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Edmonton Elks wide receiver Trevor Begue (81) is tripped up by Calgary Stampeders linebacker Josiah Schakel (27) during first half CFL exhibition football action in Calgary on May 22.Larry MacDougal/The Canadian Press

The Edmonton Elks have a little confidence. The Calgary Stampeders need some.

The CFL’s annual Battle of Alberta on Labour Day in Calgary features a pair of West Division clubs with gaps between themselves and a playoff spot.

Calgary (3-8) has lost three straight in August, all to the top three teams in the CFL. Edmonton (2-9) has won two games in a row after a miserable start to the season.

Canadian quarterback Tre Ford, a University of Waterloo alum, marshalled Edmonton to those two victories, including last week’s home win over Ottawa to end an awful 22-game losing streak at Commonwealth Stadium.

Both clubs have time to salvage their 2023 campaigns with seven games left in their regular seasons, but the salvaging needs to start immediately.

“We’re right together at the bottom,” Stampeders head coach and general manager Dave Dickenson said. “One of us has to come out of the bottom and we’re hoping that’s us.”

So Monday’s clash at McMahon Stadium combined with Saturday’s rematch at Commonwealth is a make-or-break scenario this season for Alberta’s CFL teams.

“This is kind of a defining moment for both squads,” Elks coach and GM Chris Jones said.

What’s grated on the Stampeders is losing in the last three minutes of the game six times this season. They’ve lost four games by three points or less.

Overall, there’s been an assortment of ill-timed gaffes, such as Javon Leake’s punt return touchdown for Toronto in the fourth quarter last week to break a 31-31 tie and propel the Argonauts to 39-31 victory.

“Mistakes are going to happen. We don’t want to play scared,” Dickenson said.

“When the games are going your way, you think you’re going to win them all. When they’re not going your way sometimes doubt can creep in. The only way I know how to get rid of that doubt is to start winning.”

Calgary’s quarterback Jake Maier leads the league in passing yards (2,785), but the Stampeders have produced a middling 12 touchdown catches in 11 games.

The Stampeders haven’t lit it up on the ground either with their 88.9 average rushing yards a game ranking sixth in the CFL, although running backs Ka’Deem Carey and Dedrick Mills will play in the same game Monday for just the third time this season.

Dickenson labelled Maier’s 387 passing yards and four touchdown throws in the loss to Toronto his quarterback’s best game of the year.

“I know things haven’t been overly exciting for this group this year, but there’s no quit in us right now,” Maier said.

“We feel like we’ve been very close to winning some games against good teams. Now we get an opportunity to do it on Labour Day, in a home game.”

Edmonton’s 0-9 start this season included a pair of games in which the Elks scored zero points.

But Jarious Jackson’s promotion to offensive co-ordinator at the end of July, and Ford’s ascension to starter in three subsequent games, has revived the Elks offence.

Ford started one game against Calgary in 2022, but sustained a season-ending collarbone injury during the first quarter. The 25-year-old from Niagara Falls, Ont., has been given another chance to prove he can be a CFL starter.

The CFL regular season is two-thirds over by Labour Day weekend, but games that fall on that holiday weekend traditionally feel weighty to a team’s fortunes and particularly because of the festival atmosphere around them.

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