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| Grey Cup History |
The Early Years: A
nostalgic look back at the beginnings of the CFL.
Real
Audio
The 1935 Grey Cup: The
first Grey Cup won by a team from the west.
Real
Audio
The Grey Cup Festival:
How Calgary turned the Grey Cup into
a National Drunk Festival
Real
Audio
The West and the Grey Cup:
Western teams overcome the Eastern
football establishment to dominate the Grey Cup
Real
Audio
The weird and wonderful:
Odd plays from the annals of Grey
Cup history
Real
Audio
(This series originally aired in
1984, produced by Bridget O'Toole)
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It seems apt that the enduring icon of Canadian
football would be called the Grey Cup - not a name that would fit
the flashier league to the south, to say nothing of the coming XFL.
But the name is also a little misleading. The Grey Cup's 91-year history
has been colourful enough, never travelling a bland and predictable
path.
It certainly hasn't followed a course the Cup's
founder envisioned. Then again, Albert Henry George Grey, the fourth
Earl Grey, probably never guessed that after a distinguished career
in His Majesty's service, his most significant legacy would be a
football trophy.
Grey, the popular Governor General of Canada from
1904 to 1911, planned for the Cup to be awarded to the top Canadian
senior hockey team, but was trumped by Sir Montague Allan, who donated
the Allan Cup. Undeterred, Grey declared that his hardware should
be awarded to the winner of the nation's rubgy football championship,
which would be contested by clubs registered with the Canadian Rugby
Union (CRU).
The first Grey Cup Game was played in 1909 at
Rosedale Field in Toronto with the University of Toronto downing
the Parkdale Canoe Club 26-6. The U of T won the Grey Cup the next
two years, as well, and became the first of two varsity dynasties
- Queen's University won from 1922 to 1924. A more unlikely powerhouse
emerged in 1933, when the Sarnia Imperials lost the lowest-scoring
game in Grey Cup history to the Toronto Argonauts by a 4-3 count
at Sarnia's Davis Field. The Imperials would be back to win the
Grey Cup in 1934 and 1936.
In 1935, the uncreatively named Winnipeg Pegs
became the first western Canadian team to win the Grey Cup, although
the East vs. West format would not become entrenched until 1941.
Even then, the Second World War brought a format change, and from
1942 to 1944, the Cup went a string of military clubs -- the Toronto
RCAF Hurricanes, the Hamilton Flying Wildcats and St. Hyacinthe-Donnacona
Navy.
But the East-West rivalry reached a new pitch
in the mid-1950s when the Edmonton Eskimos, who boasted such legends
as Jackie Parker, Normie Kwong, Johnny Bright and Bernie Faloney,
won three straight Grey Cup games over the Montreal Alouettes from
1954 to 1956.
Grey had intended his Cup to be open only to amateur
clubs, but the upheavals in Canadian rugby football organizations
and alliances meant those days were numbered. Regional, provincial
and intercollegiate unions organized, re-organized and disbanded
until the Canadian Football Council was formed in 1956 in association
with the CRU.
Two years later, the CFC withdrew from the CRU
and rechristened itself the Canadian Football League. In 1961, the
various rugby and football unions that competed for the Grey Cup
finally coalesced into the Western and Eastern Conferences - later
the East and West Divisions - under the auspices of the CFL.
But if those moves clarified the organization
of Canadian football, things were at their cloudiest during the
1962 Grey Cup Game, the notorious Fog Bowl. So thick was the fog
rolling through Exhibition Stadium on Toronto's lakeshore that Saturday,
Dec. 1 that the final 9:30 had to be played the next day. When the
mist finally cleared, Winnipeg had edged Hamilton 28-27 for its
fourth title in five years.
In 1976, the ending was clearer. Tony Gabriel
gathered in a touchdown pass on the final play of the game to give
the Ottawa Roughriders a thrilling 23-20 victory over Saskatchewan.
In stark contrast to those come-from-behind heroics, the biggest
Grey Cup crowd in history - 68,318 at Montreal's Olympic Stadium
- watched Montreal blow out Edmonton 41-6 in 1977 in one of the
most lopsided games in Grey Cup history.
Edmonton more than exacted revenge, though, beating
Montreal in the final the next two years on their way to five straight
Grey Cup titles.
Along the way, the Grey Cup has suffered from
the abuse and neglect that seems to be the due of any world class
trophy - just ask the Stanley Cup. It's been left behind in hotel
rooms after post-game parties, almost destroyed by fire, stolen
and held for ransom, broken in 1987 when an Edmonton Eskimo sat
on it, and broken again in 1993 by another Eskimo who head-butted
it.
For a lot of fans, though, the greatest indignity
suffered by the Grey Cup was in 1995, when it fell into American
hands. In the midst of what many felt was a CFL identity crisis,
the Baltimore Stallions beat Calgary 37-20 in the Grey Cup final
in Regina. But immediately following the 1995 season, the CFL scrapped
its U.S. expansion experiment, the American CFL franchises folded,
and the Stallions were reincarnated as the latest version of Montreal
Alouettes.
So even if the history of the Grey Cup isn't exactly
what Earl Grey foresaw, at least it remains in the country he intended
as its home.
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