Maybe it was because he was contemplating the changes in the Ottawa REDBLACKS' offence from one season to the next. Or maybe he just thought asking about contentment was a funny way of starting a conversation about football.
Or maybe it's because "contentment" is the wrong word to describe what the veteran quarterback is feeling as the 2015 season gets underway, even after a Week 1 win in Montreal. Because over the course of a rather long conversation, the almost always amiable 40-year-old leader of the REDBLACKS focused on a continuing endeavour; that of pulling Ottawa into contender status in the east this year as he gets familiar with a slew of new receivers and a new way of attacking a defence.
“I’m excited to have access to all these guys and it’s really gonna help make our team a team that can continually get better,” says Burris after Canada Day niceties were set aside and he was asked about his level of quarterback contentment. No time for that right now, with work ahead. No time for Canada Day fireworks on The Hill, either. "No, no, I'm into my playbook tonight," Burris laughs. Hank may be smilin' after last week's 20-16 win over the Alouettes but he is not resting.
Burris must be happier because the Ottawa offence is already better. Better on paper and so far, better on the field, even though the sample size that represents prosperity is admittedly small. Just the one game, although it came with a nice big cherry of optimism on top - a game clinching, ball-controlling drive that salted away the final three minutes and marched the REDBLACKS out from just in front of their own end zone.
There is much more to come, Burris thinks, as he learns a different kind of offence; one that has him reforming his game a little, the way Ricky Ray had to in Toronto and the way Anthony Calvillo had to in Montreal.
In taking time out from his homework, the veteran pivot had thoughts on his new receivers, new offensive coordinator Jason Maas, and the kind of personal execution needed to make Maas' vision a masterpiece on the field.
Burris doesn't mid looking in the rearview, as long as you don't spend too much time lingering and don't go too far back. Of last week's road win he says: “It was huge.” Of last season's lamentable 2 and 16 record he says: “We’re never gonna look back on that again because right now the future’s bright and that’s what we’ve been focusing on.”
The Ottawa offence has been remade. The off-season receiving additions include free agents Chris Williams, Brad Sinopoli, Ernest Jackson and Greg Ellingson. Maurice Price came over in a trade with Calgary. They all got their hands on the ball in that Montreal win, all of them immersing themselves in Maas' designs, which have their genesis in the schemes that brought both Calvillo and Ray Grey Cup championships.
"If it’s all about making people eat their words because I’m a forty-year-old guy ... I still have the mental ability to understand the game, know the opponents that I’m up against. It’s all about being smart when you do whichever it is, whether it’s tucking the ball and running or dropping back, reading the defences and knowing where to go with the ball.”