Unlike last year's Montréal-Winnipeg first-time Grey Cup meeting, the Toronto Argonauts and Winnipeg Blue Bombers have Grey Cup history.
The teams met 2 years ago in Regina where the Argos edged out a 24-23 win, the 7th straight Grey Cup victory for the Toronto franchise.
Toronto is 8-0 against Winnipeg in the history of the Grey Cup, winning in 1937, 1938, 1942, 1945, 1946, 1947, 1950, and 2022.
The Argonauts swept the season series against the Blue Bombers. Toronto won 16-14 at home in overtime on July 27 and squeezed by Winnipeg 14-11 at Princess Auto Stadium on October 11.
The first loss put the Winnipeg record at 2-6. The second loss is the only loss the Blue Bombers have had since then, including the West final.
The 2007 East final came up with the Chad Kelly injury. Winnipeg starting quarterback Kevin Glenn hurt his arm as the Blue Bombers won the East final over the Montréal Alouettes. Glenn's replacement against the Saskatchewan Roughriders was current Toronto coach Ryan Dinwiddie. Now Nick Arbuckle will start his first Grey Cup game Sunday in Vancouver, the 111th Grey Cup.
Dave Naylor of TSN reported that Kelly's injury is to his tibia. Other reports said ankle. The Toronto quarterback is anticipated to be out 6-9 months.
Montréal played a highly flawed East final at home against the Argos yet almost came away with a win. Toronto held on to win 30-28. The Blue Bombers jumped out to a quick lead against Saskatchewan and outlasted the Roughriders 38-22 in Winnipeg.
Zach Collaros will be the first CFL quarterback to start 5 straight Grey Cup games. Bob Irving (CJOB radio Winnipeg) pointed out that Collaros has started 6 Grey Cup games, including 2014 with Hamilton.
Mike O'Shea won't take the Alouettes for granted given that Toronto cost them a third straight Grey Cup in 2022. Until the Blue Bombers won in 2019, the team hadn't won the CFL title since 1990.
The Argos won the last 7 Grey Cups with the last loss in 1987. The team is 18-6 in previous Grey Cup games. The Blue Bombers have the most Grey Cup appearances with 28; Toronto is second with 24. Winnipeg is 12-16 in those games.
CBS Sports Network
Sunday
Toronto vs. Winnipeg @ Vancouver, 6p
CTV
Sunday
Toronto vs. Winnipeg @ Vancouver, 6p
TSN
Sunday
Toronto vs. Winnipeg @ Vancouver, 6p
A dramatic Pick-6 by the road team in the CFL East final. Shades of Marc-Antoine Dequoy in 2023. The 2024 Benjie Franklin version had a different dynamic. Walter Fletcher should have caught the ball for the Alouettes. Isaac Darkangelo got the primary assist for the Argos.
Still, Franklin had his second Pick-6 of the playoffs; 3 overall for Toronto. The runback wasn't a dramatic 101-yard return.
Montréal got momentum back, scoring the next 16 points. A Janarion Grant 71-yard TD punt return and a late TD pass to Damonte Coxie gave the Argos a surprise 2-point halftime lead.
Then again, the Alouettes with 2 extra points instead of 2 failed 2-point conversions could have sent the East final to overtime.
One could argue that Winnipeg's slow start was partially tied to the absence of Kenny Lawler, due to injury. Lawler "only" caught 4 balls in the West final. 3 of them did go for touchdowns. The yards total was 177 for an average of 44.3 yards per catch. The 177 mark was more than the other receivers combined.
Zach Collaros had 4 passing touchdowns, going 19-for-26 passes for 301 yards. The Blue Bombers offensive line didn't give up a sack. That same line helped Brady Oliveira gain 119 yards on 20 carries.
Winnipeg has won 9 straight home games against Saskatchewan, including 2021 and 2024 West finals.
The Blue Bombers have won their last 6 straight division finals at home: 2001, 2011, 2021-2024. The last time Winnipeg lost a division final at home? 1994 against the Baltimore CFLers in the East Division final.
There is a segment of the CFL audience that was unhappy that Chad Kelly is still playing in the league after the harassment of a coach, which led to her dismissal by the Toronto Argos. The idea of the Argonauts being in the Grey Cup but without Chad Kelly is an odd dynamic. Kelly gets a Grey Cup ring if Toronto wins without him on Sunday.
CFL+ occasionally runs the promo about diversity in people working for the teams and the league. The promos on their own are great but leave a bad taste in your mouth with what happened with Kelly and that coach.
Chad Kelly will miss a great chunk of the 2025 CFL season but for a very different reason than missing time in 2024.
We will be curious about the new commissioner and that person's take on these types of concerns.
Speaking of Arbuckle, the Toronto Argonauts brought back quarterback Bryan Scott. The quarterback was with Toronto until Kelly came back from his suspension. Winnipeg signed Scott and Jake Dolegala (BC released Dolegala when Nathan Rourke returned) to replace Chris Streveler in September. Scott didn’t stay until the end of September.
Cameron Dukes will be the Toronto backup on Sunday.
Caught an odd video where 3 young American men were trying Canadian foods. They were sampling ketchup chips, Timbits from Tim Hortons, and Caesars. There was doing Start, Bench, or Cut with the foods, along the lines of f-ck, marry, kill.
The Caesar drinks looked naked because there was no adornment on them.
Your humble narrator eventually figured out that they were the Jonas Brothers promoting their appearance at the halftime of the 111th Grey Cup in Vancouver.
Jonas Brothers could also push the U.S. audience to tune in, now that they can tune in for the game. Green Day would have been good for this for last year's halftime show.
Country artist Owen Riegling is doing the kickoff show. Pop singer Sofia Camara will sing O Canada.
There is an actual Grey Cup Festival setup in Vancouver. The festival features concerts from Sam Roberts Band, Bif Naked and Felix Cartal as well as The Trews, Tebey, Dear Rouge, Dehli 2 Dublin, En Karma, Chad Brownlee, John Welsh, and Orchard Sky. There are also individual team parties, including the Atlantic Schooners, the currently fictional team representing Halifax and Atlantic Canada.
Randy Ambrosie will be at his final Grey Cup as the CFL commissioner on Sunday. Ambrosie said in 2019 that he would like the 2019 Grey Cup to be the last at McMahon Stadium in Calgary. Oops. Well, Ambrosie won't be commissioner in 2026 or even 2025.
We talked about the joy of playing in the home city for the Grey Cup as the BC Lions wanted to do in 2024. Winnipeg gets that chance in 2025 and now Calgary will have a shot in 2026.
The 2026 Grey Cup will be the 6th time Calgary has hosted the Grey Cup, all at McMahon Stadium, joining 1975, 1993, 2000, 2009, and 2019.
The plan was to replace McMahon Stadium and the Saddledome in Calgary with new facilities leading up to the 2026 Winter Olympics. Then the residents voted against the potential bid. While the new Scotia Place is early in the process of being built just north of the Saddledome, the potential for a new Calgary football stadium is off the stove entirely, not even on the backburner.
Having been there, the facilities are not up to par with other CFL stadiums. Like its fellow western Canadian teams, McMahon Stadium also hosts university football (University of Calgary Dinos). The stadium also hosts the Calgary Colts of the Canadian Junior Football League as well as the Calgary Gators and Calgary Wolfpack of the Alberta Football League.
The stadium is reportedly getting new turf in time for the 2025 season.
Then again, this will be the 3rd Grey Cup for Calgary since 2008, the last year for a Grey Cup in Montréal. We know the perils of Olympic Stadium with the new roof reportedly not ready until at least 2028. Molson Stadium, the current home of the Alouettes, did host the 1931 Grey Cup. Montréal hosted the 1969 Grey Cup at the Autostade and 6 Grey Cups at Olympic Stadium: 1977, 1979, 1981, 1985, 2001, and 2008.
Montréal hasn't seriously been considered for a NHL outdoor game at either Molson Stadium or Stade Saputo, the home of CF Montréal of MLS.
Winnipeg hosts the 2025 Grey Cup at Princess Auto Stadium.
The CFL and CBS Sports Network finally got on the same page and had the U.S. outlet carry the Grey Cup. The playoffs would have been nice.
The joy of having the CFL playoffs on U.S. television was having the transition between the 2 games also on TV, like Canadians have with TSN. CFL+ isn't about such luxuries. The U.S. audience, even with ESPN+, never had full CFL pregame coverage. The U.S. audience would get the 30 minutes or so leading into the Grey Cup and extensive post-game coverage.
Watching the Grey Cup with a crowd at a bar is once again an option in the States.
We were speaking earlier about the 2007 Grey Cup where Saskatchewan defeated Winnipeg 23-19. The 2007 Grey Cup was the last Grey Cup that aired on broadcast TV on CBC until Sunday when CTV carries the TSN feed.
There is the single NHL game involving a Canadian team. Vancouver hosts Nashville at 7 pm PST, shortly after the Grey Cup next door to Rogers Arena at BC Place. The NHL game was rescheduled to that new start time.
Toronto @ Montréal: Rod Smith/Duane Forde/Matthew Scianitti
Saskatchewan @ Winnipeg: Dustin Nielson/Glen Suitor/Claire Hanna
Henoc Muamba was on the sidelines in Winnipeg while Jim Barker was on the sidelines in Montréal.
Hanna didn't have to worry about her day job in Ottawa since the Senators were on Hockey Night in Canada.
The CFL on TSN panel with Paul LaPolice were in the studio rather than traveling to the East final. Montréal was likely too far to drive.
We have the details of the extensive Grey Cup coverage. Rod Smith and Glen Suitor will call the game with Matthew Scianitti and Claire Hanna on the sidelines. Dustin Nielson and BC Lions special teams coordinator Mike Benevides will provide analysis.
The East final and West final drew stronger numbers in 2024 versus 2023. The CTV presence in Montréal was likely the deciding factor. The West final numbers were comparable: 1,114,900 (2024) vs. 1,046,000 (2023). The RDS numbers for the East final (Montréal in both years): 439,100 (2024) vs. 448,900 (2023). The jump came in the English language numbers: 1,274,900 (2024 CTV, TSN) vs. 899,400 (2023 TSN).
Congratulations to Montréal Alouettes home host Kenzie Lalonde. Among many roles Lalonde has at TSN now includes calling Ottawa Senators games on TSN5. Lalonde called her first game on Tuesday against the Toronto Maple Leafs.
photo credits: CFL; TSN/CFL; CFL
logo credit: CFL
Twitter captures: @CFL; @TSNDaveNaylor; @CFL; @browncbc