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2021 (??) CFL Season

https://www.tsn.ca/naylor-many-questions-but-few-answers-on-a-2021-cfl-season-1.1543725

The Canadian Football League has been outrageously quiet since it pulled the plug on its season more than two months ago, leaving behind a wake of speculation about where things are headed next.

With the reality setting in that COVID-19 is likely to still be around in some form next summer, there is real concern about what the 2021 season might look like or if it will occur at all.

There are teams that believe it is vitally important to play in 2021 and that without a season the CFL is in danger of being mothballed. Whether every team believes that is another question. And there is a lot to sort out before anyone can accurately predict what a season might look like and how much pain the teams are collectively willing to stomach to make it happen.

The league and its franchises are currently running through various scenarios for next season, trying to get a handle on true costs of each and working at ways to trim budgets and save money. That’s likely to continue until the league can truly choose a course of action, which feels like next April at the earliest.

Why? Well, there’s not much point in fully committing to a scenario that’s seven months away if that scenario might be totally unrealistic by the time you get there.

There has been no 2021 business plan presented yet, only regular updates to the presidents and governors about what the league is doing to prepare for the unknown.

It should be noted that teams will need to make decisions about retaining assistant coaches with expiring contracts by December, which will be the first real economic commitments to a 2021 season. Restrictions on signing players will need to be lifted well before the opening of February free agency, where players are likely to meet a cautious market – one in which signing bonuses will probably be absent.

There’s a collective bargaining agreement to amend, if not renegotiate, with the players, which will require some kind of pressure point because it always does. But the league can’t sit down with the players until it gets a true handle on revenues and it can’t do that until it chooses a course of action.

Will CFL teams be allowed to have full stadiums next summer? It doesn't seem likely. But just what percentage of capacity will be allowed – if any at all – is impossible to guess. It seems as if the league is counting on the restrictions that currently prevent fans from being in stadiums being lifted. But to what degree?

When will we see a schedule? Good question. Or could we see multiple schedules for different scenarios? Never say never.

Could it be a 21-week, 18-game season played in home stadiums? Unlikely, given the losses teams are expected to take with reduced numbers of fans in the stands. Could we see a return to the 10-week bubble? Maybe. A nine-game schedule played in home stadiums before fans? Perhaps.

The point is no one knows, so demanding answers to questions that can’t possibly be answered right now is a waste of time.

All we know is that there’s going to be a lot less revenue for teams to operate with under any scenario, not just because of crowd restrictions but also due to older fans choosing to stay home for their safety. The CFL’s fan demographics do it no favours in this regard.

Getting consensus on a best course of action won’t be easy for the CFL’s nine teams. Back in the summer, there were teams that were willing to play without government support and teams that weren’t. And just like then, the biggest challenge commissioner Randy Ambrosie faces now is finding a scenario they can all live with.

Adopting a revenue-sharing model so that each team absorbs the same amount of red ink would certainly make consensus-building easier, which many believe should be the direction for the future, COVID-19 or not.

The other elephant in the room is federal government, which many in the CFL believe left it high and dry last summer after months of back-and-forth talks where the league believed it was making progress.

Is the CFL prepared to go down that road again, knowing it doesn’t control the timeline and larger forces can change things in an instant? Perhaps, although it’s not as though the feds don’t have a long list of people coming at them with their hands out.

There will be voices demanding the owners suck up the losses of playing a season under any circumstance, as owners have done in other sports. But the business calculation in sports such as MLB, NFL, NHL and NBA is different because of the percentage of revenues those leagues derive from television.

Losses sustained by playing in those leagues can also be viewed as investments towards protecting massive franchise values. That’s not the case in the CFL, where teams can’t just float money on the backs of their franchise values, and where one third of the teams are publicly owned.

It would be beneficial for the league to soon announce its formal commitment to play some kind of season in 2021.

But beyond that, get ready for months more of waiting with lots of questions and speculation but very few answers.

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Featured Replies

2 hours ago, Booch said:

Oshea was hated as he was good, and intense....not cause he was dirty...did he take liberties..u bet..all guys did/do but was never suspended from what I know...played hard whistle to whistle...tough and mrean byut by no means a blatant dirty guy....and this is what our teasm does now...

What happens in those piles stays in those piles type mentality? lol

 

29 minutes ago, Noeller said:

now THAT was a nasty sonofabitch on the field.......

Loved him here! 

1 hour ago, Noeller said:

now THAT was a nasty sonofabitch on the field.......

We've always had a knack for finding the meanest OL in the league. Suhk Chunghs scouting report probably just said, "HE MEAN." 

(Winnipeg Blue Bombers’ offensive guard Drew) Desjarlais is such a s*** disturber. He’s so nasty in the trenches. God, I wish we had him on our team.

From 3dn today. I think thats the biggest advantage desjarlais has. He's the nastiest guy on the field every game. We have various linemen down field blocking in the run on most every play. But no matter what, DD is coming up from behind the play to punish any one he can. Every single snap. 

https://3downnation.com/2021/09/22/insider-talk-hamiltons-qb-injuries-the-cfls-best-canadian-receivers-winnipegs-s-disturber/

1 hour ago, Noeller said:

that 07 OL was awesome and, I dare say, underrated. They were nasty bastards in there...

Getting Khan and St.Germaine when Ottawa folded was huge. Our line was absolute do do for a few years there. 

1 hour ago, wbbfan said:

We've always had a knack for finding the meanest OL in the league. Suhk Chunghs scouting report probably just said, "HE MEAN." 

(Winnipeg Blue Bombers’ offensive guard Drew) Desjarlais is such a s*** disturber. He’s so nasty in the trenches. God, I wish we had him on our team.

From 3dn today. I think thats the biggest advantage desjarlais has. He's the nastiest guy on the field every game. We have various linemen down field blocking in the run on most every play. But no matter what, DD is coming up from behind the play to punish any one he can. Every single snap. 

https://3downnation.com/2021/09/22/insider-talk-hamiltons-qb-injuries-the-cfls-best-canadian-receivers-winnipegs-s-disturber/

You just know Mike O'Shea beams with pride at a comment like that.

  • Author

When it comes to Guards, you need to find the nastiest sonofabitch who will win a bar room brawl with anyone. That's what made Matt Sheridan great, and so many others. The Tackles, there's more finesse involved...but the Guards......angry brawlers. And we've had some of the all time best on this team, thankfully...

19 minutes ago, Arnold_Palmer said:

Getting Khan and St.Germaine when Ottawa folded was huge. Our line was absolute do do for a few years there. 

The whole ott dispersal draft and spreading of talent profited the bombers far more than any other team. We ended up with the korey banks fiasco, but got use out of henri childs, we traded brad banks away, we ended up with jerome haywood, and we stabilized our OL. We ended up with kyries hebert as well. It was crazy good for us. 

4 minutes ago, 17to85 said:

You just know Mike O'Shea beams with pride at a comment like that.

QFT

I remember being disappointed that they didn't take Banks - because we had an absolutely awful secondary in '05.

Until a friend laughed at me and said: "Mark, it's about protection - protecting the QB is #1."

10 minutes ago, Mark H. said:

I remember being disappointed that they didn't take Banks - because we had an absolutely awful secondary in '05.

Until a friend laughed at me and said: "Mark, it's about protection - protecting the QB is #1."

Yep! We needed Khan more then we needed Banks at the time. 

  • Author

supplementary discipline of the week and another ******* berating the doping officials: 

Image

57 minutes ago, Noeller said:

supplementary discipline of the week and another ******* berating the doping officials: 

Image

If Dickey is able to tame Mike Rose, he will really have something. But, right now he's as much of a hinderance as a benefit. 

Wasn't he the guy who got 2 RTP penalties against us that helped seal our win?

Edited by Pete Catan's Ghost

Something to keep an eye on as the Lions play the Bombers next week.

 

4 hours ago, Pete Catan's Ghost said:

If Dickey is able to tame Mike Rose, he will really have something. But, right now he's as much of a hinderance as a benefit. 

Wasn't he the guy who got 2 RTP penalties against us that helped seal our win?

He had 3 penalties (1 illegal contact on receiver, and 2 roughing the passer penalties). He did not register a tackle... One of his own penalties negated his own sack lol

One of my friend's father played for the Stamps in the 60's. He told me a story about  a longtime Stamps offensive lineman who was going to beat up one of the black players on the team because the guy dared have a shower at the same time he did. He was an American & a proud racist. He was enraged that his black teammate dared have a shower when he was already in it & didn't know his place. I know the names of the 2 players involved but as I don't know if the story is true or not, I won't name names. 

That was fairly common back then on CFL teams. A lot of General Managers & Head Coaches along with their assistants were from the Southern US & the racism that existed in American society towards Blacks also existed on the 9 CFL teams as well. 

Edited by SpeedFlex27

7 hours ago, SpeedFlex27 said:

That was fairly common back then on CFL teams. A lot of General Managers & Head Coaches along with their assistants were from the Southern US & the racism that existed in American society towards Blacks also existed on the 9 CFL teams as well. 

I read about that in a CFL player's biography when I was a kid.  To this day, I can't remember who the author / player was.  He said there was an invisible line through the middle of the locker room. 

19 hours ago, Mark H. said:

I read about that in a CFL player's biography when I was a kid.  To this day, I can't remember who the author / player was.  He said there was an invisible line through the middle of the locker room. 

That was probably true about every team back then. Wuith so many management & coaches from the US it had to be.

On 2021-09-23 at 11:54 AM, Mark H. said:

I read about that in a CFL player's biography when I was a kid.  To this day, I can't remember who the author / player was.  He said there was an invisible line through the middle of the locker room. 

That line extended to nights out after the games all the way to the late 80's. The white players at their tables and the black players at their tables.

1 hour ago, bigg jay said:

 

He will be back to the ir when they face us again 

being cautious about the player's health.

good idea.

 

 

Edited by Mark F

2 hours ago, Mark F said:

being cautious about the player's health.

good idea.

 

 

Calling it a concussion and not a neck injury would be good for the player too.

Edited by Geebrr

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