Grey Cup Day across the land. The 107th final for Canadian Football League supremacy. It’s akin to the USA’s SuperBowl. Hamilton Tiger-Cats vs Winnipeg Blue Bombers. Both teams have droughts dating from '99 and '90 so someone’s long wait will end.
The game is being played in Calgary this year. Keith Urban is the half time show. Gonna be a hoot.
I actually got Bernie Faloneys autograph, maybe 1958, on a 8x 10 glossy.
He made an appearance for a promotional event where my Dad worked.
Well, you have to do something with the bread after it goes stale, don’t you?
“Waste not, want not!”
You know, given the choice of a peerage or having a beer named after me I’d rather have the beer! Most peers are unknown to the public, but most everyone can rattle off the names of beer brands with no trouble at all!
Bud Grant is virtually a household name in the Dominion. A real champion for the CFL.
The Calgary Stampede organizers took full advantage of Calgarys football team ‘The Stampeders’ at their first Grey Cup appearance. Smart play on their part. At minimum a free $100,000 worth of advertising space.
I remember when CFL Hall-of-Famer “King Kong” Mosca used to wrestle here in Minneapolis - St.Paul, back in the American Wrestling Association days. I went to one match where (for some reason) he and his opponent Larry “The Ax” Hennig wore football helmets in the ring. IIRC Mosca wore a Hamilton Tiger-Cats helmet, and Hennig wore the helmet of the Normandale Community College Lions because his son Curt Hennig played for them. It stands out because at the time I was a student at Normandale (in Bloomington MN).
BTW seems to me our former Viking QB Joe Kapp, had a fight with Mosca at a Grey Cup reunion dinner or something just a couple of years ago?
“Earl Grey” tea was named after the second Earl Grey, the son of a British general who served in the American Revolution and the first Earl Grey.
The first Earl Grey got the nick-name of “No-Flint” Grey, for his policy of having his troops remove the flints from their muskets prior to night attacks where the bayonet, and bayonet only, was to be used. The Earl didn’t want any accidental discharges that would spoil the stealth.
“The animosity between the two dates back to the 1963 Grey Cup game, when Mosca hit running back Willie Fleming with a shot that many – including Kapp – felt was dirty. It knocked Fleming from the game, which the Ticats won 21-10. Kapp refused to shake Mosca’s hand afterward.”
I believe Fleming was one of the first black CFL players, and that was part of the issue…plus I think Mosca or his teammates had said something before the game about trying to take Fleming out during the game. As it was, Mosca hit him when he was about 10-15 feet out of bounds long after the play ended; today Mosca probably would have been kicked out the game (and fined / suspended).
African Americans have played prominent roles in the Canadian Football League (CFL) and its precursors since 1946. In many cases black Americans have been able to pursue professional football opportunities in the CFL that were for one reason or another unavailable in the United States. Especially in the mid-20th century, many African American players came to Canada to avoid the racially charged atmosphere of segregation-era America. For many years, blacks were better represented in the CFL than they were in the National Football League (NFL), and achieved a number of “firsts” in the CFL years before the same was accomplished in the NFL. More recently, the CFL has provided opportunities for black, as well as other, Americans unable to break into the NFL.