The
Canadian Football League or CFL (
[LCF] in French) is a
professional sports league located
entirely in Canada
. The
CFL is the highest level of competition in
Canadian football, a form of
Gridiron football.
Its eight teams, which are located in eight cities, are divided
into two
Conferences of four
teams each (
East and
West). The league's
nineteen-week
regular season runs
from late-June to late November. Each team plays eighteen games
with one
bye week. Following the
regular season, the six teams with the best records (regardless of
Conference)compete in the league's three-week
playoffs, which culminate in the late-November
Grey Cup championship, the country's
largest annual sports and television event.
The CFL was officially founded in 1909. It is the highest level of
play in Canadian football, the most popular football league in
Canada, and the most popular major sports league in Canada after
the
National Hockey
League.
Although
ice hockey is Canada's most popular
sport, the CFL has increased the popularity of Canadian football in Quebec
and Western Canada. Canadian football is
enjoyed at amateur levels (ie. youth, high school,
CJFL,
QJFL,
CIS and senior leagues such as the
Alberta Football League).
In
Southern Ontario, the CFL is
recovering from the
bankruptcy that
plagued the Toronto and Hamilton teams in the
2003 season. Having come under new
ownership, both teams have improved their attendance figures
dramatically since then.
The
Vancouver
-based BC Lions club has
also seen a recent resurgence of fan support, which many attribute
to improved on-field and off-field management. The Lions now
compete with the
Edmonton Eskimos
for top attendance numbers; the Eskimos average as many as 40,000
people per game.
(Vancouver's BC Place Stadium
, Edmonton's Commonwealth
Stadium
, and Toronto's Rogers Centre
are the only stadiums that seat 40,000 or
more). The Saskatchewan Roughriders enjoy the best fan
support of the league, with capacity crouds at every home game for
three seasons, and average attendance of 30,717 for 2009.
History
Early history

CFL logo from 1958-1970
Rugby football began to be played in
Canada in the 1860s, and many of the first Canadian football teams
played under the auspices of the
Canadian Rugby Football Union (CRFU),
founded in 1884. The CRFU was reorganized as the Canadian Rugby
Union (CRU) in 1892, and served as an
umbrella organization that several
leagues were part of. The
Grey Cup was
donated by
Governor
General Earl
Grey in
1909 to the team winning
the
Senior Amateur Football Championship of Canada. By
that time, the sport as played in Canada had diverged markedly
different from its rugby origins. From the 1930s to the 1950s the
two senior leagues of the CRU, the
Interprovincial Rugby
Football Union (IRFU) and
Western Interprovincial
Football Union (WIFU) gradually evolved from
amateur to
professional leagues, and amateur teams
such as those in the
Ontario Rugby Football Union
(ORFU) were no longer competitive in their challenges for the Cup.
The ORFU withdrew from Grey Cup competition in
1954, heralding the start of the
modern era of professional Canadian football, in which the Grey Cup
has been exclusively contested by professional teams (Since 1965,
Canada's top amateur teams, competing in
Canadian Interuniversity
Sport (CIS), have contested the
Vanier
Cup).
In
1956, the IRFU and WIFU
formed a new umbrella organization, the Canadian Football Council
(CFC), and in
1958, the CFC left the
CRU, becoming the Canadian Football League (The CRU remained the
governing body for amateur play in Canada, eventually adopting the
name
Football Canada). Initially,
there was no inter-divisional play between eastern (IRFU) and
western (WIFU) teams except at the
Grey Cup
final. Limited interlocking play was introduced in
1961 and by
1981 there was a full interlocking schedule
of 16 games per season. The separate histories of the IRFU and the
WIFU accounted for the fact that two teams had basically the same
name: the IRFU's
Ottawa Rough
Riders were often called the "Eastern Riders", while the
WIFU's
Saskatchewan
Roughriders were called the "Western Riders" or "Green
Riders".
Other team names had unusual yet traditional
origins: with rowing a national craze
in the late 1800s, the Argonaut Rowing Club of Toronto formed a
rugby team for its members' off-season participation; the club name
Toronto Argonauts remains to this
day, and after World War II, the two teams in Hamilton
—the Tigers
and the Flying Wildcats—merged both their organizations and their
names, forming the Hamilton
Tiger-Cats.
.png/100px-CFL_logo_(1970-2002).png)
CFL logo from 1970-2002
After the admission of the expansion
BC
Lions in Vancouver in 1954, the league remained stable with
nine franchises: (
BC Lions,
Calgary Stampeders,
Edmonton Eskimos,
Saskatchewan Roughriders,
Winnipeg Blue Bombers,
Hamilton Tiger-Cats,
Toronto Argonauts,
Ottawa Rough Riders,
Montreal Alouettes) from its 1958
inception until
1982, when the
Alouettes folded and were replaced the same year by a new franchise
named the
Concordes.
In
1986 the Concordes were renamed
the Alouettes to attract more fan support, but the team folded the
next year.
The demise of the Alouettes, leaving only
three teams in the East Division compared to five teams in the West
Division, forced the League to alter its playoff structure by
moving the easternmost Western team, the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, into the East
Division, upsetting the long-standing tradition of "East vs. West",
as Winnipeg is not considered part of eastern Canada
.
United States expansion
The CFL began eyeing an American expansion in 1992.
In 1993, the league admitted its first United States
-based franchise, the Sacramento Gold Miners. After
modest success, the league then expanded further in the U.S. in
1994 with the
Las Vegas Posse,
Baltimore Stallions, and
Shreveport Pirates. The Las Vegas
franchise was an abject failure and turned into a road team by the
end of the season. Baltimore, however, advanced all the way to the
82nd Grey Cup and was a financial
success as well.
For the
1995 campaign, the American
teams were split off into their own South Division. Las Vegas was
folded, while two new teams, the
Birmingham Barracudas and
Memphis Mad Dogs, were added.
The Sacramento team
moved to become the San Antonio
Texans — an ironic occurrence, since a San
Antonio
team was to have been admitted into the CFL along
with the Gold Miners for 1993 but folded before taking a single
snap. 1995 saw the Stallions become the first non-Canadian
team to win the
Grey Cup.
The success of the CFL's U.S. expansion was mixed. Baltimore and
San Antonio had sustainable operations and were expected to return
in 1996. Memphis and Birmingham had reasonable success in 1995 but
ran into severe attendance problems during
college football season; Shreveport,
although it had solid attendance, did not fare well. By the end of
the 1995 season, Shreveport and Birmingham moved out of their
cities and ultimately folded, and Memphis followed suit. When
Art Modell, owner of the NFL's
Cleveland Browns, announced he would be
moving his team to Baltimore to become the
Baltimore Ravens, the Stallions moved to
Montreal, becoming the revived
Montreal Alouettes. San Antonio decided
not to continue operations as the only American team and folded
shortly thereafter. By the
1996
season, the Canadian Football League was once again based
entirely in Canada.
Long before the launch of the CFL USA program,
NBC Sports had broadcast three CFL games live
during the
1982 season while
NFL players were on strike. Future
NFL Hall of Famer
Warren Moon, then of
the
Edmonton Eskimos, played in one
of those games.
Charlie
Jones and
Len Dawson were the
announcers. (For more information on current U.S. rights to
broadcast CFL games, see the "Broadcasting" section below.)
Recent history
After three seasons that included American teams, the CFL American
expansion experiment came to a close, as the CFL returned to an
all-Canadian format in
1996 with
nine teams; however, the
Ottawa
Rough Riders, in existence since 1876, folded after the 1996
season, due to poor ownership and fan support, in addition to an
aging facility which no longer was suitable for providing a
profitable location for professional football. In
2002, the league expanded back to nine teams
with the creation of the
Ottawa
Renegades. After four seasons of financial losses, the
Renegades were suspended indefinitely before the
2006 season; their players were absorbed by
the remaining teams in a
dispersal
draft.
In 1997, the NFL provided a $3-million USD interest-free loan to
the financially struggling CFL, as CFL teams were losing money
after the failed US expansion. In return, the NFL was granted
access to CFL players entering a defined two-month window in the
option year of their contract. This was later written into the
CFL's collective bargaining agreement with its players. The CFL's
finances have since stabilized and they eventually repaid the loan.
The CFL–NFL agreement expired in 2006. Both leagues have been
attempting to reach a new agreement, however the CFL broke off
negotiations after
Rogers
Communications paid $78-million to host eight games of the
Buffalo Bills over five seasons.
The league
had struck a committee in 2003 to examine the feasibility of adding
a tenth team (which has been a long-standing CFL ambition), with
the leading candidate cities being Quebec City
and Halifax
. Exhibition games were held in Quebec City
in 2003 and in Halifax in 2005. The Halifax event, dubbed
Touchdown Atlantic, was scheduled to
repeat in 2006 but was cancelled after the suspension of the Ottawa
Renegades franchise. Commissioner
Tom
Wright had indicated that Halifax was the leading candidate for
expansion.
Moncton
is also pursuing a CFL team and, though the city is
constructing a stadium for the World Junior Track and Field
Championships, set for opening in 2010, the seating, and field
itself would have to be expanded for a CFL team. The mayor
of Moncton, premier of New Brunswick, and league commissioner Mark
Cohon met in February 2009 to negotiate a deal that would see the
city host a regular season game annually over five years, beginning
in the
2010 CFL season.
In
2005, the league set an all-time
attendance record with a total
attendance of more than 2.3 million. With the absence of Ottawa in
2006, the league recorded total
regular
season attendance of 2,112,696, increasing the average per-game
attendance to 29,343. This is the third highest per-game attendance
of any North American sports league and the sixth highest
per-game attendance of any sports league worldwide.
A recent
survey conducted at the University of Lethbridge
confirmed that the CFL is the second most popular
sports league in Canada, with the following of 19% of the total
adult Canadian population compared to 30% for the NHL. The
NFL had 13% following, with a total
of 34% following at least one of the pro football leagues. This
could be interpreted to mean that approximately 80% of Canadian
football fans follow the CFL and about 55% follow the NFL. The
2007 CFL season marked the sixth
straight season of over two million attendance in regular season.
Though slightly less than 2006, the 2,100,016 total attendance
figure showed greater over-all strength as the average game
attendance rose to 29,167, the highest since the
1983 season. Leading the growth were the
Roughriders with six consecutive sellouts, the Blue Bombers with
five consecutive sellouts, and the Argonauts, whose average
attendance of 30,931 was their highest since 1992. The
2007 Grey Cup champion Roughriders were named
Canada's team of the year by
Canadian
Press and credited with rekindling interest in football in
the West.
In
2008, the CFL re-awarded the former
Renegades franchise to Ottawa 67's owner
Jeff Hunt, who will likely launch a new
Ottawa franchise in 2012 pending reconstruction of Frank Clair
Stadium
.
Season structure
As of 2008, the CFL season includes:
- A two-game, two-week exhibition season (or pre-season) in
mid-June
- An 18-game, 19-week regular season running from late June to
early November
- A six-team, three-week single
elimination playoff tournament beginning
in November and culminating in the Grey Cup
championship in late November. Championship teams will play either
two or three playoff games, including the Grey Cup game, depending
on their standing at the end of the regular season.
Exhibition season
Team training camps open in May, with pre-season exhibition games
beginning in early June. The pre-season schedule is two weeks long
with each team playing two games against teams from its own
division.
Regular season
The regular season is nineteen weeks long, with games beginning
Canada Day weekend and finishing by early
November. The CFL's eight teams are divided into two divisions: the
East Division
and
West
Division, with four teams in each division. Each team plays two
games against each team in the opposite division, three games
against two teams in its own division, and four games against the
other team in its own division. Alternating divisional
bye weeks take place in weeks nine and ten, putting
the focus on games within the division not resting that week. The
most popular featured week in the CFL season is the
Labour Day Classic, played over the
course of the
Labour Day weekend, where
the matchups feature the first half of home-and-home series between
the traditional geographic rivalries of Toronto–Hamilton (a rivalry
which began in 1873), Edmonton–Calgary (see
Battle of Alberta),
and Winnipeg–Saskatchewan. BC—Montreal, while not considered a
"traditional" rivalry, rounds out the week's games. The following
week's rematch of these games is a popular event as well,
especially in recent years, where the rematch of the
Saskatchewan-Winnipeg game has been dubbed the
Banjo Bowl.
Other features of the regular season
schedule are the Hall of
Fame Game in Hamilton
and the Thanksgiving Classic, where the match
ups do not always feature traditional rivalries.
The league awards points based on regular season results (two for a
win, one for a tie and none for a loss). As of the 2008 season, in
the event two teams in the same division finish the season with the
same number of points the tie is broken based on the following
criteria (in descending order):
- Number of wins;
- Number of wins between the tied teams;
- Net aggregate of points scored (i.e. total points
scored less total points conceded) between the tied teams;
- Net quotient of points scored (i.e. total points
scored divided by total points conceded) between the tied
teams;
- Number of wins in divisional games;
- Net aggregate of points scored in divisional games;
- Net quotient of points scored in divisional games;
- Net aggregate of points scored in all games;
- Net quotient of points scored in all games;
- Coin toss
Playoffs
The
playoffs begin in November. After the
regular season, the top team from each division has an automatic
home berth in the division final, and a bye week during the
division semifinal. The second-place team from each division hosts
the third-place team in the division semifinal, unless a
fourth-place team from one division finishes with a better record
than a third place team in the other (this provision is known as
the
crossover rule, and while it implies that it is
possible for two teams in the same division to play for the Grey
Cup, only two crossover teams have ever won a semifinal: the
Edmonton Eskimos on 8 November 2008, v. the Winnipeg Blue Bombers,
and the BC Lions on 15 November 2009, v. the Hamilton Tiger-Cats).
The winners of each division's semifinal game then travel to play
the first place teams in the division finals. Since 2005, the
division semifinals and division finals have been sponsored by
Scotiabank. The two division champions
then face each other in the
Grey Cup game,
which is held on the third, fourth or fifth Sunday of
November.
Grey Cup
The
Grey Cup is both the name of the
championship of the CFL and the name of the trophy awarded to the
victorious team. The Grey Cup is the second oldest trophy in North
American professional sport after the Stanley Cup. The Grey Cup
game is hosted in one of the league's member cities. In recent
years, it has been hosted in a different city every year, selected
two or more years in advance.
The 2007 Grey
Cup, held in Toronto
on November 25, 2007, featured a Labour Day Classic
match up for the first time ever, with the Saskatchewan Roughriders winning
23–19 over the Winnipeg Blue
Bombers. In 2008 the Grey Cup champions were the
Calgary Stampeders, after
defeating the
Montreal Alouettes
22-14. In 2009, the Montreal Alouettes defeated the Saskatchewan
Roughriders 28-27.
As the country's single largest annual sporting event, the Grey Cup
has long served as an unofficial Canadian autumn festival
generating national media coverage and a large amount of revenue
for the host city. Many fans travel from across the country to
attend the game and the week of festivities that lead up to
it.
Awards
Following the Grey Cup game, the
Grey Cup Most Valuable Player
and
Grey Cup Most
Valuable Canadian are selected. A number of league individual
player awards, such as the
Most Outstanding Player
and
Most
Outstanding Defensive Player, are awarded annually at a special
ceremony in the host city during the week before the Grey Cup game;
this ceremony is broadcast nationally on
TSN. The
Annis Stukus Trophy, also known as the
Coach of the Year Award, is awarded separately at a banquet held
during the off-season each February. While the CFL has not held an
all-star game since
1988, an All-Star Team is selected and
honoured at the league awards ceremony during Grey Cup week.
Broadcasting
The CFL Championship game, the Grey Cup, holds the record for the
largest television audience in Canadian history. Television
coverage on CBC, CTV and Radio-Canada of the 1983 Grey Cup
attracted a viewing audience of 8,118,000 people as Toronto edged
B.C. 18-17. At the time, this represented 33% of the Canadian
population.
Canadian broadcasters
Currently, the official television
broadcasters of CFL games are cable network TSN (which began televising CFL games in
1985), while cable network and TSN
partner RDS broadcasts
Montreal Alouettes games in
French for the Quebec
television
market. Games are typically scheduled for Thursday to
Saturday evenings during June, July and August, but switch to more
Saturday and Sunday afternoon games during September and October.
TSN has created a tradition of at least one Friday night game each
week, branded as
Friday Night Football.
CBC and TSN drew record television audiences for CFL broadcasts in
2005. The 2006 season was the first season in which every regular
season game was televised, as the league implemented an
instant replay challenge system. In 2006, the
CFL also began offering pay-per-view webcasts of every game on CFL
Broadband. Until the end of the 2007 season CBC and RDS were the
exclusive television broadcasters for all playoff games, including
the
Grey Cup, which regularly draws a
Canadian viewing audience in excess of 4 million.
Since
2008, TSN and RDS are the
exclusive television and internet broadcasters of all CFL games,
including the playoffs and Grey Cup. The five-year agreement, which
includes an option for a sixth year, is worth about $16 million
annually and marks the first time since
1952 that CBC will not be
broadcasting any CFL games. The CFL will no longer be broadcast on
Canadian
terrestrial
television, unless TSN chooses to air the game on its
terrestrial partners,
CTV or
A-Channel. The move to TSN all but assures
that all CFL games will be broadcast in
high
definition. , TSN was available in about 8.8 million of
Canada's 13 million
households. The
two play by play announcers are Chris Cuthbert and Rod Black while
the colour commentators are Glen Suitor (with Cuthbert) and Duane
Forde (with Black).
CFL teams have local broadcast contracts with terrestrial radio
stations for regular season and playoff games, while The Fan Radio
Network (
Rogers
Communications) owns the rights to the Grey Cup. In 2006,
Sirius Satellite Radio gained
exclusive rights for North American CFL
satellite radio broadcasts and will
broadcast 25 CFL games per season, including the Grey Cup, through
2008.
Foreign coverage
In the United States, CFL television broadcasts are available
nationally on
America One. Until the
2007 season,
regional sports networks like
Altitude,
NESN, and
MASN showed games, but these
were discontinued in
2008 (mainly
because America One and the CFL only reached a deal days before the
season began, not allowing the network time to reach deals with
individual RSNs). The Grey Cup aired on
Versus on November 22, 2008, with a
replay the next day on America One.
From 2006 through the 2008 season,
Friday Night Football
was carried exclusively on
World Sport
HD in the United States; however, due to the January 2009
shutdown of that channel's parent company,
Voom HD Networks, America One reclaimed
those rights.
In Europe, games were available on
NASN;
however
ESPN decided against renewing the
rights in 2007.
In 1982, during a players' strike in the
NFL,
NBC
broadcast CFL games in the United States in lieu of the NFL games
which were cancelled; the first week of broadcasts featured the
NFL on NBC broadcast teams,
before a series of blowout games on the network and the resulting
low ratings resulted in NBC cutting back and eventually cancelling
its CFL coverage. ESPN host
Chris
Berman became a fan of the game in the early days of ESPN, when
the network used to air CFL games, and continues to cover the
Canadian league on-air.
Previous broadcasting arrangements
From
1962 through
1986, CBC and
CTV shared CFL broadcasting rights.
They split playoff games and
simulcast the
Grey Cup. In
1962,
1965,
1967,
1968 and
1970, CTV commentators were used for the
dual network telecast, while in
1963,
1964,
1966 and
1969, CBC announcers were provided. From
1971 through
1986, one network's crew called the first
half while the other called the rest of the game. After the 1986
season, CTV dropped coverage of the CFL and the Grey Cup. From
1987 through
1990, the CFL operated its own syndicated
network,
CFN. Like CTV,
CFN split playoff games with CBC. However, CFN had completely
separate coverage of the Grey Cup, utilizing its own production and
commentators. From
1991 to
2007, all post-season games had been
exclusively on CBC; beginning in
2008, the Grey Cup was carried on
TSN, although the cable provider reserves
the right to move the game to sister network
CTV.
Internet
On the Internet, all radio broadcasts of CFL games are available
for free through each affiliate's Web site. Video broadcasts were
free in Canada at one time, but are no longer available (viewers
must watch TSN via cable or satellite). Viewers are able to
purchase previous games on the TSN website. International viewers
(identified by
geolocation) are required
to use either CFL Broadband (a
pay-per-view service, outside Northern America)
or, beginning 2008,
ESPN360 in the United
States. A small number of America One affiliates do stream on the
Internet, thus providing certain CFL video feeds for free, even
though the CFL discourages this.
Players and compensation
The CFL began enforcing a salary cap for the
2007 season of $4.05 million per team.
The cap was raised to $4.2 million in the
2008 season and remains at that level for
2009. Financial penalties for teams that breach the cap are set at
$1 to $1 for the first $100,000 over, $2 to $1 for $100,000 to
$300,000 over, and $3 to $1 for $300,000 and above. Penalties could
also include forfeited draft picks. In 2006, the active roster
limit was increased from 40 to 42. The import/non-import ratio,
which required teams to keep at least 20 non-import (Canadian-born
or Canadian-trained) players on their active roster, was increased
to 21. Teams may have up to 4 players on their reserve roster, and
up to 7 on their practice roster. Eligible non-imports (usually
from
CIS football or American
college football) are drafted by teams in
the annual
Canadian College
Draft, which follows an evaluation camp similar to the
NFL Combine. A junior player in the locale of a
team may be claimed as a territorial exemption and sign with that
team before beginning collegiate play (one recent example is of
when the Saskatchewan Roughriders claimed
Mike Maurer). Teams maintain "negotiation lists"
of players they wish to sign as
free
agents. CFL players are represented by the Canadian Football
League Players Association (CFLPA). Each team elects two players to
the CFLPA Board of Player Representatives, which meets once per
year. Every two years, it elects an executive Board of
Directors.
CFL–NFL comparisons
In the days when sports teams were financed almost entirely by
ticket sales, the CFL and
NFL were, financially speaking, on
relatively equal footing, and CFL teams could sign top U.S.
college football stars such as
Johnny Rodgers and
Joe Theismann. During the 1950s and 1960s
exhibition games were played between CFL and NFL/
AFL teams using a mixture of each
league's rules. The last such exhibition game saw the CFL's
Hamilton Tiger-Cats defeat the
AFL's
Buffalo Bills, the only time in
which a Canadian team defeated an American team in the
series.
As late
as the 1970s and early 1980s, when high-capacity stadiums were
built in Montreal
, Edmonton
, Vancouver
, and Toronto
, people such as Montreal Alouettes owner Nelson Skalbania continued to believe that
relative parity could be sustained so long as the CFL could get
larger stadiums built in its other cities and sell them
out.
However, by the 1980s it became clear that financial parity between
the two leagues would not be maintained, not so much because of the
disparity in attendance figures, but because of the NFL's
increasingly lucrative television contracts that now bring in a
majority of the NFL's revenue. The CFL could not hope to negotiate
similar contracts with Canadian networks because the U.S.
television market is more than ten times the size of Canada's
(whereas, at the time, the NFL only had 3 times as many teams as
the CFL). A notable exception to this trend occurred in 1991 when
the deep-pocketed owners of the Toronto Argonauts (tycoon
Bruce McNall, actor
John
Candy, and hockey star
Wayne
Gretzky) signed U.S. college star
Raghib
"Rocket" Ismail to the then-unheard of sum of
$18.2 million spread over four years. This proved
unsustainable and Ismail left for the NFL after two seasons.
Currently, the difference in average salaries between the CFL and
NFL is significant, with only a handful of CFL players making more
than the NFL minimum.
Despite a common belief that the average NFL player is more
talented than the average CFL player, the disparity in talent is
not nearly as great as the disparity in compensation. Due to the
difference in
rules, pace of play
and field size between the two leagues, they mostly compete for
different types of players. Mobility and quickness are typically
valued over size and strength in the CFL, and CFL teams often
recruit skilled players who would be considered undersized by NFL
standards. For this reason, there are few players who have played
in both leagues, and even fewer who have achieved success in both
leagues. Only two people have been elected to both the
Canadian Football Hall of
Fame and the U.S.
Pro Football Hall of Fame
: quarterback Warren Moon
and coach Bud Grant. There are many
cases of CFLers going to the NFL and having success, such as
Pro Bowlers Joe
Horn,
Jeff Garcia,
Brendon Ayanbadejo and
Doug Flutie and Pro Football Hall of Fame coach
Marv Levy. On the other hand, there have
also been cases of NFL stars coming to the CFL and failing to
excel, such as the 2006 signing of
Ricky
Williams.
League commissioners
Teams
Active teams
Expansion team
On March
25, 2008, the CFL granted an expansion
franchise for the 2010 CFL
season to an Ottawa
-based group
led by Jeff Hunt, owner of the Ontario
Hockey League's Ottawa 67's, on the
condition of securing a lease agreement of Frank Clair
Stadium
. The CFL had previously stated that the team
would be a continuation of the
Ottawa
Renegades, but the announcement did not make this clear.
Halifax
, Quebec
City
, London
, and
Windsor
also have been lobbying for Canadian Football
League franchises in recent years. Halifax and Moncton
have both been angling for the revival of the Atlantic Schooners, a proposed team that
was founded for Halifax in 1984 but never took the field due to the
lack of a CFL-capacity stadium (CFL rules dictate at least 25,000
seats but will allow in certain cases 20,000; however, the largest
stadium in the Atlantic region, Huskies Stadium
in Halifax, currently seats a maximum of 11,000,
though Moncton is in the process of building a stadium expandable
to 20,000 seats). A pre-season game, dubbed
Touchdown Atlantic, was held in Halifax
in the
2005 CFL season and
negotiations are underway to hold an annual regular season game in
Moncton, starting in the
2010 CFL
season.
While Quebec City has not garnered as much attention as Moncton and
Halifax, there has been expressed interest to add a team there.
In 2003,
an exhibition game was held at PEPS Le Stade Extérieur
between the Montreal
Alouettes and Ottawa Renegades
where Montreal won 54-23. In May 2009,
Christina Saint Marche, a
businesswoman based in London, England, voiced her interest in
operating a team in Quebec City stating that there would be a
natural rivalry with Montreal. However, Commissioner
Mark Cohon noted that he has not been approached
by Saint Marche and that she would still need to secure a suitable
stadium of a capacity of at least 25,000. It has been suggested
that this would be a good location based on the support that the
Laval Rouge et Or football team
receives.
Windsor,
as part of the Detroit-Windsor
metropolitan area, has been suggested by potential owner Oronde Gadsden as a potential market for a
team he is pursuing (though Gadsden indicated the team, if he were
to own it, would likely be based in Detroit, Michigan
).
Western New York has also been mentioned as
a potential expansion site; Gadsden mentioned Rochester,
New York
as another potential market for his team, while
there have been suggestions, both serious and non-serious, that the
teams from Southern Ontario play some games in Buffalo
as a response to the Buffalo Bills playing games in
Toronto. Buffalo's UB
Stadium
(29,000) and Coca-Cola Field
(19,500, with potential for expansion) are at or
near CFL-capacity. Rochester's Marina Auto Stadium
is equipped for football but its capacity is
currently only 13,768 (though its original plans allow it to be
expanded to 20,000 seats).
Defunct and inactive teams

Locations of defunct CFL teams
| Team |
City |
Stadium |
Years in CFL |
| Atlantic
Schooners |
Halifax , Nova
Scotia |
Conditional Expansion |
Proposed for 1984 |
Baltimore
Stallions
Transformed into the revived Montreal Alouettes in
1996
|
Baltimore , Maryland |
Memorial Stadium |
1994-1995 |
| Birmingham
Barracudas |
Birmingham , Alabama |
Legion Field |
1995 |
| Las Vegas
Posse |
Las
Vegas, Nevada |
Sam Boyd Stadium |
1994 |
| Memphis Mad
Dogs |
Memphis , Tennessee |
Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium |
1995 |
| Miami
Manatees |
Miami , Florida |
Miami Orange Bowl |
Proposed for 1996 |
| Ottawa
Renegades |
Ottawa , Ontario |
Frank Clair Stadium |
2002-2005 |
| Ottawa Rough
Riders |
Ottawa , Ontario |
Frank Clair Stadium |
1909-1996 |
| Sacramento Gold
Miners |
Sacramento , California |
Hornet Stadium |
1993-1994 |
| San Antonio
Texans (1995) |
San Antonio , Texas |
Alamodome |
1995 |
| San Antonio
Texans (1993 proposed) |
San Antonio , Texas |
Bobcat Stadium |
Proposed for 1993 |
| Shreveport
Pirates |
Shreveport , Louisiana |
Independence
Stadium |
1994-1995. |
- Notes
- The Hamilton Tiger-Cats were created in 1950 as a merger of the
Hamilton Tigers (founded
1869 as the Hamilton Foot Ball Club, and merged with the Hamilton Alerts in 1914) and the Hamilton Flying Wildcats.
- The
Alouettes' main home field is Molson Stadium
. In recent years, they also play their final
regular season home game and any home playoff games at Olympic
Stadium
.
- Percival Molson Stadium
Phase II for Completion in 2009, upgrading an
additional 5,000 seats, Northwest corner, and East
Grandstand.
- The CFL considers the current Montreal Alouettes franchise
(founded in 1994 as the Baltimore Stallions, moved to Montreal
and renamed the Montreal Alouettes in 1996) to be a continuation of the original
Montreal Alouettes (founded 1946, played in the CFL 1958-1981)
and Montreal Concordes (founded
1982, renamed the Montreal Alouettes
in 1986, folded just before the
1987 season).
- Created by a merger of the Winnipegs (whose roots go back to
1879) and the St. John's team, and become known as the "Winnipeg
Pegs" before changing to the current name, Blue Bombers, in
1936.
- Not related to the Vancouver Grizzlies, who
played one season in 1941.
- Roots go back to the Calgary Rugby Foot-ball Club,
which formed in 1907.
- Club originally formed in 1895, became officially known as the
Eskimos in 1910.
- Became Saskatchewan Roughriders officially in 1950, after the
team became the only pro football team left in the province in
1948.
- Proposed team that was abandoned before the 1995 season, after
an exhibition game between Birmingham and Baltimore in Miami was
poorly attended.
- Another team named the San Antonio Texans was formed in 1993,
but folded before playing a game. The Texans team listed here were
the Sacramento Gold Miners, who moved to Texas in 1995.
Cheerleading
Each football team is also teamed up with a
cheerleading squad.
See also
References
- http://www.nationalpost.com/sports/story.html?id=563856
-
http://www.sportsnet.ca/football/cfl/2007/10/20/lefko_bills_nfl_initiative/
- Crase, Dave. New stadium puts hopes for a CFL franchise on
high. CanWestNews Service. 23 April 2008.
- CFL broadcasters page accessed 2008-03-06
- Naylor, David.
- Examples include this April Fool's Day joke played by the
Tiger-Cats: TICATS TO HOLD TWO GAMES SOUTH OF THE BORDER.
Hamilton Tiger-Cats press release. 1 April 2008.
External links
- Official
- Media