Skip to main content

Toronto Argonauts trade veteran quarterback Nick Arbuckle to Edmonton Elks

Toronto Argonauts quarterback Nick Arbuckle (9) prepares to throw during first half CFL football game action against the Hamilton Tiger Cats in Hamilton, Ont., Monday, Sept. 6,2021. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Peter Power ) Toronto Argonauts quarterback Nick Arbuckle (9) prepares to throw during first half CFL football game action against the Hamilton Tiger Cats in Hamilton, Ont., Monday, Sept. 6,2021. (THE CANADIAN PRESS/Peter Power )
Share
TORONTO -

The Toronto Argonauts are now McLeod Bethel-Thompson's team.

Bethel-Thompson became the clear-cut starter Tuesday after Toronto dealt quarterback Nick Arbuckle to Edmonton for a conditional 2022 third-round draft pick and the rights to American quarterback Chad Kelly. He's the nephew for former Buffalo Bills star Jim Kelly who was on the Elks' negotiation list.

If Arbuckle, who signed a one-year deal with Toronto prior to the '21 season, re-signs with Edmonton, the pick will become a second-round selection.

Toronto signed Arbuckle, 28, with the intention of him being the starter, but twice he was hampered by hamstring injuries. Bethel-Thompson started the Argos' first two regular-season games and has been under centre for the last four contests.

Bethel-Thompson (4-2 as the starter) and Arbuckle (2-2) helped guide Toronto to second in the East Division standings behind the Montreal Alouettes (6-4), who dispatched the Argos 37-16 last week. The six-foot-four, 220-pound Bethel-Thompson will be the full-time starter now - starting with Saturday afternoon's home game against the B.C. Lions (4-6) - with veteran Antonio Pipkin serving as the backup.

Edmonton (2-7), last in the West Division standings, hosts the Hamilton Tiger-Cats (5-5) on Friday night.

It's the first time in Bethel-Thompson's four-year tenure with Toronto that he's become the face of the franchise. The 33-year-old Californian threw a CFL-best 26 TD strikes in 13 starts in 2019 and was third in passing yards (4,024) but was more concerned Tuesday about losing a valued teammate than securing the starting position.

“Maybe that will sink in down the road but for now it's the loss of a really good teammate and the fact we need to have a really good week of practice and get a big win Saturday,” Bethel-Thompson said. “This is the best camaraderie in a quarterback room I've ever been a part of.

“He (Arbuckle) was huge in terms of how we installed every week. He's got a wicked smart football brain and so it's tough to see him go . . . hopefully they invest in him like the starter that he is in this league.”

This season, Bethel-Thompson has completed 126-of-191 passes for 1,605 yards with nine TDs and six interceptions. Over 52 regular-season games with Toronto, Bethel-Thompson has made 661-of-989 passes for 7,832 yards with 44 TDs and 29 interceptions.

He served as Ricky Ray's backup in the Argos' 27-24 Grey Cup win over Calgary in 2017.

Money also factored in the decision. John Murphy, Toronto's vice-president of player personnel, said the club couldn't afford to pay two quarterbacks as if they were starters, especially as more of Toronto's injured veterans become healthy and are ready to return.

“Having two starting quarterbacks was a really good concept until this point,” he said. “You can't successfully put your best “A“ roster out there if at the same time you're paying two starting quarterbacks.”

The CFL trade deadline is 5 p.m. ET on Wednesday, but Murphy doesn't believe acquiring more talent is the best way for Toronto to improve its roster.

“The best way for us to improve what's here right now is for our unhealthy guys to get healthy as fast as they can,” he said. “There's currently nine guys on (six-game injured list) that started the season on the Week 1 roster who are currently not active and not participating in helping us.

“The second part is there are enough guys here who need to turn it on down the stretch who we acquired in the off-season for these very games. I have every expectation that in the coming weeks we start seeing the best out of them because that's why we acquired them in the first place. We were hopeful to play meaningful fall football. We've accomplished the first part of that, the second part is to be seen.”

The six-foot-one, 213-pound Arbuckle completed 96-of-153 passes for 1,158 yards with five touchdowns and six interceptions in seven games this season. Arbuckle began his CFL career with Calgary (2018-19) and spent 2020 with Ottawa after the Stampeders traded his rights there.

But Arbuckle was released by Ottawa on Jan. 31 prior to a $150,000 roster bonus being due.

Toronto head coach Ryan Dinwiddie, who served as Calgary's quarterback coach (2016-19), said Bethel-Thompson simply earned the Argos' starting job.

“It's never easy to make these decisions,” Dinwiddie said. “I have a great relationship with Nick, I appreciate him as a man.

“MacLeod just took the next step, we felt he was the starter . . . we feel like Nick has a future someplace else. I's good for him to get an opportunity to probably start in Edmonton.”

Kelly, 27, is currently a free agent. The native of Buffalo, N.Y., was a 2017 seventh-round pick of the Denver Broncos and also spent two seasons with the Indianapolis Colts (2019-2020).

“Let's go @TorontoArgos!” he tweeted. “So excited to be in the 6!”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct, 26, 2021

CTVNews.ca Top Stories

Sandy Hook families help The Onion buy Infowars

The satirical news publication The Onion won the bidding for Alex Jones' Infowars at a bankruptcy auction, backed by families of Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting victims whom Jones owes more than US$1 billion in defamation judgments for calling the massacre a hoax.

California teenager admits to making hundreds of hoax emergency calls

A California teenager has admitted to making hundreds of swatting calls — hoax emergency calls — over a two-year period, creating 'fear and chaos' when police responded to his false reports of bomb threats and mass shootings at schools, homes and houses of worship, federal prosecutors said.

Stay Connected