2008 Toronto Argonauts season explained

Team:Toronto Argonauts
Year:2008
Record:4–14
Division Place:3rd, East
General Manager:Adam Rita
Coach:Rich Stubler (to Sept. 9)
Don Matthews (Sept. 9 to Oct. 31)
Stadium:Rogers Centre
Playoffs:did not qualify
Uniform:Image:CFL TOR Jersey 2008.png
Shortnavlink:Argonauts seasons

The 2008 Toronto Argonauts season was the 51st season for the team in the Canadian Football League and 136th season overall. The Argonauts attempted to win their 16th Grey Cup, but they failed to make the playoffs ending the season on a nine-game losing streak.

Offseason

CFL draft

In the 2008 CFL Draft, 48 players were chosen from among 752 eligible players[1] from Canadian universities across the country, as well as Canadian players playing in the NCAA. The first two rounds were broadcast on TSN.ca with host Rod Black.

RoundPickPlayerPositionSchool/Club Team
213 WR McMaster
3 21 LB McGill
4 29 DB Ottawa
5 37 OL Western Ontario
6 42 (via Edmonton) OL Calgary
6 44 (via Montreal) REC Western Ontario
6 45 DB Saginaw Valley

Notable transactions

[2]

Allen retires as pro football's career passing leader with 72,381 yards. He played on four Grey Cup-winning teams and in 2005, he captured the league's outstanding player award.[4]

Rosters

Preseason roster

As of June 10, 2008

End of season roster

Schedule

Preseason

Week Date Opponent Location Final score Attendance Record
AJune 12@ AlouettesMolson StadiumT 34 – 3420,2020–0–1
BJune 19Tiger-CatsRogers CentreL 28 – 2121,4220–1–1
[5]

Regular season

Week Date Opponent Location Final score Attendance Record
1June 27@ Blue BombersCanad Inns StadiumW 23 – 1626,1551–0
2July 3Tiger-CatsRogers CentreL 32 – 1330,8221–1
3July 10@ EskimosCommonwealth StadiumL 47 – 2831,7071–2
4July 20EskimosRogers CentreW 35 – 3128,5222–2
5July 27@ RoughridersMosaic StadiumL 28 – 2228,8002–3
6August 1Blue BombersRogers CentreW 19 – 1128,5233–3
7August 7@ Tiger-CatsIvor Wynne StadiumL 45 – 2119,4233–4
8August 15AlouettesRogers CentreL 32 – 1430,5213–5
9Bye
10September 1@ Tiger-CatsIvor Wynne StadiumW 34 – 3125,9114–5
11September 7@ AlouettesMolson StadiumL 45 – 1920,2024–6
12September 12Blue BombersRogers CentreL 39 – 928,4534–7
13September 20@ StampedersMcMahon StadiumL 34 – 433,1354–8
14September 27StampedersRogers CentreL 44 – 1628,6724–9
15October 3LionsRogers CentreL 24 – 2028,2734–10
16October 10@ Blue BombersCanad Inns StadiumL 25 – 1627,2684–11
17October 18AlouettesRogers CentreL 43 – 3430,2624–12
18October 25@ LionsBC Place StadiumL 55 – 3235,9944–13
19October 30RoughridersRogers CentreL 45 – 3828,6544–14
[5]

Regular season

Toronto started the season off well, winning against the Blue Bombers 23–16, but after that they compiled a 2–5 record the next 7 games. After the Bye week, everything went downhill, they won only one game and lost 9 start to finish the season 4–14 and missed the playoffs.

A raucous Labour Day crowd of 25,911 at Ivor Wynne Stadium witnessed a game that ended with a 34–31 Argo victory, the team's first win against the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the season. Argo head coach Rich Stubler's job was rumoured to be on the line.[6] Argos receiver Arland Bruce III found time for a little theatrics, celebrating an 11-yard TD catch by donning a Spider-Man mask produced from his pants.[6] Several days later, the Canadian Football League fined the Argonauts receiver an undisclosed amount for his touchdown celebration.[7] Game officials had handed Bruce an objectionable conduct penalty after the incident. Bruce went on to have his best game of the season, catching 10 passes for a game-high 149 yards.[7]

On September 9, Stubler was released as head coach of the Argonauts after posting a 4–6 record. There was the belief he could not get along with those he worked with.[8] The Argos hired Don Matthews, the head coach with the most wins in CFL history and head coach during Toronto's back-to-back Grey Cup victories in 1996 and 1997, to return to the club as head coach for the third time in his coaching career.[9]

During the team's next game on September 12 at Rogers Centre, Winnipeg Blue Bombers slotback Milt Stegall became the most prolific receiver in the history of the CFL.[10] The slotback caught a 92-yard pass at 9:02 in the second quarter to raise his career total to 14,983, breaking the mark of 14,891 yards previously held by former Stampeders receiver Allen Pitts.[10] Stegall took a pass from Kevin Glenn and scored a touchdown, his second of the game. It put the Bombers ahead 28–3.[10]

On October 31, Matthews resigned from the Argonauts a day after the conclusion of the Argonauts 2008 regular season, which saw the Argos fail to win a game in the eight games under his leadership and finishing out of the playoffs for the first time since the 2001 CFL season.[11]

Season standings

Statistics

Offence

Passing

PlayerAttComp%YardsTDINTRating
Kerry Joseph 536307 57.3 4174 17 14 82.0
Cody Pickett 10463 60.6 610 1 2 72.2
Reggie McNeal 20 0.0 0 0 0 2.1
[12]

Rushing

PlayerAttYardsAvg,TDFumbles
Jamal Robertson 117645 5.5 6 2
Kerry Joseph 78493 6.3 4 7
Dominique Dorsey 6441 0 6.4 2 2
Jeff Johnson 831 3.9 1 0
[12]

Receiving

[13]

PlayerReceptionsYardsTouchdowns
Arland Bruce9212109
Andre Talbot769154
Reggie McNeal436062
P. K. Sam364993
James Robinson253811
Tyler Scott193090
Dominique Dorsey152860

Defence

Postseason

The Argos finished third in the East Division with a record of 4 wins and 14 losses. The Edmonton Eskimos, who finished fourth in the West, had a better record of 10 and 8, and under the cross-over rule eliminated Toronto from the playoffs and play the Winnipeg Blue Bombers in the East semi-final.

Awards and records

Milestones

Further reading

On training camp:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Draft List for Year 2008 . Canadian Football League . 2008-01-28 . 6 May 2008 .
  2. Web site: McCormick . Murray . March 5, 2008 . Dealt to Argos . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20080408151457/http://www.canada.com/reginaleaderpost/news/story.html?id=a8ea04d9-788c-4fdb-882c-fe2fa7b86c76&k=65864 . 2008-04-08 . 2008-04-12 . Canada.com.
  3. News: Argonauts add former NFLer Bethel Johnson . CBC News . May 26, 2008. 28 May 2008 .
  4. Web site: CFL legend calling it quits . usurped . https://archive.today/20120713145139/http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Football/CFL/Toronto/2008/05/27/5682066-sun.html . July 13, 2012 . Canoe.
  5. Web site: 2008 Toronto Argonauts. 2010-11-07.
  6. News: Argos hang on to beat Ticats . The Star . Toronto . Chris . Zelkovich . September 2, 2008 . April 22, 2010.
  7. Web site: Posted Sports. network.nationalpost.com.
  8. News: Stubler just didn't fit. https://archive.today/20120714015021/http://slam.canoe.ca/Slam/Football/CFL/Toronto/2008/09/10/6722091-sun.html. usurped. July 14, 2012. Simmons. Steve. 2009-09-10. Toronto Sun. 2008-09-10.
  9. News: Argos fire Stubler, bring back Matthews. 2008-09-09. CBC Sports. 2008-09-09.
  10. Web site: CFL on Yahoo Canada Sports – News, Scores, Standings, Rumours, Fantasy Games. Yahoo Sports.
  11. News: Matthews quits as Argos coach. 2008-10-31. CBC Sports. 2008-10-31. https://web.archive.org/web/20081205061830/http://www.cbc.ca/sports/story/2008/10/31/argos-matthews.html. 5 December 2008 . live.
  12. Web site: CFL.ca . 2017-08-23 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081211021918/http://cfl.ca/statistics/league/stat/Passing/year/2008/ . 2008-12-11 . dead .
  13. Web site: 2008 Receiving Statistics. CFL.ca. 2008-11-06. https://web.archive.org/web/20081010201906/http://cfl.ca/statistics/league/stat/Receiving/year/2008/. 2008-10-10. dead.
  14. Web site: CFL.ca - 2008 East & West Division All-Stars . 2017-08-23 . https://web.archive.org/web/20081206180127/http://www.cfl.ca/article/2008-east-west-division-all-stars . 2008-12-06 . dead .