Bert Faibish says that the Tiger-Cats are ready to take the next step, and that in 2011 the only goal they have is to be playing for the CFL’s Holy Grail come November.
Training Camp in the CFL; a time for veterans of the game to knock off that off-season rust and for a handful of unknowns to realize what to most, has been a lifelong dream.
The true value of a draft class can’t be evaluated immediately, but all indications suggest that the Hamilton Tiger-Cats class of 2011 is going to be a winner explains Bert Faibish.
After parting with Non-Imports Chris Bauman, Jermaine Reid, Alexandre Gauthier, Brian Ramsey and George Hudson this draft will be especially important for the Ticats
Last year it was Bishop’s receiver Steven Turner turning heads at E-Camp. This year it was his cousin Junior’s turn to show off for CFL coaches and scouts.
Nathan Coehoorn has been living in the shadow of fellow receiver and Dinos teammate Anthony Parker for years, but that’s all about to end if he has his way.
After playing four years south of the Border at Rice University the CFL’s second ranked prospect heading into E-Camp Scott Mitchell is happy to show his skills back in Canada.
In the CFL, a team’s success is often tied directly to the quality of its Canadian talent and the Ticats are ready to evaluate the next generation of Canadians at this week’s E-Camp.
February represents the first relevant step in the build-up to the 2011 season. Bert Faibish examines who the Ticats may target during the upcoming free agency period.
Jimenez and seven other CFL players will join with Oxfam Canada and WestJet in an initiative dubbed “Huddle for Haiti”, a trip to bring awareness and hope to the people of Haiti.
The game comes down to the potential of the Roughriders versus the experience of the Alouettes and as CFL.ca’s Bert Faibish explains, he will take experience anytime.
Turnovers plagued Hamilton all game and proved the hardest improvement to make is to jump from being a competitive team to a dominant one explains Bert Faibish.
When you’ve already faced a team three times during the regular season, there can be very few secrets so the Ticats know exactly who they need to stop says Bert Faibish.
One of Hamilton’s main goals was to improve on its level of execution compared to the loss in Calgary. Despite losing to B.C., it was a step in the right direction heading into the playoffs.
Most teams with nothing to gain in the standings have a hard time getting motivated but not the Ticats who are looking forward to playing spoiler Friday says Bert Faibish.
For the first half of the season the Tiger-Cat defence was good, but it seemed that a piece here or there could give it ‘elite’ status. Now they have them says Bert Faibish
If there’s anything that can help exercise the demons of a tough loss on the road, it’s the chance to play the same opponent as soon as possible says Bert Faibish.
Mann started 25 games over the most of three seasons with the Eskimos before he was traded to Hamilton this past off-season for defensive back Chris Thompson.
Perhaps it’s his laid back, humble persona, but Ticats linebacker Markeith Knowlton doesn’t receive nearly as much recognition as he deserves says CFL.ca’s Bert Faibish.