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Not enough time to comment, other than the author seems to
be misguided with several inflammatory quotes - such as
"vastly inferior athletes" and "CFL stars are at best role players."
Simple nonesense.
There is no denying that the NFL has outstanding athletes, but
the margin is not as wide as the author believes to be.
For instance, Warren Moon plyed his trade in the CFL many years
before moving on to the NFL (who didn't care for black quarterbacks
back then) and will now be inducted into the hall of fame.
You can add Joe Theisman from the CFL, as well as a host of
others. Him mentioning Flutie is faulty at best. Flutie moved
up to Canada and was never given a chance. When he did return,
he did so at an advanced age, and even when winning in Buffalo
was questioned for his height, etc. rather than his abilities.
Many players in the CFL are good enough to play in the NFL,
but for one reason or another (usually politics) they
are not given an opportunity and simply wait for
another chance to play in the NFL.
Finally, the best kicker today in the NFL is from the CFL - Mike
Vanderjact (sorry for the spelling error), morever, he
is a Canadian.
Long live the Grey Cup.
Anthony Smith
My theory on why refs don't screw around with instant replay in Canada: who bets on these games? Bottom line is - NFL outcomes, scores included, are worth Billions to the league and its friends in Vegas. If there was no point spread betting I'd wager a small sum (taking the over of course) that we would not have instant replay in the NFL.
Also, it's friggin cold in Edmonton and Saskatoon for 340 days out of the year and who wants to be sitting around for 30 extra minutes a game waiting for a decision on a decision. I love how fans in Green Bay are lauded for turning out in the cold when Eskimo fans are practically sitting in the Northwest Passage stomping around.
Please give us the rule that says you can return a missed FG. Easy to implement and adds potential excitment to the most boring 3 seconds in sports ;)
Has anyone seen the Reggie Bush HS clips on NYT website. Simply unbelievable. If he stays healthy and is drafted by a team with even decent blocking, look out OJ...
Last unrelated question - any UK posters surprised at the level of post-humous deification going on with George Best? Obviously one of the all-time great talents, but also one of the all-time great wastes. Think if Mickey Mantle had his first 4-5 great years with the Yanks, won a couple of World Series and decided to drink and screw around full-time at that point, played in semi-pro leagues rather than deal with major league standards for conduct, showed up drunk on national TV...The only US football parallel I can think of is Joe Namath, who would certainly be missed but enshrined in the pantheon?
Below, the person writes this:
"Please give us the rule that says you can return a missed FG. Easy to implement and adds potential excitment to the most boring 3 seconds in sports ;)"
Um, Nathan Vasher did this to the tune of 108 yards and a touchdown for the Bears earlier this season.
It's misleading to proclaim the NFL's players vastly superior to the those in the CFL. For one thing, the different rules attract and produce different kinds of athletes. The plodding quarterbacking of someone like Drew Bledsoe would not survive in the CFL, which typically demands more mobile quarterbacks to handle the larger field and the loss of a down. In this sense, the CFL was ahead of its time, breeding scrambling QBs long before the NFL embraced this model (consider Argo great Condredge Holloway - http://www.argonauts.ca/Argos/History/HallOfFame/Condredge_Holloway.html, or Eskimo great Warren Moon).
Flutie, for example, was a legend in the CFL because he was built for that league, and because the NFL snubbed him after he chose to play in the USFL. Other, taller pivots, such as Jeff Garcia, have emerged from the CFL and become top quarterbacks in the NFL (a few years ago, Garcia was one of the best rated QBs in the NFL).
One thing the NFL does well to ensure people believe its athletes are the best in the world, and not simply the best suited for the NFL's rules, is promote the players as unparalleled. You almost never hear an announcer of an NFL broadcast say something critical about a player. Every player is described as the "best" at something, or the "most underrated" at something else. It's smart marketing, and it seems to work.