WINNIPEG ā When Zach Collaros looks around the Winnipeg locker room, he gets a good feeling of dĆ©jĆ vu.
The Blue Bombers have returned 47 players who suited up for at least one game last season.
It was a campaign that featured the CFL club setting a franchise record for wins (15-3) before losing the Grey Cup 24-23 to the Toronto Argonauts to foil a championship three-peat.
The veteran quarterback, whoās entering his 11th season and fourth with the Bombers, said the number of returnees shows that players love being part of the team.
"Itās always great when you enjoy coming to work, so itās always nice seeing familiar faces," Collaros said after Mondayās practice, where his backups are returnee Dru Brown and newcomer Tyrrell Pigrome.
"Iāve said it for a long time, I really think continuity matters in this league and we certainly have that. Thatās not something you can just rest your laurels on, so to speak, but it is nice having guys back."
Collaros, the leagueās back-to-back reigning most outstanding player, didnāt play in Winnipegās final exhibition game, but heās ready for the regular-season opener Friday at home against the Hamilton Tiger-Cats.
All-star middle linebacker Adam Bighill should also be in the lineup after missing all of training camp for the first time in his 11-year career. After returning to practice Monday, he said new cleats he was trying out gave him an ingrown toenail that got infected and was painful.
Heās been impressed with a roster filled by so many returnees.
āI donāt know if Iāve been to a camp where you really donāt have an open slot on offence or defence,ā Bighill said.
āI donāt think I can say that in any camp that Iāve been in. So youāre looking for depth, youāre looking for guys to come in and help play roles.ā
Winnipeg hopes returning placekicker Sergio Castillo will bring consistency to its kicking game.
Marc Liegghio, who was cut last weekend, did all three kicking duties in his second season last year but had costly convert and field-goal misses at times, including in the Grey Cup loss.
The Edmonton Elks released Castillo for contract reasons 10 days before training camp, and Winnipeg scooped him up within hours.
Castillo started his career with the Bombers in 2015, left for other teams and then got picked up by Winnipeg in a trade late in the 2021 season.Ģż
He was good on all five field-goal tries in Winnipegās overtime Grey Cup victory against the Tiger-Cats before signing a higher-paying contract with Edmonton for the 2022 season.
Global player Jamieson Sheahan (Australia) takes over the punting.
Being viewed as Winnipegās kicking saviour wonāt put too much weight on Castilloās shoulders.
āI think if I could overcome an ACL (tear in 2017 with Hamilton) and being without a team for 618 days, I can overcome anything,ā Castillo said.
āIām excited. Obviously, thereās going to be ups and thereās going to be downs, itās normal, right?ā
Castillo isnāt the only former Bomber to return to the fold.
Winnipeg is expected to have an explosive receiving corps, although the season debut for Kenny Lawler has been delayed.
The American wide receiver signed back with the Bombers after taking a lucrative deal with the Elks last season, but Winnipeg put him on the suspended list last week. The team announced it was due to a 2021 off-field incident that was expected to be resolved in three to four weeks.
The Winnipeg Sun then reported that Lawler had pleaded guilty this past April to an October 2021 impaired driving charge and is dealing with immigration paperwork.
On a happier note for the team, one rookie has cracked the active roster.
Defensive lineman Anthony Bennett, the teamās first pick (eighth overall) in this yearās CFL draft, has earned praise from his teammates and coaches.
"I donāt want to compare him to anybody, but he understands the game of football and I think he's a natural pass rusher," head coach Mike OāShea said of the University of Regina product.Ģż
Bennett, who will have a rotational role, said he feels a bit lucky but hard work helped him reach his initial goal.
āBeing honest, I just fought every day,ā he said. āI went into camp thinking, āIām going to make this team.ā It wasnāt, āOh, Iām going to beat the older guys.ā
āNo, itās a puzzle piece, thatās why they drafted me. Iām honestly going to be the ultimate puzzle piece.ā
While the Bombers donāt have the pressure of going for a three-peat this season, the bar is set high again.
āIf you look at the guys we have, what weāve done in the past, the team we have, the continuity, we expect to be in the Grey Cup and we expect to win the cup,ā Bighill said.
āThatās where our mindset is and thatās where we set our work targets at.ā
Ģż
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 7, 2023.
Judy Owen, The Canadian Press