CIS football: UBC T'Birds QB Billy Greene claims 2011 Hec Crighton trophy

CIS football: UBC T'Birds QB Billy Greene claims 2011 Hec Crighton trophy

VANCOUVER (CIS)Billy Greene, a fourth-year quarterback from the University of British Columbia, was named the Canadian Interuniversity Sport football player of the year, on Thursday night.

The native of Surrey, B.C., became the third Thunderbirds’ player to claim the Hec Crighton trophy since its inception in 1967. Running back Mark Nohra and quarterback Jordan Gagner were honoured in 1997 and 1987, respectively.

Other CIS recipients announced during the Gibson’s Finest CFL Player Awards at the Vancouver Convention Centre were Concordia linebacker Max Caron, who captured the Presidents’ trophy as the nation’s top defensive player; Laval defensive end Arnaud Gascon-Nadon, who became the first-ever multiple winner of the J.P. Metras trophy as the most outstanding down lineman; and Western Ontario running back Tyler Varga, who claimed the Peter Gorman trophy as rookie of the year.

It marked the first time in history that CIS award winners were honoured alongside the best of the CFL.

More CIS hardware will be handed out Friday morning during the Vanier Cup championship breakfast at the Convention Centre, including the Frank Tindall trophy (coach of the year), the Russ Jackson award (football, academics, citizenship) and the Gino Fracas award (outstanding volunteer assistant coach).

The 47th Vanier Cup final between Laval and McMaster will follow at 6 p.m. Pacific Time at B.C. Place Stadium, live on TSN and RDS, with TSN’s pre-game show kicking off at 5:30 p.m. PST.

For all the info on CIS football: www.cis-sic.ca and www.vaniercup.com

HEC CRIGHTON TROPHY – Billy Greene (UBC)
Greene made his fourth season at UBC one for the record books. He was the architect behind one of the biggest turnarounds in program history as his Thunderbirds improved from a 2-6 campaign a year ago to 6-2 and a second-place finish in Canada West. UBC qualified for the playoffs for the first time since 2006 and earned its first post-season win since 1999.

In eight regular season games, the 6-foot-1, 220-pound English major led the country in passing yards (2,558) and total offence (380 ypg), tied for the CIS lead in touchdown passes (20), had the best touchdown-to-interception ratio in the nation (20-4) and topped all CIS quarterbacks with a team-best 482 rushing yards. Along the way, he set single-season school records for TD passes and passing yards.

A product of Holy Cross High School in Surrey, Greene was at the helm of the second best passing offence in the country (326 ypg) and the fourth most productive offence overall (471 ypg).

“I’m very happy for Billy, because he took a big step this off-season as far as the work that he put in. It’s always good to see a guy rewarded for the amount of work he puts in and to see a player start to fulfill his potential,” said UBC head coach Shawn Olson. “This is a big as it gets. It’s a huge honour and it’s something that I think every CIS player dreams about. Very few end up being nominated and even fewer have the honour of being able to say they’re a Hec Crighton winner.”

Acadia quarterback Kyle Graves, Sherbrooke wide receiver Simon Charbonneau-Campeau and McMaster wideout Michael DiCroce were also nominated.

PRESIDENTS’ TROPHY – Max Caron (Concordia)
Caron perpetuated Concordia’s tradition of excellence at the linebacker position. Since 2004, Stingers’ players have claimed the Presidents’ trophy on five occasions, including Mickey Donovan in 2004, brother Pat Donovan in both 2005 and 2006, current Kansas City Chief Cory Greenwood in 2009, and now Caron.

In only his second university campaign, the 6-foot-2, 210-pound political science student led the country in solo tackles (67), total tackles (78.5) and interception returned for touchdowns (3) in nine league games. His 78.5 tackles are a new single-season RSEQ conference record, while his five interceptions overall were tops in Quebec and good for second place in CIS. The 22-year-old from Kingston, Ont., also collected 3.5 quarterback sacks, 11 tackles for losses, two forced fumbles and three fumble recoveries en route to first-team all-Canadian status.

Linebackers Tom Labenski of Acadia, Ryan Chmielewski of McMaster and Sam Hurl of Calgary were also up for the Presidents’ trophy.

J.P. METRAS TROPHY – Arnaud Gascon-Nadon (Laval)
Gascon-Nadon, who also claimed the J.P. Metras trophy a year ago, became the first multiple winner of the award since its inception back in 1974. His stellar play this fall helped the Rouge et Or finish atop the RSEQ standings with an 8-1 mark and earned him a spot on the first all-Canadian team for the second year in a row.

In his second season at Laval, the 6-foot-3, 250-pound independent studies student tallied 13.5 tackles in nine conference games including seven quarterback sacks, which ranked fourth in the country, and nine tackles for losses, the fifth highest total in the RSEQ. He also forced a fumble, recovered another, and scored the first touchdown of his CIS career on a 19-yard interception return. The native of Montreal was the anchor of a defensive unit that finished first in CIS for least points allowed for the fourth straight year (12.0 ppg) – and for the sixth time in eight campaigns – and was the stingiest in the nation against the run (53.7 ypg).

The other finalists for the Metras trophy were Acadia defensive tackle Jake Thomas, Queen’s defensive end Osie Ukwuoma and Regina defensive end Akiem Hicks.

PETER GORMAN TROPHY – Tyler Varga (Western Ontario)
Varga, who hails from Kitchener, Ont., is the third Western player to claim the Peter Gorman trophy. He follows in the footsteps of receiver Andy Fantuz (2002) and running back Sean Reade (1992).

To say the 5-foot-10, 218-pound back started his university career with a bang would be an understatement. He scored on a 39-yard run five minutes into his first game against Waterloo on Sept. 5 and, 17 minutes into that first contest, he had already found the end zone three times. The following week against eventual OUA champion McMaster, he added another four rushing touchdowns and 149 yards on 25 carries. Despite sitting out the final game of the regular season to nurse injuries, Varga finished with a CIS-best 15 rushing majors – a single-season record for a freshman – and his 799 yards were good for second in Ontario and fifth in the country. His average of 114 yards on the ground per contest was the third best in the nation this fall, while his 15 rushing TDs rank ninth all-time on the CIS single-season list and are one off the school record set in 1991 by former Hec Crighton trophy winner Tim Tindale. 

Mount Allison defensive tackle Jacob LeBlanc, Sherbrooke quarterback Jérémi Doyon-Roch and Saskatchewan offensive lineman Jordan Arkko were also nominated for the Gorman trophy.

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Friday, November 25

Cummins named top coach, Heap claims Russ Jackson, Cluff takes home Fracas Award

VANCOUVER (CIS) – Acadia’s Jeff Cummins was named the coach of the year in Canadian Interuniversity Sport football on Friday morning, while Wilfrid Laurier’s Dillon Heap received the Russ Jackson award recognizing excellence in football, academics and citizenship.

Cummins and Heap were honoured in front of over 700 guests during the Vanier Cup championship breakfast at the Vancouver Convention Centre on Friday morning

Brian Cluff was raised in Falconbridge, ON where he attended St-Charles High College before beginning a 27-year career as both a player and coach at the University of Guelph.

Brian first joined the Gryphons in 1982 as an Offensive Lineman, playing 5 years for Tom Dimitroff, Dick Brown, and John Musselman. During Brian’s time as a player he went on to win the Vanier Cup in 1984.
Now in the 21st year of his coaching career at the University of Guelph which began in 1987, Cluff has coached special teams, defensive line, linebackers, and has been the defensive coordinator. During his tenure at Guelph, Cluff helped guide the Gryphons to two Yates Cup victories in four appearances.

About Canadian Interuniversity Sport
Canadian Interuniversity Sport is the national governing body of university sport in Canada. Fifty-two universities, 10,000 student-athletes and 550 coaches 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.