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“A lot of rest, that is the key,” Bryant said. “I don’t do much of anything. I am a laid-back guy. I go home and let my dog out and sit on the couch. Other than that, I don’t do much.”
Published Oct 22, 2025 • 2 minute read
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Bllue Bombers offensive tackle Stanley Bryant. The 39-year-old was nominated as the Bombers representative for the league’s most outstanding offensive lineman award. Photo by KEVIN KING/Winnipeg Sun /Winnipeg SunArticle content
Well into his supposed gridiron golden years, Stanley Bryant can still bring it with the best of them.
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“Bryant is good,” Blue Bombers head coach Mike O’Shea said. “I don’t know if age comes into it, because if you are good then you are really good. He can still handle the physical demands, his understanding of how to play the game, the angles you need, he can still handle the rigors of the daily grind.”
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The 39-year-old left tackle was nominated as the Bombers’ 2025 representative as the league’s most outstanding offensive lineman. This marks the seventh time Bryant has been nominated.
“It is always an honour, but I couldn’t do it without the guys in the room with me,” he said. “I am at a top-tier (level to my game) and just playing well. I will continue to build on that (while) always trying to improve and get better every game.”
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Bryant has picked up the CFL’s most outstanding offensive lineman award on four separate occasions. He is also a nine-time league all-star, dating to the 2013-14 season.
The North Carolina native was asked how he manages to maintain his ‘top-tier’ standard when most guys have either retired or padded a few inches to the waistline.
In loving jest, one local media representative called him older than “the average bear” as a comparison to the age of players in the league.
Bryant chuckled before mentioning Lebron James and Tom Brady as athletes who maintained a high level of play in the advancing years. Though he didn’t compare himself to either Brady or James, he used their names to illustrate his point.
“I don’t know how to answer that,” he said. “For me, it is a mindset, knowing what I am capable of and what I still can do. I am striving for greatness and continuing to be the best I can be when I am on the field.”
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The left tackle was asked about his most important off-season or in-season routine that allows him to maintain his longevity.
“A lot of rest, that is the key,” he said. “I don’t do much of anything. I am a laid-back guy. I go home and let my dog out and sit on the couch. Other than that, I don’t do much.”
“He doesn’t tax himself too much in the off-season,” O’Shea added. “He is very good at relaxing.”
The voting was conducted by four members of the local chapter of the Football Reporters of Canada and the league’s head coaches. The league announced all the league’s nominees on Wednesday morning.
The next round of voting will see the West and East Division winners announced next week, followed by the CFL’s Player Awards on Nov. 13 at the Club Regent Event Centre.
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