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CALGARY - Calgary Stampeders quarterback Bo Levi Mitchell may be light on CFL playoff experience, but head coach John Hufnagel is confident his starters regular-season form will continue into Sundays West Division final against Edmonton.Mitchell is 15-2 in career starts, including a 12-2 record this season. The 24-year-old from Katy, Texas, was one of three different starters Calgary employed last season. Mitchell beat out Drew Tate in training camp this year to earn the No. 1 designation.But Mitchell hasnt had the opportunity to start a post-season game until now. He came in and completed one of three pass attempts for six yards in last years 35-13 loss in the division final to the Saskatchewan Roughriders.He saw more post-season action in 2012, when he was 6-for-9 in passing for 80 yards and a fourth-quarter touchdown throw in a Grey Cup loss to Toronto. He also scored a touchdown on a one-yard plunge and threw a 42-yard pass in the West final.I dont think the game will be too big for Bo, Hufnagel said Monday at McMahon Stadium. Any time you get playoff experience, it helps. Bo has managed the game every time hes been on the field.He can forget about a bad play and get back on the field and make something good happen. We call it re-loading and he does it very well.Calgary (15-3) and Edmonton (12-6) meet at McMahon in an all-Alberta division final for the first time since 2001, when the Stampeders won 34-16 en route to claiming the Grey Cup. The Stampeders and Eskimos last met in the post-season in the 2011 division semifinal, which the Eskimos won 33-19 at home.Calgary last hoisted the Grey Cup in 2008, while Edmontons most recent appearance and victory in the CFLs championship game was in 2005.Sundays winner advances to the Grey Cup on Nov. 30 in Vancouver to face the victor of the East Division final between Montreal and Hamilton.How Mitchell will fare in his first playoff start is one of the West finals subplots. The mobility of Eskimos counterpart Mike Reilly, who reports say has a broken foot, is another.Edmonton head coach Chris Jones, Hufnagels defensive co-ordinator from 2008 to 2011, has said Reilly will get the ball in Calgary.Reilly didnt play in Edmontons final regular-season game, and he stayed on the sidelines of Sundays 18-10 division semifinal win over Saskatchewan until six minutes into the third quarter.He then completed six of eight passes for 53 yards in relief of starter Matt Nichols.He didnt do much as far as running, Hufnagel observed. Whether that has any factor with his health or whether thats just how the game was, he didnt look any differently to me as far as what he was able to do on the field.I believe hell be the starting quarterback and be Mike Reilly.The Stampeders swept the season series 3-0 with wins of 41-34 on Sept. 6, 28-13 on Sept. 1 and 26-22 on July 24.Its been quite a while since we played them, Reilly told reporters Sunday in Edmonton.Were a different team at this stage of the game and so are they. Theyre still a very good football team, so we definitely need to figure out ways we can attack them. We want to put up more points than 18, thats for sure.Mitchell should have more offensive weapons with the return of receiver Maurice Price and CFL rushing leader Jon Cornish to the lineup. Both men were following concussion protocol when they sat out the regular-season finale.Hufnagel said he was optimistic that defensive end Charleston Hughes, the CFLs defensive player of the year in 2013, would return for the division final after missing seven games with a leg injury.Calgary and Edmonton rank first and second in the CFL in average rushing yards per game at 143.9 and 129.4 respectively. John White led the Esks in rushing with 852 yards to Cornishs league-leading 1,082. White ran for 134 against Saskatchewan on Sunday.The Eskimos and Stampeders are also second and third respectively in defending the rush.I believe the team that has more production on the ground will have more of a chance to succeed, Hufnagel said.I also believe the biggest factor in winning the football game is turnovers. In a playoff game, you just cant give the other team unnecessary opportunities, which a turnover does create for them.Sundays forecast for Calgary is a high of minus-3 with occasional flurries. The Stampeders practised in bitter cold during their bye last week, but the temperature will be more comfortable for their preparation this week.I believe the whole weeks going to be around zero or one or two degrees above, Hufnagel said. Hopefully the sun is shining and I dont think the wind is going to be a factor on Sunday either.It should be a great day for a football game with two very good football teams playing against each other with a lot of similarities with one goal in mind. Wholesale Air Jordan 2 . Bostons bats exploded in Mondays opener, as David Ortiz belted a pair of two-run homers, Stephen Drew homered and drove in four runs and the Red Sox pummeled the Blue Jays, 14-1. Air Jordan 2 Retro . -- The Chicago Bears have agreed to a one-year contract with cornerback Kelvin Hayden. Bobrovsky posted a 2-0-1 record with a 1.58 goals-against average and .950 save percentage to help the Blue Jackets (35-26-6) gain five of a possible six points last week. He capped the week by making 32 saves and stopping 2-of-4 shootout attempts in a 2-1 win over the Minnesota Wild on Saturday. Jordan Retro 2 Cheap . His brother — Red Lake chiropractor Richard Radford — is en route to Sochi to cheer on his younger brother. "Ive been getting texts from Eric and he just says the atmosphere is amazing, its special,” he said. Jordan 2 For Sale . PAUL, Minn.BEREA, Ohio -- Mike Pettine knows he might not have been Clevelands first choice or even the Browns second pick. All that matters to the son of a high school coaching legend is that hes the one they selected. "Its been my life-long dream to be an NFL head coach," Pettine said Thursday, "and however that opportunity presents itself, its fine with me." After nearly a month of twists, turns and talk, the Browns found their man. Buffalos defensive co-ordinator, who didnt seem to be on Clevelands radar when the team began a coaching search last month, signed a five-year contract Thursday and was named the Browns seventh full-time coach since 1999. Pettine replaces Rob Chudzinski, fired on Dec. 29 after just one season. The Browns interviewed 10 candidates before deciding on the 47-year-old Pettine, who has built a solid reputation with a no-nonsense approach with his players. "I have been nicknamed BFT -- Blunt Force Trauma," he said. "The days are too short to dance around subjects some time and I think guys appreciate that." His straight-forward style attracted Browns owner Jimmy Haslam, who set out to find a "strong winner" and feels the clean-shaven Pettine can lead Clevelands resurgence. "Hes very smart," Haslam said. "Hes aggressive. Hes innovative. You can see hes tough. Hes going to be very demanding. Hes going to set high standards for our organization." Pettine spent one year with the Bills after four as Rex Ryans defensive co-ordinator with the New York Jets. Before that, Pettine was an assistant coach in Baltimore, giving him some familiarity in Clevelands division. Pettine understands there are challenges in turning around the Browns, who have lost at least 11 games in each of the past six seasons and made the playoffs once in their expansion era. Pettine believes the Browns have talent -- as evidenced by their six Pro Bowlers -- and wants to be the one to return them to glory. "Theres only 32 of these jobs and they dont come along often," Pettine said. "People ask me, Why didnt you wait? There will be chances next year? I dont know if I believe in that. When you put all the factors together, this franchise is in position, given the right leadership, to win." Pettine emerged as the favourite to become Clevelands fourth coach in six years as the Browns eliminated candidates and Denver offensive co-ordinator Adam Gase, considered the front-runner when the search started, told the team to move onn without him.dddddddddddd His hiring ends a 25-day odyssey for the Browns. It was a quest filled with rumours, denials, withdrawals and far too much drama for a franchise seeking stability. At the Pro Bowl in Hawaii, Browns tight end Jordan Cameron echoed the sentiments of most Cleveland fans. "Im just happy to have a coach," he said. The Browns flew to Mobile, Ala., on Tuesday to interview Pettine for the second time at the Senior Bowl. The four-hour meeting came shortly after Gase, the first candidate the team contacted, called Haslam and withdrew from consideration. The team had been expected to give Seattle defensive co-ordinator Dan Quinn a second interview, but if he was their pick, the Browns would have had to wait until after the Super Bowl to finalize a deal. Banner said the decision to hire Pettine before speaking with Quinn a second time was "tough." As six other teams filled their head-coaching vacancies, the Browns kept looking. The lengthy delay led to a national perception the team didnt have a clear plan. Aware of the criticism, Haslam sent a letter to Cleveland fans last week explaining why the team was being "methodical" in finding Chudzinskis replacement. Haslam argued the view of the Browns was media driven. "Thats a perception that you all have generated," he said to reporters. "Thats not the perception among candidates or football people that Ive talked to around the country." Browns CEO Joe Banner took a playful jab at Clevelands front office, which was characterized locally as "The Three Stooges" when the search began. "I dont know if you had a chance to meet Mike, but since (GM) Mike Lombardi and I are Moe and Larry, we went and set out to find Curly and we succeeded," he said. "Thats why it took so long; there arent a lot of Curlys running around the country." Now that hes in place, Pettine is ready to roll up his sleeves and fix the Browns. Football is in his blood. He learned the game from his father, Mike Pettine Sr., who won four Pennsylvania state championships and retired as the winningest coach in state history. Not long after getting the job, Pettine phoned his dad. "It was special," he said. "It didnt last very long because he knew I had a lot of stuff to get done. My poor mom answered the phone and he said "Is that Michael?" He ripped it out of her hands. They were both excited and knew how much work it went into this." 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