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Winnipeg GM Kyle Walters isn’t worrying about the long-term future of Blue Bombers head coach Mike O’Shea.

O’Shea is in the final year of his contract with Winnipeg, which will chase a third straight Grey Cup title Sunday at Mosaic Stadium against the Toronto Argonauts. On Wednesday, O’Shea, 52, of North Bay, Ont., downplayed any suggestion that he’s a lame-duck coach, adding he has traditionally completed his deals and then signed new ones.

On Thursday, Walters said that’s been the case this season as well.

“This is what Mike does,” Walters said during the Bombers’ media-day session. “We sign him to a term, he works the term of that contract and then we sign him to a new one.

“I fully expect that will be the case again this year. I don’t really worry about it because it’s nothing new.”

Walters said if he was a betting man, he’d put money on O’Shea remaining with the Bombers.

“Correct,” Walters said.

O’Shea, the CFL’s longest-tenured head coach, is completing his eighth season as Winnipeg’s head coach, having complied an 82-58 regular-season record. The Bombers have finished atop the West Division the past two campaigns and won Grey Cups each time.

Winnipeg has a 7-3 playoff record under O’Shea but is 6-0 since 2019, including the two Grey Cup championships. The franchise has recorded double-digit wins in each of its past six seasons, including a franchise-record 15 regular-season victories this year.

“Mike is just the way he is and during the football season we don’t talk about anything like that,” Walters said. “We don’t worry about anything else.

“There’s no use even bringing it up, it’s pointless. But that is the benefit of having worked together for so many years [that] as a whole group, we know how everybody thinks and works.”

The 6-foot-3, 228-pound O’Shea had a stellar 16-year CFL career as a linebacker with the Hamilton Tiger-Cats (1993-95, 2000) and Toronto (1996-99, 2001-08). He won three Grey Cups as an Argo (1996-97, ‘04) and in 271 regular-season games accumulated 1,151 tackles – the most ever by a Canadian and second in league history.

O’Shea was the CFL’s top rookie in 1993 and its outstanding Canadian six years later. An all-time Argo, O’Shea was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 2017.

Success has followed O’Shea into the coaching ranks. He added a fourth Grey Cup ring in 2012 as Toronto’s special-teams co-ordinator before joining the Bombers.

O’Shea captured the Annis Stukus Trophy as the CFL’s top coach last season and is a finalist for the honour again this year with Toronto’s Ryan Dinwiddie.

CFL awards

The CFL handed out its top trophies in Regina on Thursday night. Find out who won on our website, globesports.com

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