Into the snake pit

Into the snake pit

Big stakes tonight for X-Men, Huskies
By Monty Mosher, The Chronicle Herald

IT’S THE BIGGEST game of the regular season in AUS football at a place that has been nothing more than a snake pit for the St. Francis Xavier X-Men for the past decade.

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Gary Waterman’s X-Men visit Steve Sumarah’s Saint Mary’s Huskies at Huskies Stadium tonight in a clash of 5-1 teams.

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Barring a slip on the last weekend of the season, which sees the Acadia Axemen at Saint Mary’s and Mount Allison Mounties at St. F.X., tonight’s winner should claim a first-round playoff bye and host the Loney Bowl on Nov. 14. Since the current three-team playoff format started in 2002, the team with the week off and home-field advantage has won every conference title.

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"We know the importance of this game and so do they," said Sumarah.

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The X-Men have lost 16 straight in Halifax, none more painful than the last two title games.

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St. F.X. missed a late field goal that would have forced overtime last year. Saint Mary’s rallied in the fourth quarter to win in 2007.

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Waterman said the X-Men need a breakthrough in Halifax.

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"It’s a whole new ball game going down there and playing them in their park," he said. "They’ve got a lot of confidence there."

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Acadia, 1-5, goes to Mount Allison, 0-6, on Saturday with the Mounties clinging to thin hopes for third.

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The X-Men were 5-0, including a 29-24 win to open the season over the Huskies at Oland Stadium, until stumbling to a 33-12 loss to Bishop’s at home last week. The Huskies used the opening-game loss to deflate a few egos and haven’t lost since, beating McGill 39-23 last week in Montreal for a fifth straight win.

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"That game kind of opened our eyes a little bit," Huskies quarterback Jack Creighton said of the September loss.

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"We’ll be ready to fight on Friday."

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The Huskies were prone to turnovers in the first meeting between the two teams, and took some bad penalties, and still held the lead late in the fourth quarter, when X-Men kicker Anthony Alix ran 41 yards on a fake punt to set up the deciding major.

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Waterman believes the playoff bye gives a team a genuine advantage more than a perceived one. "It doesn’t guarantee you are going to win the AUS, but history is history," he said.

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Sumarah agrees: "I think this game is as big as a playoff game."

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SMU kicker Justin Palardy needs 11 points to pass St. F.X. running back Paul Brule for top spot on the league’s all-time scoring list. Brule had 306 points from 1964-67.

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The X-Men will make a game-time decision on defensive end Dave Skillen and wide receiver Akeem Foster. Both suffered leg injuries last week.

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Huskies all-Canadian defensive tackle Dan Schutte will be out at least one more week after arthroscopic knee surgery.

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Running back Tristan Jones injured his knee last week, but will dress.

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Creighton will look to be sharper than in the first meeting. He had four interceptions in Week 1.

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"I want to sit in the pocket a little more and be a little more patient," he said.

Axemen (1-5) at Mounties (0-6) — The math is simple for Jeff Cummins and his reeling Axemen — just win.

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Acadia has lost five in a row, their last victory a 58-10 blowout of the Mounties on opening day in Wolfville.

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An Acadia win slams the door on the Mounties and puts the Axemen on the road for the semifinal on Nov. 7.

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Realistically, the Mounties have to win twice and have the Axemen lose their last two to steal the playoff spot.

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Neither has a shred of momentum after the Axemen turned in a stinker in a 39-5 Homecoming loss to Concordia and the Mounties got slammed 73-7 at Laval.

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Cummins unloaded on his team last week, admitting his frustrations boiled over after 13 turnovers in three games.

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But he knows his team still has a chance to salvage the season.

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"As bad as we’ve played, we’ve got a chance to be a playoff team," said Cummins. "This is a playoff game for us."

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Mount A head coach Kelly Jeffrey said his team is happy to be in a playoff race regardless of tough odds. His team is coming off consecutive games against the Huskies followed by the Laval trip.

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"We wanted to get through the last two or three weeks and still keep our heads up and realize we’ve got something to play for," he said.

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Mount A receiver/returner Gary Ross will start the day in sight of several AUS records, including career receptions, receiving yards and kickoff return yards.