Cumulative Power Ranking
1. Calgary (Week Eleven 2)
2. Toronto (Week Eleven 3)
3. B.C. (Week Eleven 4)
4. Saskatchewan (Week Eleven 1)
5. Edmonton (Week Eleven 7)
6. Hamilton (Week Eleven 5)
7. Montreal (Week Eleven 6)
8. Winnipeg
I'm Back!! Yes, you can cease panicking now, I only ran into an angry bout of useless-internet-service-provider-taking-over-two-weeks-to-get-me-internet, nothing more. It's a long story but the bare bones is there and, excuses aside, I have returned and should be here for the rest of the season, if not many more.
So with four weeks of hiatus a few changes are very visible, the big one being the nose-dive Saskatchewan managed to put themselves in. Call it a lack of Sheets with no working back up plan after losing a key part of the offense. Durant managed to sky rocket in INT's as a result but compared to the rest of the teams, only Calgary and Toronto are at less so it's not the end of the world despite what the ship jumpers might have you believe. Meanwhile B.C., Toronto and Calgary have all found bona-fide starters behind their initial QB. Good news for them which has made this season interesting and competitive. At least in the top half. Montreal is paying the price of not having a tested and ready backup QB on the other hand (though switching Head Coaches might have played into this as well). Edmonton was suffering from having nothing but Fred Stamps and a decent QB (and now they're down the QB as well - incidentally Stamps is the first and only receiver to pass 1000 yards thus far). Hamilton really doesn't have an excuse QB wise though I suspect changes will come end of season as Burris and Austin really aren't meshing as well as anyone hoped. And Winnipeg, well, there's a story for a different time. Probably never.
In any case a lot of shifting has happened and with 5 games left to be played it will be interesting to see how things change in this final stretch. TTFN!