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  #261  
Old Posted Mar 27, 2024, 2:51 PM
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Ottawa Redblacks' 10th anniversary season plans include return of Henry Burris
'When you look at the 10 years in totality, you've got a lot to celebrate, a lot to be proud of and a lot to be thankful for'

Author of the article:Tim Baines • Postmedia
Published Mar 20, 2024 • 4 minute read


It won’t be just one day, one week or one month; the Ottawa Redblacks plan to have a season-long party to celebrate their 10th anniversary.

The anniversary bash will include the return of heroic quarterback Henry Burris and several of the Redblacks’ stars from the past 10 years, there’ll be a big Canada Day concert, plus there’ll be the introduction of a new beer created for the Redblacks.

There was plenty of good crammed into the team’s first five years and too much bad the past four, but there’s a positive vibe in both the reflection of the team’s history and pushing forward into what it the Redblacks hope is a bright future.

“It’s a milestone that deserves celebration,” said Redblacks president Adrian Sciarra Wednesday. “It’s amazing how time flies, 10 years has snuck up on a lot of us. We’ve got lots to celebrate in the first 10 years, but it’s also a launching pad to the next 10 years. It’s a look back and also a jump forward. When we look back and celebrate the players and the great moments that have come over the last 10 years, we also look forward to creating new memories, new moments, seeing new players develop into stars.

“We know and accept the struggles we’ve had on the field the past few years, that’s a part of our last 10 years. But when you look at the 10 years in totality, you’ve got a lot to celebrate, a lot to be proud of and a lot to be thankful for.”

One of the early highlights of the anniversary will be the season-opener (June 13 vs. Winnipeg) return of Burris, the Hall-of-Fame quarterback who led the Redblacks to the Grey Cup in 2016 and was such a huge part of those early years.

Said Sciarra: “One of the first calls I made as we were starting to build out these plans was to Hank, to make sure he was in the know on what we’re doing and was available to participate. We’ve got the All-Decade game on Aug. 24, but it felt like we needed Hank here to kick things off at the home-opener. We had to make sure it worked with his schedule. It’ll be great to have him up here for a few days. In in many ways, Hank is the star of the first decade, so we wanted him to be a big part of this.”

The acknowledgment of the anniversary has already started. Earlier this week, the team unveiled a 10th anniversary crest along with merchandise sporting the new design. A new black home uniform will also be unveiled before the season starts.

Asked about the uniform, Sciarra said: “It’s not a retro uniform because it’s definitely contemporary. The term we’re using is ‘retro inspired.’ ”

The anniversary season will also include a new beer option at TD Place: The Redblacks’ 10th anniversary Blitz Brew, in partnership with Labatt Canada and its Goose Island Brewery.

One of the season’s bigger moments will be a June 30 Canada Day celebration, with a special musical performance and fireworks display included with the game against Hamilton.

“Over the past couple of years, we’ve started making the Canada Day game a tradition here,” said Sciarra. “Last year, we had a big win, it was a beautiful night, a big fireworks show after the game. How do you take that to the next level? A concert as part of the game is that next level. It will not be a house or cover band. It’ll be a concert.”

Then, there’s the All-Decade Game, Aug. 24 when the Redblacks host the BC Lions. Many Redblacks alumni, including key players from the 2016 Grey Cup team, will be on hand.

“It’s a game fans should circle on their calendar,” said Sciarra. “It’s the game where we hope to bring back many players from the first 10 years. It’ll be a real celebration of the decade.”

With the anniversary celebration as a big part of it, there’s excitement for the team on and off the field.

“From the business side of things, it breathes energy into our team,” said Sciarra. “The brainstorming and planning around it has been really fun and exciting for our staff. Those folks don’t work on the football product, they work on the the fan experience and game presentation.

“We look at the football team and we’re excited about the changes and some of the things (general manager) Shawn Burke and his staff have done this year and we think that’s going to lead to a good year on the field.”

VOTING FOR TOP PLAYERS: Fans are being asked to vote for the top 10 all-time greatest Redblacks. The online voting process has begun and will run for 30 days. Go to ottawaredblacks.com to vote. A new Top 10 player will be unveiled at each Redblacks home game this season. Fans arriving at the games will receive a special poster for the player being highlighted on that day.

SIGNINGS: Among the Redblacks signings that were announced Monday on CFL.ca’s transactions page: LB Davion Taylor (Colorado), a 2020 third-round draft pick of the NFL’s Philadelphia Eagles. Also, Ottawa has added WR Dillon Stoner (Oklahoma State) and DL Carson Taylor (Northern Arizona). Announced as signed by the Redblacks last week: DL Jermaine McDaniel (North Carolina A&T) and Malcolm Lee (Kansas), DBs Dillon Thomas (Missouri State), Yusuf Corker (Kentucky) and Bennett Williams (Oregon), WRs Eli Stove (Auburn) and Sam James Jr. (West Virginia), global OL Hector Zepeda (Instituto Tecnologico de Monterrey) and QB Matthew McKay (Elon).

https://ottawacitizen.com/sports/footbal...son-plans-include-return-of-henry-burris
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  #262  
Old Posted May 8, 2026, 9:38 PM
Johnny Kit Kat Johnny Kit Kat is offline
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I have to laugh at the CFL. Isn't it high time they gave franchises to Quebec city, Halifax and Kitchener-Waterloo to go to 12 teams. The league could leverage the expansion fees ($150 million total estimated) to do something to improve their product and national interest in the league would go up.
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  #263  
Old Posted May 8, 2026, 9:58 PM
kwoldtimer kwoldtimer is online now
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Originally Posted by Johnny Kit Kat View Post
I have to laugh at the CFL. Isn't it high time they gave franchises to Quebec city, Halifax and Kitchener-Waterloo to go to 12 teams. The league could leverage the expansion fees ($150 million total estimated) to do something to improve their product and national interest in the league would go up.
K-W seems unlikely. Maybe London could be persuaded.
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  #264  
Old Posted May 10, 2026, 3:39 AM
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K-W seems unlikely. Maybe London could be persuaded.
KW is quite a bit bigger metro than London now. But very close to Hamilton and Toronto.

The biggest issue with any of those places is the $2-300 million it would cost to build an appropriate stadium.
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  #265  
Old Posted May 10, 2026, 12:37 PM
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KW is quite a bit bigger metro than London now. But very close to Hamilton and Toronto.

The biggest issue with any of those places is the $2-300 million it would cost to build an appropriate stadium.
Yes, KCW is now a larger market than London, but the cost is the issue - K-W is preparing to build a major new hospital, and may need to build a water pipeline to the Great Lakes. A new hockey arena would likely be a higher priority.
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  #266  
Old Posted May 10, 2026, 6:36 PM
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Yes, KCW is now a larger market than London, but the cost is the issue - K-W is preparing to build a major new hospital, and may need to build a water pipeline to the Great Lakes. A new hockey arena would likely be a higher priority.
All true. As it’s unlikely that any local owner would step up to build a CFL stadium, the best chance of more teams for the CFL is likely an upgrade of an existing facility - university stadiums at Western and Laval come to mind, though Telus is pretty tight for expansion.

Probably would be in conjunction with a CPL and/or Northern Super League team like at Lansdowne
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  #267  
Old Posted May 11, 2026, 2:04 PM
GeoNerd GeoNerd is offline
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KW is quite a bit bigger metro than London now. But very close to Hamilton and Toronto.
I wouldn’t say Kitchener-Cambridge-Waterloo is a “quite a bit bigger metro” than London. The latest 2026 estimates puts it only 68k larger. Quite a negligible difference. Also, KCW is a grouping of three smaller mid-sized cities loosely grouped together. London is one larger mid-sized city with a strong single core.
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  #268  
Old Posted May 11, 2026, 3:25 PM
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I wouldn’t say Kitchener-Cambridge-Waterloo is a “quite a bit bigger metro” than London. The latest 2026 estimates puts it only 68k larger. Quite a negligible difference. Also, KCW is a grouping of three smaller mid-sized cities loosely grouped together. London is one larger mid-sized city with a strong single core.
If you look at the growth rates, it's not going to be close for long. In 2001, London was the bigger metro. Now KW is 10% bigger. I'd also note that Guelph is 30 minutes away from Kitchener, and that's another 175k people. Quite a bit more population in the Kitchener area in terms of a CFL drawing area.

You're right about London having the larger core. Stronger, I'm not sure, as it was in pretty desperate shape the last time I was there. Unlikely a CFL stadium would be in the core anyway.
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  #269  
Old Posted May 12, 2026, 1:41 PM
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I moved a few posts from the Lansdowne thread. Here's the related article that sparked the discussion.

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Deachman: New CFL playoff format tells me Lansdowne 2.0 backed the wrong team

Ottawa is struggling to keep up with the fortunes of two professional sports franchises heading in very different directions.

By Bruce Deachman, Ottawa Citizen
Published May 07, 2026


If 90 per cent of the sports teams in a league qualify for the playoffs, what exactly is the regular season for?

That’s the question Canadian football fans might be asking following the recent announcement by the CFL that, starting in 2027, eight of the league’s nine teams will advance to the post-season.

The league is citing more meaningful games, more fan engagement, and more teams staying alive longer into the year as pluses.

But there’s another way to look at it: getting in really doesn’t mean much — and may, in fact, make more games matter less.

This feels less like innovation than survival.

Last year, league commissioner Stewart Johnston noted that only two CFL teams had turned a profit the previous season. “That’s not a sustainable business model,” he said.

And perhaps that’s of particular interest in Ottawa these days, where two professional sports franchises appear to be heading in very different directions and, increasingly, at very different speeds — and where the city may be struggling to keep up with the fortunes of each.

One league — the CFL — is not-so-quietly lowering the bar to keep teams, and the league itself, relevant. It has adjusted rules and formats in an effort to, in Johnston’s words, “win in the attention economy.”

The other — the PWHL — is finding that its problem is not too little interest, but too much.

In remarkably little time, the Professional Women’s Hockey League has become one of the city’s hottest properties in sports. The Ottawa Charge have drawn crowds and a level of enthusiasm that most teams, and leagues, would kill for.

In the attention economy, it’s doing gangbusters.

And yet, when it came time to plan the future of Lansdowne Park, the city effectively sent two very different messages.

It went to considerable lengths to “right-size” the site for the CFL and OSEG — the Redblacks’ owner — ultimately relying on Redblacks projections that may have been overly optimistic.

But when it came to the arena, “right-sizing” meant reducing capacity to the point where the PWHL and Charge effectively said, “We can’t play here. It’s too small.”

The result is that the team has had to look elsewhere — not because of a lack of demand, but because the plan didn’t anticipate its success.

So here’s the $419 million question: why is the city investing hundreds of millions in a Lansdowne 2.0 project that is backing a dying league, and potentially evicting a winning one?

The Charge are looking for a new home. Throughout these PWHL playoffs, their home games will be at the Canadian Tire Centre — an arena that solves the capacity problem while creating another: geography.

For many fans, it’s a long haul. For a team whose early success has been partly built on accessibility, it’s not ideal, and season ticket-holders I’ve spoken with are not excited by the prospect of the team leaving downtown.

Meanwhile, the Senators’ future downtown arena, where the Charge will hopefully one day play, remains years away, leaving Ottawa with a hot ticket and nowhere quite right to stage it.

Yet, when the Charge do play in a larger venue, the response is unmistakable. At its April 3 game at the CTC, an announced crowd of 17,114 turned out — a figure that almost exactly matched the Sens’ home average of 17,123 last season. Not bad for a league that by just about any measure is still just getting started.

True, the game had the feel of a one-off special event. And yes, the familiar Kanata drawbacks were all there, including $26 for parking and the slow, bottleneck crawl out of the parking lot afterwards.

And while the crowd was much bigger, the atmosphere wasn’t necessarily better. As TD Place Arena has shown for three seasons now, 8,000 fans in the right building can feel louder, closer and more connected than twice that number spread throughout a much larger venue.

The energy at CTC was still strong, rivalling or even exceeding Sens’ games. Fans waved oversized cutout heads of players. One young girl holding a sign that read “Future PWHL goalie” drew a huge ovation when she was shown on the jumbotron, as did a man proudly hoisting a copy of Heated Rivalry.

But it felt different — more diffuse and less like the compact shared buzz that makes games at TD Place feel electric.

That said, even in a building that’s too far, too inconvenient and, for many, in the wrong place entirely, it still worked. The Charge and their fans brought the goods.

The stakes will be even higher when the Charge return to the CTC for Games 3 and 4 of their best-of-five semifinal series against the Boston Fleet — the kind of meaningful games leagues are often talking about.

The city has spent years trying to make Lansdowne work, finding the right scale and use. It decided on a new smaller, more efficient arena, one less prone to empty-seat optics.

When the city’s auditor general examined the last Lansdowne report, it warned that some of the financial projections tied to the Redblacks — including how often the team might host playoff games — were optimistic.

With the CFL changing its playoff criteria, those assumptions might now seem more likely. But that may not mean what it once did, if those games lack urgency, if they’re closer to Participaction than playoffs.

I’m not a gambling man, but I would wager a hefty sum of money that the CFL doesn’t survive anywhere close to 2075, which is how long the city is projecting on receiving revenue from its deal with OSEG for Lansdowne 2.0.

Which makes the contrast with the PWHL harder to ignore. Women’s hockey doesn’t need help filling seats. It needs more seats. And the city didn’t just underestimate the demand; it didn’t figure out — or care to figure out — what size arena that demand required. And so the arena it is building may be too small for the team most want to see there, while the arena that is big enough is one many fans don’t want to go to.

The city didn’t back the wrong horse. Turns out it was in the wrong race.

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local-news/cfl-playoffs-pwhl
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  #270  
Old Posted May 12, 2026, 1:46 PM
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I agree the CFL needs to expand to gain relevance, but obviously the lack of suitable stadiums is what is preventing them from doing so, and investing $100-$200 million for a small league with only 9 to 12 games a years is a tough sell. It's slightly easier to argue when you have other teams like the CPL, NSL or other to supplement, but they need far smaller stadiums.

The CFL might need to lower expectations if they want to expand.
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  #271  
Old Posted May 12, 2026, 6:48 PM
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Originally Posted by J.OT13 View Post
I agree the CFL needs to expand to gain relevance, but obviously the lack of suitable stadiums is what is preventing them from doing so, and investing $100-$200 million for a small league with only 9 to 12 games a years is a tough sell. It's slightly easier to argue when you have other teams like the CPL, NSL or other to supplement, but they need far smaller stadiums.

The CFL might need to lower expectations if they want to expand.
I think if the new TV deal is big enough you could find a way to make 15K work in expansion markets which means temp seating or renos to make QC or London work with current stadiums or a partnership with the Wanderers in Halifax in a new stadium
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  #272  
Old Posted May 12, 2026, 7:09 PM
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I think if the new TV deal is big enough you could find a way to make 15K work in expansion markets which means temp seating or renos to make QC or London work with current stadiums or a partnership with the Wanderers in Halifax in a new stadium
Quebec is already there in terms of capacity, but I think that they fall short in terms of other CFL standards for stadiums. They could definitely relax the standards to get some new markets in the door, but there would be a limit to how much they want to erode the professional image of the league. I would think that things like temporary bench seating would likely be on the wrong side of that line.
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  #273  
Old Posted May 12, 2026, 7:20 PM
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Quebec is already there in terms of capacity, but I think that they fall short in terms of other CFL standards for stadiums. They could definitely relax the standards to get some new markets in the door, but there would be a limit to how much they want to erode the professional image of the league. I would think that things like temporary bench seating would likely be on the wrong side of that line.
I think the fact that they have been trying to expand for 40 years means some compromises on that end of it to get this across the finish line, if there is a path to grow, especially if you can combine it with a CPL team. You would then be looking at 28-30 home dates per year at a minimum.
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  #274  
Old Posted May 12, 2026, 7:42 PM
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I want the league to at least reach 10 teams. Please, just one more.
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  #275  
Old Posted May 12, 2026, 8:47 PM
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Originally Posted by cjones2451 View Post
I think the fact that they have been trying to expand for 40 years means some compromises on that end of it to get this across the finish line, if there is a path to grow, especially if you can combine it with a CPL team. You would then be looking at 28-30 home dates per year at a minimum.
Yep, and I think that combining with the CPL is pretty much essential to make that work.
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