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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

18 minutes ago, SpeedFlex27 said:

Like Aaron Rodgers? 

Or Antonio Brown, who created a fake vaccine card. 

35 minutes ago, SpeedFlex27 said:

Like Aaron Rodgers? 

Yeah..was a question as I don't follow the coming and goings of NFL...so don't know nor care what their protocols were

Just now, Booch said:

Yeah..was a question as I don't follow the coming and goings of NFL...so don't know nor care what their protocols were

He lied about being vaccinated. He told NFL officials as well as those from the Packers that he was when he wasn't. No idea wht they didn't demand to see documents supporting his statement. If that was Cam Newton he'd be suspended but Rodgers wasn't. I liked Rodgers but he totally lost my respect. 

1 hour ago, SpeedFlex27 said:

He lied about being vaccinated. He told NFL officials as well as those from the Packers that he was when he wasn't. No idea wht they didn't demand to see documents supporting his statement. If that was Cam Newton he'd be suspended but Rodgers wasn't. I liked Rodgers but he totally lost my respect. 

Wasn't there a story about the Roughriders organization essentially having their players on the honour system for vaccinations? Basically not asking for proof from the players? I've searched, but cannot find a story. Maybe some kind of bizzaro nightmare that caused me to use Roughriders and honour in the same sentence...

12 hours ago, SpeedFlex27 said:

He lied about being vaccinated. He told NFL officials as well as those from the Packers that he was when he wasn't. No idea wht they didn't demand to see documents supporting his statement. If that was Cam Newton he'd be suspended but Rodgers wasn't. I liked Rodgers but he totally lost my respect. 

No that's not accurate... the team knew he wasn't vaccinated but they still broke protocol.

12 hours ago, SpeedFlex27 said:

He lied about being vaccinated. He told NFL officials as well as those from the Packers that he was when he wasn't. No idea wht they didn't demand to see documents supporting his statement. If that was Cam Newton he'd be suspended but Rodgers wasn't. I liked Rodgers but he totally lost my respect. 

No, Rodgers never lied to the NFL. He did that weird misleading lie to the media and fans. He asked the NFL for an exemption based on the magic beans he found and consumed but they didn't grant it. He followed all the Covid protocols the NFL has for unvaxxed players and still got Covid. That's why he wasn't suspended. 

However, Antonio Brown and others lied about their vaccine status, didn't follow the rules and all got 3 game suspensions. In the CFL, that was at least a suspension for the rest of the season. 

51 minutes ago, JCon said:

No, Rodgers never lied to the NFL. He did that weird misleading lie to the media and fans. He asked the NFL for an exemption based on the magic beans he found and consumed but they didn't grant it. He followed all the Covid protocols the NFL has for unvaxxed players and still got Covid. That's why he wasn't suspended. 

However, Antonio Brown and others lied about their vaccine status, didn't follow the rules and all got 3 game suspensions. In the CFL, that was at least a suspension for the rest of the season. 

He got fined for breaking protocol... but never lied to the team, they knew he wasn't vaccinated.

https://www.nfl.com/news/packers-fined-300k-aaron-rodgers-allen-lazard-fined-14k-for-violation-of-covid-p

 

  • Author

This is..........interesting........

 

The CFL is trying to work out of the financial hole mostly caused by the pandemic, commissioner Randy Ambrosie and the owners hope revenue sharing can help lead to prosperity around the league in the future.

“We used the crisis to really reexamine: how do we approach the business of the game? Because the game is great but the business has to punch at its weight in order to have a really good league,” Ambrosie said.

There are many financial questions facing the CFL and fans around the country are curious if the three-down league can progress onward and upward amid the crisis the virus has created.

“We found a way to restructure our business in a way that’s going to give us a much stronger foundation, a much, much stronger financial foundation,” Ambrosie said.

Behind the scenes, the board of governors agreed to a revenue sharing model between the franchises for the first time in almost 40 years.

 

“At the heart of the philosophy is that we want all teams to be able to break even, if they do some, most, if not all of the right things. And we’re going to hold each other accountable to that standard,” Ambrosie said.

The CFL lost between $60 and $80 million due to the cancelled 2020 season. Despite further financial losses for the league this year, the Winnipeg Blue Bombers except to post a “meaningful” profit.

“I’m not trying to suggest in any way, shape or form that we don’t have work to do, we do, we have lots of work to do in the days to come,” Ambrosie said.

 

“We’ll have to work tirelessly, [the Grey Cup] game will end at roughly 9:30 p.m. on Sunday night — we’ll take 12 hours off. And yes, we have challenges to face.”

15 minutes ago, JCon said:

Can't wait for my money to go to poor Rogers & Bell. 

There already is revenue sharing. TV revenue is split evenly. 

The league as a whole will already enjoy great prosperity due to new gambling dollars, yet Ambrosie calls for revenue sharing before the betting numbers are even counted. 


Fuckrightoff!

Edited by Pete Catan's Ghost

I know it sucks that the prairie teams will be floating the league basically, but keep in mind that Rogers/Bell etc are very large corporate entities with very little "human" decision making capabilities. Single owners like the Braleys of the world can understand why their team took a hit year and year and even be ok with it. Companies with stock holders DO NOT. They see only 1 thing and that's the amount of $$ they made or lost. End of discussion. No if ands or buts. And if a section of said company is only losing money year after year after year, they will let it die or sell it off.  The league can't afford to lose a team right now.

So what it comes down to, is making sure those companies don't see red after Q4 when it comes to the CFL.

23 minutes ago, Noeller said:

This is..........interesting........

 

The CFL is trying to work out of the financial hole mostly caused by the pandemic, commissioner Randy Ambrosie and the owners hope revenue sharing can help lead to prosperity around the league in the future.

“We used the crisis to really reexamine: how do we approach the business of the game? Because the game is great but the business has to punch at its weight in order to have a really good league,” Ambrosie said.

There are many financial questions facing the CFL and fans around the country are curious if the three-down league can progress onward and upward amid the crisis the virus has created.

“We found a way to restructure our business in a way that’s going to give us a much stronger foundation, a much, much stronger financial foundation,” Ambrosie said.

Behind the scenes, the board of governors agreed to a revenue sharing model between the franchises for the first time in almost 40 years.

 

“At the heart of the philosophy is that we want all teams to be able to break even, if they do some, most, if not all of the right things. And we’re going to hold each other accountable to that standard,” Ambrosie said.

The CFL lost between $60 and $80 million due to the cancelled 2020 season. Despite further financial losses for the league this year, the Winnipeg Blue Bombers except to post a “meaningful” profit.

“I’m not trying to suggest in any way, shape or form that we don’t have work to do, we do, we have lots of work to do in the days to come,” Ambrosie said.

 

“We’ll have to work tirelessly, [the Grey Cup] game will end at roughly 9:30 p.m. on Sunday night — we’ll take 12 hours off. And yes, we have challenges to face.”

Inb4 we have to send a million bucks to the argos because they have no fans and need to go over the cap again to try and buy a contender. Having community owned teams profit share with mega wealthy privately owned teams is idiotic. 

The league was propping up teams for years, its all the same thing by another name. 

21 minutes ago, JCon said:

Can't wait for my money to go to poor Rogers & Bell. 

There already is revenue sharing. TV revenue is split evenly. 

Gotta off set rogers spending 200m on the jays 2022 roster. 

 

If any thing the league needs to do better by the players. Most if not every star in the league just took a pay cut this year after getting nothing in 2020. The NFL is making significant raises to PR money for the next 4 years. And we have the XFL and USFL in the next 2 years.  Not to mention they just played a shortened schedule with multiple 3 games in 6/7 day stretches, and dealt with all the covid procedures.  

Rather than prop up the corpse of a dead franchise (toronto) or give free money to the super wealthy, we should give back to our players. Revenue share with the players, and move the vet guarantee date waay up.  

1 minute ago, Bigblue204 said:

I know it sucks that the prairie teams will be floating the league basically, but keep in mind that Rogers/Bell etc are very large corporate entities with very little "human" decision making capabilities. Single owners like the Braleys of the world can understand why their team took a hit year and year and even be ok with it. Companies with stock holders DO NOT. They see only 1 thing and that's the amount of $$ they made or lost. End of discussion. No if ands or buts. And if a section of said company is only losing money year after year after year, they will let it die or sell it off.  The league can't afford to lose a team right now.

So what it comes down to, is making sure those companies don't see red after Q4 when it comes to the CFL.

The league can afford to lose a team. The league can not afford to float money to teams with cash rich owners. With no toronto the league continues. With no prairie teams it doesnt. 

This isnt about getting cash to mtl, or bc, its all about TO. Right now that ownership group has been the worst move the league has made in a long long time. 

I'm in favour of more money going to players, if that's how the revenue sharing would work. 

Any losses that MLSE incurs for the Argos just reduces the taxes they pay. 

Edited by JCon

I'm in the revenue sharing to raise salaries, expand the roster (ie 3 QBs) but not to prop up Rodgers and Bell.

Say what you will about Jones, but the guy wins. Winning with a ****** running the show beats being doormats and getting a new coach every 2nd year

  • Author
1 minute ago, Dr Zaius said:

Say what you will about Jones, but the guy wins. Winning with a ****** running the show beats being doormats and getting a new coach every 2nd year

Yeah, but you'll still be looking for a new coach right away once that ******* jumps to the next best offer......never fails. 

1 minute ago, Dr Zaius said:

Say what you will about Jones, but the guy wins. Winning with a ****** running the show beats being doormats and getting a new coach every 2nd year

He does win... for a bit, then bolts when something new catches his eye.

1 minute ago, bigg jay said:

He does win... for a bit, then bolts when something new catches his eye.

Or when he senses that his team is on the verge of imploding.

Edited by Tracker

I see I'm a bit late with this but yikes why would the Elks want this freaking idiot around?  This is like throwing out the trash, and then grabbing someone else's trash and bringing it into your house.  Doesn't really solve the problems they have, just replaces a cancerous culture with diabetes.

10 minutes ago, kelownabomberfan said:

I see I'm a bit late with this but yikes why would the Elks want this freaking idiot around?  This is like throwing out the trash, and then grabbing someone else's trash and bringing it into your house.  Doesn't really solve the problems they have, just replaces a cancerous culture with diabetes.

I find it hard to believe as well because of the fact that he abandoned them once before...  I guess if you give him both the GM and Head Coach jobs he might stick around a little longer, but I'd still be nervous with him if I were the Elks.

17 minutes ago, Sard said:

I find it hard to believe as well because of the fact that he abandoned them once before...  I guess if you give him both the GM and Head Coach jobs he might stick around a little longer, but I'd still be nervous with him if I were the Elks.

Tell him I’m advance that there is no “out-clause” in this contract. If he balks, move on. Fool me once…

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