The Queen’s Gaels scored 26 unanswered points to turn a 25-7 halftime deficit into a 33-31 victory over the Calgary Dinos in the 45th Desjardins Vanier Cup on Saturday at Université Laval’s PEPS Stadium before a standing-room crowd of 18,628 in Quebec City.
The win is the Gaels’ fourth Vanier Cup championship and their first since 1992. The game was a rematch of the 1983 final when Calgary prevailed 31-21 in the only previous meeting between the two schools.
After trailing by 18 at the break, Queen’s scored 12 third-quarter points and proceeded to add a pair of touchdowns driving against a fierce wind in the fourth stanza. It marked the largest comeback from a halftime deficit in Vanier Cup history, and only the eighth time a team won after trailing at the midway point.
The Dinos drew within two points on a 15-yard touchdown reception by Anthony Parker of Okotok, Alta., with 6:38 remaining in regulation, but quarterback Erik Glavic of Pickering, Ont., was unable to complete a two-point convert pass intended to tie the score.
Gaels’ pivot Danny Brannagan of Burlington, Ont., playing the final game of his five-year CIS career, earned the Ted Morris memorial trophy as the game MVP by completing 17 of 33 passes for 286 yards. He threw three touchdown passes and one interception.
Brannagan completed two of his touchdown tosses to fifth-year senior and first-team all-Canadian Scott Valberg of Kingston, Ont., who led all Queen’s receivers with 109 yards on seven receptions.
Queen’s fourth-year linebacker Chris Smith of Toronto earned the Bruce Coulter trophy as the top defensive player of the game. Smith posted 4.5 tackles, a 15-yard sack, one forced fumble and a fumble recovery.
The Queen’s defense generated five turnovers from Calgary, including two fumbles, two interceptions and one blocked field goal.
Running back Marty Gordon of Kingston led the OUA champions’ ground attack with 102 yards on 19 carries. He scored the game-winning touchdown on a 15-yard run 6:26 into the final frame.
Calgary opened the scoring at the 10:34 mark of the opening frame, capping an eight-play, 54-yard drive with a one-yard touchdown run.
Queen’s equalized the tally three minutes later with Brannagan connecting with Valberg on a nine-yard passing play.
Taking the wind in the second quarter, Calgary piled up 18 unanswered points. Frank Ifield booted three field goals, a establishing a single-quarter Vanier Cup record. Glavic later added a one-yard rushing major, and Queen’s conceded a safety touch in the dieing minutes of the quarter rather than punt into the driving breeze. Calgary led 25-7 going into halftime.
Queen’s reasserted itself on the third play of the third quarter with Brannagan connecting with Devan Sheahan (Kingston, Ont.) for a 60-yard pass-and-run score.
The Gaels defense dominated play in the third quarter, generating three crucial turnovers though a fumble recovery deep in Calgary territory, a blocked field goal and an interception in the end zone. While robbing Calgary of a potential 10 points, Queen’s offense found difficulty capitalizing on these turnovers, emerging with one field goal and still trailing 25-19 going into the final frame.
Driving against the wind to open the fourth quarter, the Gaels mounted a six-play, 51-yard campaign, capped with a 17-yard touchdown toss from Brannagan to Valberg at the 2:23 mark. The ensuing convert gave the Gaels a 26-25 lead, their first of the afternoon.
Trailing 33-25 following Gordon’s touchdown, Calgary responded on its next possession, capping a 70-yard drive with Glavic’s 15-yard pass to Parker to bring the Dinos within two points. Glavic’s two-point convert attempt, directed at Walter, was unsuccessful, as the all-Canadian couldn’t hold on to the ball when he was tackled.
Calgary’s final drive was stifled by a fumble recovered by Smith, solidifying Queen’s victory.
“I’m so proud of the guys, there’s no quitting in this group,” said winning head coach Pat Sheahan, who had led the Concordia Stingers to a Vanier Cup appearance in 1998 and is at the helm of the Gaels since 2000. “At halftime, I was direct with them, I just told them we didn’t play very well in the first half and had to play better.”
“Winning a Vanier Cup is an opportunity that doesn’t present itself every year. You have to take advantage of these opportunities when they come.”
The Queen's University Gaels never gave up despite the deficit and came away the the 2009 Vanier Cup and IFAF.org December Team of the Month.