Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

History

Earl Grey's legacy

It seems apt that the enduring icon of the CFL and Canadian football would be called the Grey Cup — not a name that would fit the flashier league to the south.

But the name is also a little misleading. The Grey Cup's 95-year history has been colourful enough, never travelling a bland or 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 rugby 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 too, 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, Winnipeg — saddled with the horrendous nickname the "Pegs" — became the first western Canadian team to win the Grey Cup when they defeated the Hamilton Tigers.

Still, it took until 1941 — when Winnipeg defeated Ottawa — for the East vs. West format to become entrenched within the very fabric of the Canadian football landscape. Even then, the Second World War brought a format change, and from 1942 to 1944, the Cup went to a string of military clubs — the Toronto RCAF Hurricanes, the Hamilton Flying Wildcats and St. Hyacinthe-Donnacona Navy.

The East-West rivalry finally reached dizzying heights in the mid-1950s when the Edmonton Eskimos, boasting 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 (CFC) was formed in 1956 in association with the CRU.

The following year, a new era in Grey Cup lore was ushered in when the game was telecast live coast to coast across Canada, beginning a tradition that continues to this day.

In 1958, the CFC withdrew from the CRU and re-christened itself the Canadian Football League. Three years later, 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 on Sat., 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 much 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 the Montreal Alouettes, who went on to reach the Grey Cup game in 2000 and win it in 2002.

Back-to-back wins by the Toronto Argonauts in 1996 and 1997 gave way to a brief run that produced three different Grey Cup winners: Calgary in 1998, Hamilton in 1999 and B.C. in 2000. The Stamps became the first Grey Cup Champions of the new millennium when they defeated Winnipeg the following year in Montreal.

Montreal and Edmonton renewed their famous Grey Cup rivalry in the back-to-back Grey Cup finals in 2002 and 2003 with the Alouettes winning the first showdown in Edmonton and the Eskimos taking the latter in Regina.

In 2004 the Argonauts ended the Alouettes' two-year reign as East Division champs with an upset win in Montreal, then capped a surprise championship season by beating B.C. for the Grey Cup at Ottawa's Frank Clair Stadium.

Last year the Alouettes returned to the title game for the third time in four years as they took on the Eskimos in front of a sellout crowd at B.C. Place Stadium in Vancouver. In one of the most memorable championship games ever, Montreal's Damon Duval kicked a 27-yard field goal with no time remaining in regulation to force the Grey Cup game into overtime for the first time since 1961. After the teams traded touchdowns in the extra frame, Edmonton's Sean Fleming booted a 36-yard field goal to give the Eskimos their second championship in three years.

There's been nearly a century of memorable games and rugged warriors battling it out on football fields all across Canada in hopes of winning the Grey Cup.

Somehow, you just know Earl Grey must be beaming with pride.

Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

World »

Millions of Iraqi children need help now: UNICEF report Video
A United Nations report paints a grim picture of life in Iraq for two million children, but says an improving security outlook offers the opportunity to provide much-needed help.
U.S. government asks judge to hold off investigating destroyed CIA tapes
Lawyers for the U.S. government urged a federal judge on Friday not to launch his own investigation into the destruction of CIA videotapes that showed officers using harsh interrogation methods as they questioned suspects.
50 killed in suicide attack outside Pakistan politician's home Video
At least 50 people were killed and dozens injured when a suicide attacker detonated a bomb early Friday at a mosque outside the home of Pakistan's former interior minister, officials said.
more »

Canada »

Hundreds attend funeral for doting grandfather killed delivering Christmas cards Video
Friends and family gathered Friday for the funeral of Hunter Brown, an elderly man who was slain while delivering Christmas cards in Kitchener, Ont.
Byelections in 4 vacant federal ridings set for March
The race is on in four vacant federal ridings as Prime Minister Stephen Harper announced Friday that byelections will be held on March 17.
Arms exports reached record levels in 2003: report
A new report by the federal government shows that in 2003, Canada's arms exports reached the highest level ever recorded.
more »

Health »

Surgeons fail to discuss reconstruction with breast cancer patients: study
Surgeons frequently fail to discuss breast reconstruction options with women who have undergone surgery for breast cancer, a new U.S. study has found.
Sleep disorder drug linked to severe allergic reactions: Health Canada
Health Canada has issued a warning about serious skin and allergic reactions related to Alertec, a drug used to relieve excessive sleepiness due to narcolepsy, obstructive sleep apnea and shift-work sleep disorders.
Improper use of fentanyl pain patches linked to more deaths: FDA
U.S. health officials say improper use of patches that emit the painkiller fentanyl is still killing people.
more »

Arts & Entertainment»

Sacha Baron Cohen bids Borat, Ali G goodbye
British comic actor Sacha Baron Cohen is bidding farewell to the two alter egos that brought him international success: the dim-witted hip hop interviewer Ali G and uncouth reporter Borat.
Quebec City museum gets $37.5 million from Ottawa
Ottawa has come up with $37.5 million for Quebec City's Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec.
Karl Rove sells memoir for more than $1.5M
Republican strategist Karl Rove will dissect the presidency of George W. Bush in a memoir said to be worth more than $1.5 million US.
more »

Technology & Science »

Toshiba, Sharp expand LCD TV ties
Japanese electronics rivals Toshiba and Sharp expanded ties in making liquid crystal displays Friday, with competition growing increasingly intense among flat-panel TV producers.
CRTC gives thumbs-up to telecom complaints agency
The CRTC has approved an industry-sponsored telecommunications complaints agency, giving cellphone and internet customers an official way to resolve their problems with service providers.
Bell to administer telemarketer do-not-call list
The CRTC has picked Bell Canada to operate the National Do Not Call List, giving the company a five-year mandate to block calls from telemarketers for customers who request the service.
more »

Money »

2007's winners and losers on the TSX
As 2007 winds down, it's 'woulda, coulda, shoulda' time as investors take a look back to find the stocks they should have bought in bulk at the start of the year.
RIM rallies as earnings beat street Video
Shares of Research in Motion shot up by 10 per cent Friday after the maker of the BlackBerry wireless device reported earnings that topped expectations.
Treasury runs $2.7B deficit in October
The monthly budget surplus that Canada usually records disappeared in October as the tax cuts announced in that month's economic statement were added to the mix.
more »

Consumer Life »

Bell to administer telemarketer do-not-call list
The CRTC has picked Bell Canada to operate the National Do Not Call List, giving the company a five-year mandate to block calls from telemarketers for customers who request the service.
Transport Canada issues safety alerts for 3 car seats
Transport Canada has issued recall notices and safety warnings for three models of child restraint systems.
Holiday shopping to peak Friday Video
Storekeepers ready your registers, holiday shopping will reach its peak Friday afternoon between 2 and 3 p.m., according to credit and debit card transaction processor Moneris.
more »

Sports »

Scores: CFL MLB MLS

Ribeiro, Stars end Flames' win streak in OT
Centre Mike Ribeiro scored two goals, including the game winner just 57 seconds into overtime, to give the Dallas Stars a 3-2 win against the Calgary Flames Friday night at the Pengrowth Saddledome.
Gionta rallies Devils past Oilers
Winger Brian Gionta scored the game-winning goal early in the third period to lift the New Jersey Devils to a 3-1 victory over the Edmonton Oilers Friday night at Rexall Place.
Durant lifts Sonics over Raptors
Seattle rookie Kevin Durant scored 27 points and the Seattle SuperSonics handed the Toronto Raptors their second straight loss following a 123-115 victory Friday night.
more »