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Davis: Saskatchewan Roughriders quietly gain a few, lose a few during CFL’s goofy free agency
Riders GM Jeremy O’Day: ‘We didn’t lose anyone that we didn’t offer.’
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Published Feb 14, 2025  âąÂ Last updated 17 hours ago  âąÂ 4 minute read
Saskatchewan Roughriders centre Peter Godber (51) gets ready to snap the ball against the Toronto Argonauts on Jul 28, 2023 in Halifax, Nova Scotia. PHOTO Kevin Sousa/CFL Photo by Kevin Sousa /Kevin Sousa-CFLWhile the focus is usually on who the Saskatchewan Roughriders acquire during the CFLâs free-agent frenzy, there were also a few players who quietly left the green-and-white confines of Mosaic Stadium. Itâs apparently not âGood riddance,â itâs just âGoodbye.â
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âWe didnât lose anyone that we didnât offer,â said Roughriders general manager Jeremy OâDay, when asked which players he was disappointed about losing.
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That means centre Peter Godber, quarterback Shea Patterson, defensive linemen Anthony Lanier, Christian Albright and Miles Brown, defensive backs Amari Henderson, Deontai Williams and Godfrey Onyeka, linebacker Adam Auclair and receiver Jerreth Sterns werenât formally offered contracts. As of Thursday morning, those were the players who had had joined other teams after their Roughrider contracts expired Feb. 11.
Godber, Brown and Auclair were the biggest surprises, based on past performances.
Although Godber missed nine games during the past two seasons, he had been Saskatchewanâs starting centre since leaving the B.C. Lions as a free agent in 2023.
Brown was a promising defensive tackle, despite getting in trouble last season for penalized hits on opposing quarterbacks.
Auclair was a Canadian, part-time starter.
Godber was quickly replaced by all-star centre Sean McEwen, who was signed away from the Calgary Stampeders. Brown was basically replaced by Mike Rose, a powerful tackle who was waived by Calgary before free agency began. And the Roughriders have six, probably cheaper, Canadian linebackers under contract, led by A.J. Allen, who can likely replace Auclair.
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Some of the departees were free to leave because they didnât fit into Saskatchewanâs future plans, but that doesnât mean the Roughriders didnât want a few back for less money. Some of those ex-Riders likely had a dollar figure in mind, but the team had a smaller amount preordained for a contract, so a formal offer was never discussed.
Because the Roughriders signed a defensive lineman (Shane Ray) and defensive back (Tevaughn Campbell) with NFL experience, plus the addition of former Stampeders quarterbacks Jake Maier and Tommy Stevens as the backup and short-yardage pivot respectively, Lanier, Williams, Onyeka, Henderson, Williams and Patterson werenât especially coveted by their former team.
Itâs a harsh metaphor and isnât meant to disparage anyoneâs ability, but one manâs trash is another manâs treasure. Hence there were other teams interested in Saskatchewanâs castoffs.
âIt something to be said about the number of our players that sign with other teams in the offseason as a credit to our personnel department and the job they do,â said OâDay. âThereâs a lot of good players that wonât be back for us that unfortunately we just werenât able to sign.â
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All nine CFL teams operate under a salary cap for player salaries.
The cap was expected to be $5.65 million in 2025, but three days into last weekâs free-agent negotiating window outgoing commissioner Randy Ambrosie announced â in one of those only-in-the-CFL moments â there was an additional $18 million available through a revenue-sharing agreement with the CFL Playersâ Association. The CFL and CFLPA ham-handedly decided that extra money would be earmarked solely for salaries, so each teamâs salary cap was increasing by $400,000.
During a media conference Wednesday to discuss his teamâs free-agent activity, OâDay was asked when he learned about the increased salary cap.
âThe same day as it came out publicly,â said OâDay. âThat was surprising. And then everyoneâs trying to figure out how that was going to impact everything. But the majority of agreements were already in place with most teams and, to my knowledge, it didnât really change much in free agency.
âIf the cap goes up, it doesnât mean teams are going to spend it. Itâs probably on a team-by-team basis. Weâre going to have discussions about what itâs going to look like, so it didnât really have an impact on us dealing with free agency.â
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Itâs a strange way to conduct business, finding out thereâs an extra 400 Gs available after planning to spend $5.65 million. A good-news announcement quickly turned into questions about how something like that could happen in the middle of the busiest contract-signing days of the year. Blame it on inefficiency by the league and its playersâ association.
Maybe the extra cash will help retain some veterans by extending contracts, increasing salaries or adding bonuses. But those players who have departed wonât be coming back.
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