Vancouver, BC (SportsNetwork.com) - Kevin Glenn threw for 312 yards and a touchdown as the Calgary Stampeders rolled to a 33-16 victory over the British Columbia Lions at BC Place. Glenn completed 26-of-36 pass attempts, but was intercepted twice for Calgary (15-3). Stefan Logan rushed for 117 yards on 17 carries and Emmanuel Arceneaux finished with 89 yards and a score on six receptions. Drew Tate and Bo Levi Mitchell shared time at quarterback for British Columbia (9-9). Tate threw for 206 yards and had a touchdown to match an interception on 14-of-20 passing. Mitchell tallied 208 yards and a score on 13-of-18 passing. Marquay McDaniel had game-highs in receptions (12) and receiving yards (165). The two squads traded field goals in the first quarter, with Rene Paredes kicking a 13-yarder for Calgary and Paul McCallum responding with an 18-yard effort for British Columbia. A 21-yard touchdown pass from Tate to Eric Rogers early in the second quarter pushed Calgary ahead. The Lions responded with a 47-yard field goal from McCallum. There were plenty of fireworks in the last few minutes of the first half. First, Bryant Moniz scored on a one-yard touchdown run for Calgary, which was followed by a 46-yard touchdown pass from Glenn to Arceneaux before Mitchell hooked up with Rogers for a 24-yard touchdown pass. Calgary led 24-13 after the scoring outburst. McCallum added yet another field goal in the third quarter, this one from 27 yards out. Paredes answered back with three field goals of his own, with a 26-yarder in the third quarter and kicks of 41 and 14 yards in the fourth. Game Notes Calgary matched a team record for wins in the season with the victory ... The Stampeders went 8-1 at home this season ... Three different players, including Arceneaux, had at least 70 yards receiving for British Columbia. Bob Feller Jersey . -- The Detroit Lions made it crystal clear to Golden Tate that he was their top target in free agency. 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Jose Ramirez Indians Jersey . - The Mavericks built a 12-point lead with 2:50 to play, gave away all but two points of it, and still managed to hang on.The Canadian Soccer Association is accusing a group of top women’s players of waiting “until what is effectively the 11th hour” to complain that games during next year’s Women’s World Cup will be played on artificial turf, and accuses lawyers for the players of misrepresenting how many players are upset about the turf controversy. “The use of high quality turf is integral to soccer in Canada and the CSA’s bid on behalf of Canada to host the competition was always premised on the use of turf,” the CSA wrote in a filing with the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario. “The (women players) have been aware of this for at least a year and a half, and probably for three years, since Canada was awarded the right to hold the competition in 2011.” Last Thursday, the players filed a complaint with the tribunal alleging they are victims of gender discrimination because male players in the men’s World Cup only play that tournament on grass. Playing on artificial turf leads to injury more frequently than on grass, the women complainants charge. The complainants include Abby Wambach of the U.S. and Germanys Nadine Angerer, FIFA players of the year for 2012 and 2013, respectively. The players who filed the complaint charge FIFA is discriminating against women by having the tournament played on artificial turf since the 2014 FIFA World Cup for men in Brazil was played on grass. Some professional football leagues, including Major League Soccer, and some FIFA World Cup matches, are played on artificial turf. The women asked for the tribunal to fast-track their filed complaint, since the World Cup begins in eight months. But the CSA says that those players did not complain to FIFA and failed to file their complaint to the tribunal “in a timely way.” “On this basis, not only should the demand for an expedited hearing be rejected, but the CSA will be applying to dismiss the complaint in its entirety for being out of time,” the CSA says in its filing. On March 21, 2013, over 18 months before the players filed their complaint, the match schedule for the Women’s World Cup was announced indicating the stadiums to be used. “That very day, Abby Wambach, one of the playerss listed in the complaint and a major international soccer star, began tweeting about her opposition to the matches being played on turf,” the CSA wrote.dddddddddddd. “To the CSA’s knowledge, no one filed any claim of discrimination in relation to the competition until this complaint was filed.” The CSA’s filing late Thursday amounts to literally the first public statements the organization has made about the controversy. “The assertion that turf fields are ‘second class’ is highly contentious,” the CSA wrote. “The applicants cannot seriously contend that the CSA’s decision to bid on the competition, proposing to use Canada’s best available facilities, constitutes discrimination.” The CSA said the complaint was filed as a way to publicize players’ dissatisfaction with FIFA’s decision in Zurich in 2011, to allow Canada to host the games. Canadian soccer officials say that while a lawyer for Wambach and other players contended that 18 players were compainants, “the complaint is authorized to be brought by only seven players who have delivered consents to counsel advancing the case.” “None of the seven players (or even the 18) is resident in Ontario or plays on an Ontario or on a Canadian team,” the CSA wrote. “They are not authorized to and do not speak on behalf of the teams which have qualified or are attempting to qualify for the competition.” The CSA also wrote that “most elite players spend a significant amount of their playing time on turf. This is particularly the case in Canada. If the complaint proceeds, the CSA will demonstrate that there is no increased risk to players from the use of turf rather than grass.” Data will not dispute the fact that grass has been used at every men’s and women’s World Cup,” David Wright, a lawyer for the players, wrote in a letter Friday to the human rights tribunal. “The fact that the women feel demeaned by being forced to play on an inferior surface while millions watch is indisputable. Applicants allege unequal, discriminatory treatment that does not require extensive data and expert reports to prove, and the applicants deserve a ‘day in court’ before it is too late to remedy this injustice.” ' ' '