A historic night in the North Okanagan belonged to the boys in blue.
The blue-white-and-gold-clad UBC Thunderbirds from Vancouver defeated the white-and-red Calgary Dinos 28-7 in the first Kal Tire Kalamalka Bowl Canadian U-Sports exhibition football game played in the North Okanagan in front of nearly 2,000 people, the biggest crowd to watch any event at Greater Vernon Athletic Park Wednesday, Aug. 24.
鈥淭he first Kal Tire Kalamalka Bowl was a resounding success,鈥 said Malcolm Reid of the host Kalamalka Bowl Society.
The teams were tied 2-2 on a pair of safeties after one quarter. UBC took control in the second, scoring 16 unanswered points for an 18-2 lead at the half. The T-Birds were up 28-4 heading into the final 15 minutes.
Kal Tire鈥檚 Ryan Paulson presented UBC captains Manu Giovanni, Gavin Coakes, Luke Pearson and Ryan Baker with the Kalamalka Bowl in a post-game ceremony.
Giovanni, a towering offensive lineman, was named player of the game while Vernon鈥檚 Liam Reid of the Dinos was chosen as the Okanagan player of the game.
Reid, Roan Reid, Josh Hyer and Brady Szeman, all from Vernon, played for Calgary, as did 琉璃神社鈥檚 Nate Beauchemin. Vernon鈥檚 Zack Smith and 琉璃神社鈥檚 Isaac Athans and Easton and Everett Schmuland did not play for the Dinos.
UBC dressed Okanagan-Thompson products Brandon Sanford of Salmon Arm, Nicholas Stanfield of West 琉璃神社 and Liam Wishart of Kamloops. Vernon鈥檚 Bradley Hladik did not play for the T-Birds.
Tyler Welfing of Vernon鈥檚 CarveWel Creations presented beautiful wood carvings of a dinosaur and thunderbird to head coaches Wayne Harris of Calgary and Blake Nill of Vancouver, respectively.
The game opened under bright sunny skies. UBC and Calgary exchanged safeties in their respective end zones during the quarter, making the score 2-2 after 15 minutes.
The weather changed in the second quarter as a storm blew in, though rain was very minimal. Dane Kapler scampered up the middle on a 50-yard touchdown run for UBC with Kieran Flannery-Fleck booting the convert to give the T-Birds a 9-2 lead. Kapler finished the night with 127 yards on eight carries and the major.
Calgary gave up another safety, adding another two points to UBC鈥檚 cushion, and the Thunderbirds padded the lead in the final minute of the half. Quarterback Garrett Rooker scored on a one-yard run with 17 second remaining (Flannery-Fleck added the convert). The score was set up by a diving catch inside the 20-yard-line red zone on a Rooker pass to Shemar McBean.
UBC led 18-2 at the half.
After an entertaining intermission scrimmage between Vernon Minor Football鈥檚 two Atom Division squads, the big kids got back to business.
Hyer received the biggest cheer of the night when he dropped UBC quarterback Derek Engel for a sack. T-Birds鈥 left-footed kicker Owen Brown mastered a swirling wind to boot a 43-yard-field goal on the ensuring play to extend the UBC led to 21-2.
Engel would hook up with receiver Brett Birch-Jones, who made a great catch in the corner of the end zone to give the Thunderbirds a 28-2 bulge (Flannery-Fleck was perfect on the converts). The play was set up by a 51-yard punt return by UBC鈥檚 Edgerrin Williams.
After Deakon Taylor-Young got Calgary out of trouble with a 52-yard punt return that started in his endzone, the Dinos marched but couldn鈥檛 put points on the board. The Calgary defence then forced UBC into a two-and-out and a punt from their end zone, which the T-Birds conceded for a safety.
During the third-quarter intermission, youngster Tatym Tiggelaar had a chance to win $5,000 by making a field goal from 40 yards out. The barefooted right-footed kicker got it about seven yards in the air.
Calgary kicker Vince Triumbari added the final points of the night for Calgary on a 47-yard fourth-quarter field goal.
The Thunderbirds have been ranked No. 5 in the first CIS U-Sports Top 10 football poll while the Dinos received honourable mention. The top-rated Canada West Conference team is the Alberta Golden Bears at No. 2.
Ontario鈥檚 Western Mustangs are ranked No. 1.
The game was created by the Kalamalka Bowl Society, who hoped to make the contest an annual event to help promote sports in the community.
鈥淲e have received extremely positive feedback from the teams, our sponsors and of course the community,鈥 said Malcolm Reid. 鈥淲e now will be looking how to make this an annual event coming back bigger and better next year. A huge thank you from the Kalamalka Bowl Society to our sponsors and the community for supporting this event.
鈥淎s well this event could never have happened without the army of volunteers showing our visiting teams and spectators true Vernon hospitality.鈥
Festivities kicked off Tuesday, Aug. 23 after the teams arrived in Vernon. Both schools took part in helping with a skills camp for minor and high school football players, then both had some fun at a meet-and-greet and free concert in Polson Park called Huddle in the Park, which included the teams playing Minute to Win It games to determine who ate first.
The video below will show you how the Dinos did not become extinct in the food line.
roger@vernonmorningstar.com
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