Question:

Where do I find out more on Canadian football?

by  |  earlier

0 LIKES UnLike

I live in the states and find the CFL to be a breath of fresh air to the NFL with its overrated pay to players and costs to fans.I think the rule differences in the CFL are intresting and I like to know where I can find out more about them?

 Tags:

   Report

8 ANSWERS


  1. find out more at www.cfl.ca  go argos go.


  2. go to cfl.ca for all info you need...i agree with you about the CFL.  The rule differences such as 3 downs and longer field naturally result in more passing which is much more exciting than running 2, 3 yards per play (BORRRRRRRRRRRRING)...the kicking team getting a point if the ball enters the other team's end zone and not run back over the goal line.  Also, NFL players are overpaid and i don't think they play for the love of the game as much as CFL players.

  3. www.cfl.ca or www.tsn.ca/cfl

  4. You can start at WWW.CFL.CA.

    I share your sentiments about the CFL.  More action, more fun, less hype.

  5. The exact answer(s) to your question are available on wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Can...

    The official site (www.cfl.ca) is useful, but I'd strongly suggest visiting a CFL fan forum such as "The 13th man" (www.13thman.com) for answers to specific CFL-related questions.

  6. Go to the web site of the Saskatchewan Roughriders and get a copy of Terry McEvoy's book "Rider Pride On The American Side". He is a Minnesotan who also likes -- nay, loves -- the CFL and makes it here to Regina for several games each year.

  7. Check out www.cfl.ca it has links to all Canadian teams, plus rules, stats and records dating back to the start up of the league.

  8. CFL” redirects here. For other uses, see CFL (disambiguation).

    Canadian Football League

    2007 CFL season



    Sport Canadian football

    Founded 1958

    CEO Mark Cohon (commissioner)

    No. of teams 8, in two four-team divisions

    Country/

    Countries  Canada

    Most recent champion(s) British Columbia Lions

    TV partner(s) TSN, RDS, CBC

    Official website cfl.ca

    LionsStampedersEskimosRoughridersBlue BombersTiger-CatsArgonautsAlouettesThe Canadian Football League (CFL) (Ligue canadienne de football (LCF) in French), is a professional sports league located in Canada that plays Canadian football. Its eight teams, located in eight cities, are divided into two divisions of four teams each(East and West). The league's nineteen-week regular season runs from the Canada Day weekend in early July to early November. Each team plays eighteen games with one bye week. Following the regular season, six of the eight teams 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.[1] The CFL, officially founded in 1958, yet tracing its origins to the 1860s, is the highest level of play in Canadian football, the most popular football league in Canada, and most popular sports league in Canada after the National Hockey League.[2]. The Grey Cup trophy and game predate the league by many years, just as does the NHL's championship trophy, the Stanley Cup.

    Contents [hide]

    1 History

    1.1 Early history

    1.2 United States expansion

    1.3 Recent history

    2 Season structure

    2.1 Exhibition season

    2.2 Regular season

    2.3 Playoffs

    2.4 Grey Cup

    2.5 Awards

    3 Broadcasting

    4 Players and compensation

    5 Teams

    5.1 Active teams

    5.2 Defunct and inactive teams

    6 See also

    7 References

    8 External links



    [edit] History

    [edit] Early history

    Further information: History of Canadian football



    CFL logo from 1958 to 1969Rugby football had its origins 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.[3] 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 nickname: 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 nicknames 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 nickname Toronto Argonauts remains to this day, and after World War II, the two teams in Hamilton—the Tigers and the Wildcats—merged both their organizations and their nicknames, forming the Hamilton Tiger-Cats.

    Commissioners

    Sydney Halter 1958-1966

    Keith Davey 1966

    Ted Workman (interim) 1967

    Allan McEachern 1967-1968

    Jake Gaudaur 1968-1984

    Douglas Mitchell 1984-1988

    William Baker 1989

    Roy McMurtry (interim) 1990

    Donald Crump 1990-1991

    Phil Kershaw (interim) 1992

    Larry Smith 1992-1996

    John Tory 1996-2000

    Michael Lysko 2000-2002

    David Braley (interim) 2002

    Tom Wright 2003-2006

    Mark Cohon 2007-Present



    CFL logo from 1970-2002After the admission of the expansion British Columbia Lions 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 balance 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 isn't a part of Eastern Canada.

    [edit] United States expansion

    Main article: CFL USA

    In 1993, the league admitted its first United States franchise, the Sacramento Gold Miners, in an attempt to broaden Canadian football's popular appeal and boost league revenues. The ultimate plan was to have a league of ten Canadian and ten American teams. Spearheading the efforts were two former World League of American Football owners, Fred Anderson and Larry J. Benson, who would each receive a franchise. While the first incarnation of Benson's team, the San Antonio Texans, did not play a single down, the Gold Miners did and finished the season 6-12, placing last in the West Division. The following year, the league added three more franchises: the Las Vegas Posse, the Shreveport Pirates, and the Baltimore CFL Colts (who were forced to change their name to the Stallions after a long legal battle). Baltimore was the most successful of the American CFL teams, finishing second in the East and becoming the first American team to play for (and win) the Grey Cup.



    CFL USA logoThe 1995 season saw the loss of the Posse and the move of the Gold Miners to San Antonio, while the Birmingham Barracudas and Memphis Mad Dogs were added. However, fan interest in Canadian football, with the possible exception of the Baltimore Stallions, was sparse at best. At the end of the year, which saw the Stallions become the first American team to win the Grey Cup, all United States teams with the exception of the Stallions and the re-launched San Antonio Texans folded because of financial difficulties. When the National Football League announced that a new team was to be added in Baltimore, the Stallions looked at the possibility of relocating to nearby Richmond, Virginia, but later moved to Montreal, becoming the Alouettes. The Texans would later fold with a similar explanation.

    [edit] Recent history

    After three seasons that included American teams, the CFL returned to an all-Canadian format in 1996 with nine teams; however, the Ottawa Rough Riders, in existence since 1876, folded before the following season. 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 prior to the 2006 season; their players were absorbed by the remaining teams in a dispersal draft. The league had struck a committee in 2003 to examine the feasibility of adding a tenth team, with the leading candidate cities being Quebec City and Halifax.[4] Exhibition games were held in Quebec City in 2003[5] 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.[6] Commissioner Tom Wright had indicated that Halifax was the leading candidate for expansion.[7]



    Edmonton's Commonwealth Stadium is the largest venue in the CFL and the only one with a natural grass playing surface.Although ice hockey is Canada's most popular sport, the CFL is highly popular in Quebec and Western Canada, and along with Canadian football played at amateur levels (ie. youth, high school, CJFL, QJFL, CIS and senior leagues such as the Alberta Football League), has increased in popularity in recent years. 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 BC Lions have 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+). Saskatchewan Roughriders fans are known for their loyalty and for attending Roughriders games at stadiums across the country.

    In 2005, the league set an all-time attendance record with a total attendance of more than 2.3 million.[8] 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 24% 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.[2]

    [edit] Season structure



    Montreal Alouettes quarterback Anthony Calvillo looks down field with the ball during the 2005 Grey Cup game against the Edmonton Eskimos at BC Place.

    The Grey Cup

    Russ Jackson circa 1969. Considered by many the best Canadian quarterback of all time, he led the Ottawa Rough Riders to three Grey Cup championships.As of 2007, The CFL season includes:

    A 2-game, 3-week exhibition season (or pre-season) in mid-June

    An 18-game, 19-week regular season running from late June to early November

    A 6-team, 3-week single elimination playoff tournament beginning in November and culminating in the Grey Cup championship in late November. Championship teams will play either 2 or 3 playoff games, including the Grey Cup game, depending on their standing at the end of the regular season.

    [edit] Exhibition season

    Team training camps open in May, with pre-season exhibition games beginning in early June. The pre-season schedule is three weeks long with each team playing two games against a team in its own division.

    [edit] Regular season

    The regular season is nineteen weeks long, with games beginning on the 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[3]), Edmonton–Calgary (see Battle of Alberta), and Winnipeg–Saskatchewan. BC—Montreal, while not considered a "traditional" rivalry, rounds out the week's games.[9] 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 matchups do not always feature traditional rivalries.

    [edit] 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, no crossover team has ever won the Semifinal game). 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.[10] The two division champions then face each other in the Grey Cup game, which is held on the third or fourth Sunday of November.

    [edit] Grey Cup

    Main article: 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 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 2006 Grey Cup was held in Winnipeg on November 19, 2006, where the BC Lions defeated the Montreal Alouettes by a score of 25-14. The 2007 Grey Cup will be held in Toronto on November 25, 2007.

    As the country's largest annual sporting event,[1] 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.

    [edit] 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 prior to 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 honored at the league awards ceremony during Grey Cup week.

    [edit] Broadcasting

    The principal television broadcasters of CFL games are cable network TSN (which began televising CFL games in 1985) and broadcast network CBC, while cable network and TSN partner RDS broadcasts Montreal Alouettes games in French for the Quebec television market.[11] 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.[12] TSN has created a tradition of at least one Friday night game each week, branded as Friday Night Football, while CBC airs at least one game every Saturday. CBC and TSN drew record television audiences for CFL broadcasts in 2005.[13] The 2006 season was the first season in which every regular season game was televised, as the league implemented an instant replay challenge system.[14] In 2006, the CFL also began offering pay-per-view webcasts of every game on CFL Broadband.[15] CBC and RDS are the exclusive television broadcasters for all playoff games, including the Grey Cup, which regularly draws a Canadian viewing audience in excess of 4 million.[16]

    Beginning in 2008, TSN and RDS will be 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, although the move to TSN all but assures that all CFL games will be broadcast in high definition.[1] As of 2006, TSN was available in about 8.8 million of Canada's 13 million households.[1]

    CFL teams have local broadcast contracts with terrestrial radio stations for regular season and playoff games, while Corus Entertainment 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.[17]

    In the United States, CFL television broadcasts are available nationally on Dish Network, DirecTV and America One, which also feeds the broadcasts to regional cable outlets, such as NESN and Comcast Sportsnet. High definition games are available on Dish Network's World Sport HD.[18] In Europe, games are available on NASN.[19]

    From 1962 through 1986, CBC and CTV 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. CFN had completely separate coverage of the Grey Cup, utilizing its own production and commentators.

    On the Internet, all radio broadcasts of CFL games are available for free through each affiliate's Web site. Video broadcasts are free in Canada, but U.S. viewers (identified by geolocation) are required to use a pay-per-view service instead. That being said, a small number of America One affiliates do stream on the Internet, thus providing CFL video feeds for free.

    [edit] Players and compensation

    The CFL will begin enforcing a salary cap for the 2007 season of $4.05 million per team. 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.[20] 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.[20] 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.[21] 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 Saskatchewan Roughrider Mike Maurer[22]). 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.[23]

    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. 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 "big splash" signings of Ricky Williams and Onterrio Smith.[24]

    Norman Kwong, John Sopinka, Jim Silye, J.C. Watts and Lionel Conacher are just a few of the former CFL players who assumed careers in government after retiring from the league.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CFL

Question Stats

Latest activity: earlier.
This question has 8 answers.

BECOME A GUIDE

Share your knowledge and help people by answering questions.