The University of Toronto Blues, first winner of the Grey's Cup. Neither of the trophy's shown is the mammoth Cup. |
By
the sheerest of coincidences two Canadian
sports traditions were both born on December 4, 1909.
The
first Grey’s Cup game was played
that day between the University of
Toronto Varsity Blues and the Parkdale
Canoe Club. You read that right, a
game be-tween a college team and a bunch of paddlers. In those days the Cup was open to all amateur
Rugby football teams. By the way the college jocks won.
The
enormous silver loving cup itself
was the accidental gift of Albert Grey,
4th Earl Grey, and the Governor General of Canada. He was also the grandson of the guy who
popularized my favorite tea. The
Governor wanted to immortalize himself by awarding a trophy for the amateur championship
of the Canadian national sport, ice
hockey. But after the Cup had been
commissioned from a silversmith but before it could be announced Sir H. Montagu Allan donated his self-named
cup for that purpose. Stuck with a big
bill and larger trophy, the Governor looked around for other uses, and came up
the footballers.
The
Blues dominated the early years of the cup, always against teams from Toronto
or Hamilton. World
War I interrupted the games and they failed to resume in 1919 due at a
rules dispute. During that time the Cup
was nearly lost. It was re-discovered in
the equivalent of a storage locker. Play
resumed in 1920 with the Blues victorious for the last time.
By
then the Canadian Rugby Union (CRU) was the governing body of the
championship Cup. In 1921 the dissident Western Canada Rugby Football Union
joined the CRU and its members became eligible to contest the cup. The Edmonton
Eskimos were the first, going down to defeat to the Toronto Argonauts. By 1923 it became customary
for western and eastern champions to face each other in the game. But the east remained dominant and it was not
until 1935 that the Winnipeg ‘Pegs beat
the Hamilton Tigers and took the
trophy home to the west for the first time.
Officials
had planned to cancel the game during World
War II, but the military felt that it was a great moral boost. Instead from 1942 to 1945 the cup was
contested by all military teams.
With
the post-war resumption of the game long festering resentments of college and amateur
teams playing professional organizations came to a head, as did the very poor
field playing conditions allowed by Cup officials. The later resulted in the infamous Mud Bowl of 1950 on a field so bad a Winnipeg
player was carried unconscious from the field after nearly drowning in a pond
sized puddle.
In
1956 the Canadian Football Council
was formed to administer professional football two years later becoming the Canadian
Football League (CFL) which has
sponsored and administered the Cup championships ever since.
In
the 1980’s and ‘90’s the CFL experimented with adding American teams. Four joined and the Baltimore Stallions actually won the Cup in 1995. But the American teams could not compete
against the might NFL and the CFL
quickly returned to a strictly national organization.
Today
the Grey’s Cup game is played annually in November. This year the Cup was awarded for the 100th
time. The Toronto beat the Calgary
Stampeders 35-22.
J. Ambrose
O'Brien
had other things on his mind on December 4, 1909. He was founding the Montreal Canadiens as a charter member of the new National Hockey Association, a league of
professional teams. The Canadiens were
the sole Francophone team and were
set defiantly to represent French
speaking Quebec against the rest of the Dominion. The original charter stipulated that the team
was to be composed of French speakers and led and managed by them.
In
its first year the team finished an embarrassing last place. It was
sold to another Irish Francophile,
George Kennedy and its prospects improved. By 1916 it won its first Stanley Cup.
The
following year the Canadiens and three other teams founded the new National Hockey League (NHL).
It became the first winner of the Stanley Cup when that award became the
NHL championship trophy in 1924,
Not
only are the Canadiens the NHL oldest team, it has been one of the most
successful. It has won 24 Stanley Cups,
the last in 1993.
Canadiens
have struggled most years since then until managing a Divisional championship in 2008. That same year they became the
first NHL team to post 3,000 wins.
And
they remain the passion of their devoted and still defiant French speaking
fans.
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