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Argos could be in play for Canadian QB

CIS standouts Brannagan, Dunk, Glavic to vie for CFL roster spot this weekend

It’s really, really hard to be a Toronto Argonauts fan right now.

The team, still reeling from their latest campaign under an unpopular import coach, boasts an awful 7-29 record over the past two seasons and was recently sold to BC Lions owner David Baley because, well, no one else would take them.

Talk about a team you can get behind.

To make matters worse, up until three days ago there was not a single person listed as a quarterback with the Toronto Argonauts. Not one.

The Argos have been very quiet about their plans at the, um, pivotal position after releasing incumbents Cody Pickett and Kerry Joseph last month.

They settled some of the mystery earlier this week when they traded for the Saskatchewan Roughriders’ Dalton Bell and signed former Buffalo Bills pivot Gibran Hamdan. But neither of those two can be considered a lock as the Argo’s number one starter and there still remains one quarterback spot on the Argonaut’s roster. That could leave the door open for one of the highly talented class of quarterbacks coming out of Canadian Interuniversity Sport competition this year.

Queen’s Danny Brannagan, Guelph’s Justin Dunk, Western’s Michael Faulds and Calgary’s Erik Glavic all had stellar campaigns in 2009 and have all garnered some serious interest from Canadian Football League teams.

Toronto has the first pick in the CFL’s entry draft on May 2 and have the most picks overall with 10. Don’t expect the Argos to take a quarterback with their first overall pick — Concordia LB Cory Greenwood or Nevada OL John Bender are the most likely, it says here — but there is a good chance they could be in the market for a Canadian quarterback in one of the later rounds.

Interestingly, this year the CFL made it clear that any Canadian quarterbacks invited to training camp would not count against a team’s training camp roster, which is capped at 75.This means teams can invite as many quarterbacks to camp as they please, as long as they’re Canadian. The league hopes this will level the playing field for Canadian quarterbacks and help them crack a team’s roster by simply having the chance to show their stuff at training camp.

The first test the Canadian quarterbacks will have to pass comes this weekend at the CFL’s annual evaluation camp in Toronto, where they will run through a series of drills and interviews with the CFL’s eight teams.

Unfortunately for Mustangs fans, Faulds — who set a CIS record for passing with 3,033 yards in 2009 — won’t be taking part in the weekend’s festivities. He’s still recovering from a torn ACL he suffered at the end of the Mustangs season and played on throughout the playoffs.

Nevertheless, three other standout CIS quarterbacks will be showing their stuff this weekend:

Danny Brannagan

Brannagan had a phenomenal final season for the Queen’s Gaels, leading the team to its first Yates Cup in more than 30 years and its first Vanier Cup since 1992. Brannagan picked up MVP honours in both those games, although his 515 yard, five touchdown performance against the Mustangs in the Yates Cup was one of the greatest feats by a CIS quarterback in recent memory.

Brannagan is undersized — listed at a generous 6-0 on the Gaels website — which may scare off some teams. However, Brannagan proved time and again with Queen’s that he has no problem operating if he’s given a solid offensive line in front of him. Brannagan’s stellar performances in big games make him an attractive option as well.

Erik Glavic

The University of Calgary’s Glavic is arguably the most talented of the three CIS pivots being looked at this weekend and has the most impressive resume, boasting two Hec Crighton trophies as the top player in the CIS. He threw for 2,186 yards last season and came within two points of winning the first Vanier Cup for Calgary in 15 years. He’ll be the most likely candidate to hear his name called early on draft day.

Glavic doesn’t have the size issue Brannagan does — he’s only 6-foot-6 — and showed he can run the ball well last season, picking up 508 yards on the ground. Glavic has another year of CIS eligibility left and is expected to return to an extraordinarily strong 2010 Calgary team that will bring back every single starter on their offence which scored just under 40 points a game in 2009.

Justin Dunk

Guelph’s Dunk has the steepest hill to climb when it comes to impressing the CFL scouts. He was serviceable for the Gryphons this year, putting up decent numbers— 1,897 yards, 13 TD, 7 INT — but his attitude and temper have been repeatedly questioned over the course of his career. His on field antics this season — remember “fuck western” — didn’t do him any favours.

One of Dunk’s strongest assets is his legs — he piled up 423 rushing yards in 7 games this year and is always a threat to scramble. In fact, Dunk’s athleticism means he can audition as a wide receiver and a quarterback. Dunk has already worked out as a receiver for the BC Lions — hat tip to The Ontarian’s Mike Treadgold for that one — and certainly several teams will be interested in his multi-position versatility.

Arden Zwelling

Arden is the Associate Editor of The Gazette. He is also a writer for CFL.ca and is in his fourth year of the Media, Information and Technoculture program at Western. Arden is also the host of the Utility Men which airs every other Thursday at 6:00 PM on CHRW 94.9 FM. Email Arden at arden@westerngazette.ca or follow him on twitter at www.twitter.com/ArdenAtGazette