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  #301  
Old Posted Sep 14, 2008, 3:01 AM
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^ Denied!!
Oh well, lets hope Saskatchewan downs BC. The west needs to open up a bit.
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  #302  
Old Posted Sep 14, 2008, 5:19 AM
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The Lions have awoken.
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  #303  
Old Posted Sep 15, 2008, 1:13 AM
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I think a western team is definitely going to cross over and take the 3rd playoff spot in the East.
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  #304  
Old Posted Sep 15, 2008, 1:16 AM
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A Battle of Alberta final would be sick.
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  #305  
Old Posted Sep 15, 2008, 2:18 AM
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I must apologize to the Montreal fans. I didn't think the Als would amount to much this year. I'm shocked at how quickly Trestman turned the organization around. They have just played good football. It's not a team that relies on stars to do all the work, although Avon Cobourne is a special player. In that respect, the Alouettes and the Roughriders are very similar football teams, and perhaps not co-incidentally both experiencing their fair share of success.

On the flip side of things, my Bombers have no shortage of big name players but have only played one consistent game from start to finish all year. Thankfully it was their last effort, and I hope it's a sign of things to come, but it still goes without saying that Winnipeg and Toronto have flopped so far this year.

I really feel bad for the Ti-Cat fans. That team continues to struggle, and I just don't understand the dealing of Zeke Moreno. Cornelius Anthony (Moreno's replacement) was a big reason as to why they lost in Edmonton.
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  #306  
Old Posted Sep 15, 2008, 3:08 AM
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A Battle of Alberta final would be sick.
No doubt, has that ever happened before?
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  #307  
Old Posted Sep 15, 2008, 6:33 AM
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No doubt, has that ever happened before?
No cross-over team has ever won a playoff game, so nope, it hasn't ever happened before.
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  #308  
Old Posted Sep 15, 2008, 3:04 PM
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No cross-over team has ever won a playoff game, so nope, it hasn't ever happened before.
Well, there's a first time for everything...
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  #309  
Old Posted Sep 15, 2008, 5:43 PM
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He was good on some plays and then he would throw an interception on the next. Either way, aside from the fact that it was bloody freezing, it was a great game. Although I would have to say that was the longest football game evey, it took a little over an hour and a half to play the first half, and almost 3 1/2 for the whole game.


On a side note, Ricky Ray just threw 2 interceptions in a row. Go Hamilton!!!
I froze my ass off on Friday night. And yes, it was definately one of the longest games I have ever endured, and the weather made it worse. I had to laugh at the lines inthe councourse at half time. The beer lines were non existant and the coffee/hot chocolate lines were massive.

Great to see the Esks squeaked out a W too. They have a hell of a time against hamilton fro some reason. 2 games seperate first from last inthe west now.
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  #310  
Old Posted Sep 16, 2008, 4:06 PM
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Kudos to Chris Berman on ESPN for mentioning Milt Stegall's record breaking catch against the Argos during the half time show on MNF last night. They even showed a clip of the catch. Very classy.
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  #311  
Old Posted Sep 16, 2008, 4:55 PM
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Kudos to Chris Berman on ESPN for mentioning Milt Stegall's record breaking catch against the Argos during the half time show on MNF last night. They even showed a clip of the catch. Very classy.
really? that's kinda cool.
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  #312  
Old Posted Sep 16, 2008, 6:25 PM
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Kudos to Chris Berman on ESPN for mentioning Milt Stegall's record breaking catch against the Argos during the half time show on MNF last night. They even showed a clip of the catch. Very classy.
Damn! - I missed that. I like the fact that Boomer acknowledges the CFL, he;s done it before.
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  #313  
Old Posted Sep 16, 2008, 9:23 PM
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I was quite impressed to see that as well.
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  #314  
Old Posted Sep 18, 2008, 4:09 PM
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Very sad news ............

CFL great Ron Lancaster dead: reports
The Hamilton Spectator and TSN

Canadian Football League great Ron Lancaster has died.

The CFL icon and former Ticat head coach died this morning, Tiger-Cat team officials confirmed this morning. They informed players in a special meeting at this morning's practice.

Lancaster was 69.

Lancaster had been serving as Hamilton's senior adviser to organizational development and providing analysis on the team's radio broadcasts.
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  #315  
Old Posted Sep 18, 2008, 4:29 PM
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damn that sucks. He meant a lot to the ti-cats and the eskimoes!

Sad day indeed
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  #316  
Old Posted Sep 18, 2008, 4:29 PM
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Very sad news ............

CFL great Ron Lancaster dead: reports
The Hamilton Spectator and TSN

Canadian Football League great Ron Lancaster has died.

The CFL icon and former Ticat head coach died this morning, Tiger-Cat team officials confirmed this morning. They informed players in a special meeting at this morning's practice.

Lancaster was 69.

Lancaster had been serving as Hamilton's senior adviser to organizational development and providing analysis on the team's radio broadcasts.

Very sad news, cfl has lost to many icons this year. Ackles now lancaster
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  #317  
Old Posted Sep 18, 2008, 5:10 PM
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RIP Ron.

I was chatting about him with a couple of (relative) old timers just the other day. The guy used to own this province.
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  #318  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2008, 12:04 AM
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Prime Minister Stephen Harper said in a statement.....

"It is with sadness that we learned today of the passing of Ron Lancaster"

"A Saskatchewan and Canadian sports icon, he brought joy to more than a generation of Canadian football fans in Saskatchewan as well as in Ottawa, Edmonton, Hamilton and across Canada.

"On behalf of the Government of Canada, I offer sincere condolences to his wife Bev, his family and many friends and fans."
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  #319  
Old Posted Sep 19, 2008, 5:51 PM
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'He was the epitome of Cat football'

There will be a life celebration for Ron Lancaster at the Bay Gardens Funeral Home, 947 Rymal Road E. in Hamilton. It runs from 2 – 5 p.m.

In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations be made to the Juravinski Cancer Centre.

Ron Lancaster fondly remembered as player, coach, GM and family man
September 19, 2008
Steve Milton
The Hamilton Spectator

Inside the Little General beat the heart of the enlisted man.

It's jarring, and depressing, to realize that today -- Game Day and, appropriately, Hall of Fame Game Day -- is the first day we are all forced to carry on without Ron Lancaster.

His huge smile and quick, smoky laugh no longer lighting up, and lightening up, Ivor Wynne Stadium? No more raucous stories of the greats and the goats of the Canadian Football League, back when it rivaled the National Hockey League for popularity?

He and Bernie Custis no longer cackling under the canopy in the east end zone, slapping each other on the back after their own jokes?

He and Bev Lancaster not welcoming friends on the sidelines, an extension of their living room, an hour before game time?

Impossible. All of it.

From coast to coast, the football world has been mourning the loss of a transcendent presence. Thirty years after their playing days, Lancaster and George Reed are still as Saskatchewan as wheat. Ten years after he won the franchise's last Grey Cup, Lancaster was still, as Zeke Moreno said yesterday, "a rock star in Hamilton. But down-to-earth too."

Lancaster was a tribal leader of that beautifully blessed breed: Americans who come north and become bigger boosters of the CFL than most Canucks. He did everything in and around the league: hall-of-fame quarterback, Grey Cup-winning coach; one of the best colour TV analysts the game has ever heard; general manager; community ambassador; oral historian; stand-up comedian.

And, in these parts, franchise saviour six years before Bob Young saved it again.

Lancaster became Ticat head coach in 1998, the year after the club went 2-16 and had no local cachet.

He brought quarterback Danny McManus and receiver Darren Flutie with him from Edmonton, brought his son in as offensive co-ordinator and within eight months they were a last-second Calgary field goal from winning the Grey Cup. They won it the next year, and haven't been close since.

"When I got to the CFL with B.C., in 1991, to me he was just a figure on the sidelines with Edmonton," Flutie recalls. "But he was a very intimidating presence. He never smiled, and I'd see him sneak a smoke.

"Then in '96, when I went to Edmonton and got to know him, he turned out to be a very caring, understanding man. He had played a long time, so the best thing he did was handle players. He knew when he needed to lay off, when you needed to be pushed.

"I think he recognized some kindred spirits in Danny and me. We were not too fast, we were not too big, but we played our asses off. So he gave me a lot of trust on and off the field.

"I'm very sad. It's like a member of the family has passed."

Which is exactly how McManus put it and, not surprisingly, he and his former batterymate handled the news the same way.

When Flutie was phoned about Lancaster's death, he immediately hung up because he couldn't maintain his composure. When McManus was told after yesterday's short Ticat practice, he hurriedly left the field in tears and walked around the stadium -- their stadium -- alone, before returning to talk about the man who'd been his coach, confidante, idol since 1996.

"The big thing was that first day, he said we were a Grey Cup team, and the team needed to hear the leader say that," McManus said.

"He was a father figure to me. But he was also a career saver.

"He took a chance on me in Edmonton to run his ball club."

McManus appreciated Lancaster's legendary bluntness. As a player, or a journalist, you could ask him a question but had to be prepared for an answer you didn't like.

"He wasn't going to sugar-coat it," McManus smiled. "He had too much respect for football to blow smoke up your rear end."

Better than most who've ever played in this country.

It's been a year of brutally impactful losses for Canadian football. Within the past 12 months the CFL has lost, among others, its most august commissioner, Jake Gaudaur, two pioneering broadcasters in Don Chevrier and Don Whitman (Lancaster's on-air CBC partner), player/broadcaster Lief Petersen, Lions' franchise cornerstone Bobby Ackles, the unique J.I. Albrecht, and thundering fullback Earl Lunsford.

And now, the Little General.

CFL commissioner Mark Cohon, and his assistant Matt Maychak, have become too good at writing obituaries. And they penned a beauty to Lancaster yesterday.

Most complimentary to Hamilton, Ron and Bev Lancaster chose to live here during his broadcasting career, and even after he finished coaching the Cats. He always said the Steel City reminded him of the people, and values, of his Pennsylvania.

"He is -- not was -- the epitome of Ticat football," said interim Tiger-Cats head coach Marcel Bellefeuille succinctly.

"A hard-working, down-to-earth person.

"He's a microcosm of this town."
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  #320  
Old Posted Sep 20, 2008, 6:19 AM
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sad day. great memories.
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