summer Universiades, as well as numerous world university championships. For further information, visit www.cis-sic.ca or follow us on:
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/CIS_SIC
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/cissports
YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/universitysport
-CIS-