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  #1  
Old Posted May 16, 2016, 2:28 PM
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Riise Riise is offline
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Originally Posted by HomeInMyShoes View Post
Distances and costs involved to play other teams are the biggest impediment Canada has to developing a domestic league.
This is a reason why we need to embrace regional divisions, especially when it comes to amateur and semi-pro leagues. It's something that even Sir Alex Ferguson noted.


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Originally Posted by SaskScraper View Post
The recipe for (pro)sports success in Saskatchewan seems to be grass-roots community support with a proven winning franchise, then the sky's the limit for attendance & merchandise triumph.
I don't think that recipe is exclusive to Saskatchewan. Its use may be more prevalent in that Province at the moment but I believe it can and will work elsewhere.
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  #2  
Old Posted May 16, 2016, 2:39 PM
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^ Saskatoon is an underserved market when it comes to pro sports (i.e. there is no competition), which makes it a lot easier for NLL to break through there as opposed to places like Ottawa/Edmonton.

Frankly I'm a bit surprised that Saskatoon swooned over some johnny come lately lacrosse team instead of rallying behind the hockey team it has had for decades. Speaking for myself, I'd far rather watch WHL hockey than lacrosse.
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  #3  
Old Posted May 17, 2016, 1:38 AM
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^ Saskatoon is an underserved market when it comes to pro sports (i.e. there is no competition), which makes it a lot easier for NLL to break through there as opposed to places like Ottawa/Edmonton.

Frankly I'm a bit surprised that Saskatoon swooned over some johnny come lately lacrosse team instead of rallying behind the hockey team it has had for decades. Speaking for myself, I'd far rather watch WHL hockey than lacrosse.
Attendance at Saskatoon Blades games hasn't really changed much this year as compared to the last decade and since both the Rush and Blades play on different nights in the same coliseum, one doesn't really take away from the other.. and the Rush are a proven success which probably explains their 3rd place highest spectator attendance in league, beating places like Calgary, Vancouver & Toronto..

Oh.. if you've never seen a NLL lacrosse game before, you can watch it streaming for free after registering at:

http://nllplayoffs.neulion.com/#!home

playoff schedule is at:

http://www.oursportscentral.com/serv...-com/n-5140997
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  #4  
Old Posted May 17, 2016, 9:16 AM
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Argos trying to bring back football culture to missed generations
Move to BMO enables Argos to engage younger customers via tailgates and the game-day experience.
Morgan Campbell Staff Reporter thestar.com May 16, 2016

Four weeks before the CFL regular season kicks off, the Toronto Argonauts’ brain trust has already drawn up its first blitz.

This one involves marketing.

In the lead-up to the Argos’ first season at BMO Field, the club plans to plaster the city with ads — on TV, radio, bus shelters and more — hoping to boost ticket sales to games at the team’s new home.

The ad campaign is part of a broader brand makeover aimed at making the team relevant again. Overtaking one of the city’s Big Three pro sports franchises might not be realistic, but Argos executives think a renewed marketing buzz could propel the club to a less-distant fourth place in local fans’ minds.

Outdoor ads are set appear this week in the neighbourhood surrounding BMO Field.

“It will show our players in a whole new way,” Argos president Michael Copeland said during a conference call Monday. “It will really re-ignite the conversation around Argos football.”

It’s nearly impossible for the club to have a smaller footprint than they had last season, when the Pan Am Games kept the Argos away from their home field until August. Later in the season, Blue Jays playoff games at the Rogers Centre forced the Argos to play “home” games in Hamilton and Ottawa.

The team’s absence from its home stadium had a drag on attendance. The Argos averaged 12,430 at home games last season, a figure that includes the sparse crowds at the out-of-market games the team hosted.

The Star commissioned a poll late last year that found only two per cent of sports fans in Toronto listed the Argos as their primary rooting interest, tying them with Toronto FC but placing them well behind the Jays, Raptors and Leafs.

Not a single respondent between 18 and 34 identified as an Argos fan, but the club is confident the re-brand and move to BMO will help re-engage younger fans who have avoided home games at the cavernous Rogers Centre.

Argos executive Sara Moore says the club conducted extensive market research before embarking on its marketing program. She says younger adults routinely reported being open to embracing the Argos if the club could deliver an engaging game-day experience.

Specifically, they wanted to tailgate.

“In this market there never really has been great football culture,” says Moore, the Argos’ senior vice-president of business operations. “There are a couple generations here that haven’t been immersed in what is the best game-day experience . . . That’s been missing and that is everything we’re creating and investing in.”

To craft a campaign that speaks to the cherished 18-to-34 demographic, the club enlisted Bensimon Byrne, the same Toronto-based ad agency that oversaw the CFL’s re-brand late last year.

That movement kicked off during Grey Cup week with “What We’re Made Of,” a commercial that stresses the league’s national appeal and local flavour. In Calgary, a man riding a white horse holds a Stampeders flag overhead, while in the next shot a beefy offensive lineman-type grips a rope and pulls a tractor across a flat stretch of Saskatchewan highway.

One shot features the Argos sprinting onto their home field, and another features longtime receiver Chad Owens flexing his muscles for the camera.

But Owens, one of the club’s most recognizable players, signed with Hamilton this winter, depriving the club of a familiar, marketable face.

Similarly, Moore acknowledges re-branding risks the equity a company has built among loyal fans but says the gamble is minimal here because previous Argos regimes haven’t invested in cultivating younger fans.

“The fans we have now didn’t become fans at 55,” Moore said. “We got them when they were young. The problem is the Argos haven’t gone back to that well and captured more of those 20-somethings.”
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  #5  
Old Posted May 17, 2016, 9:33 AM
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Argonauts set to unveil new branding
Kirk Penton, Winnipeg Sun May 16, 2016

Toronto is about to blanketed in all things Argonauts.

Now that the Boatmen are under new ownership and they’re moving to BMO Field this season after two depressing decades at Rogers Centre, the team is about to unleash a marketing campaign that will re-brand the Double Blue and signify a brand new beginning for North America’s oldest pro franchise.

The new message will hit the 6ix next week, and there will be Argos everywhere you look and listen: TV, radio, patios, subway stations, billboards. You name it, and it’ll have an Argos ad on it. The franchise hired the Bensimon Byrne marketing company to tackle the project.

“This is a real effort to bring the Argonauts brand out to the forefront and return it to the stature that it has experienced previously,” Argos president Michael Copeland said Monday, adding it will be a brand campaign “the likes of which this city hasn’t seen for probably a couple decades.”

The team, which is now owned by Bell and Larry Tanenbaum, will be pulling out all the stops to attract new and old fans alike. The one attraction the Boatmen are really banking on is tailgating, which will be allowed in areas around BMO Field this season.

The only catch is it isn’t BYOB due to Ontario liquor laws. Beer will be sold at “very fair prices,” according to Copeland, and patrons are allowed to bring their own food and barbecues. There will be areas for games of catch and other attractions.

Copeland and his team are doing everything they can to put the fun back in Argos football.

“We can’t just rest on the stadium alone,” Copeland said. “While it is going to be spectacular, it’s everything we’re doing around the stadium that’s really going to augment it for us this year. And that begins with tailgating.”

Copeland wouldn’t get into specifics about season ticket sales, saying the only thing the organization is worried about this year is selling out all 26,000 seats for all nine home games.

“We went into this year focused on selling out our games, so that’s all we’re focused on,” Copeland said. “We like where we are. We’ve had a really good start to the year. We’ve exceeded the team’s levels from last year quite a bit, and once our single game tickets go on sale June 1 we’re going to start seeing some sellouts.

“This organization is only going to aim to be No. 1 in all categories, and that means selling out our building. We’re not focused on anything less than that. So we haven’t set targets other than that.”

They should get some help in the summer, as the Argos will have two home games during the Canadian National Exhibition. Having a ticket to the Argos games on Aug. 20 against Edmonton or Aug. 31 versus B.C. will also get you into the CNE.

“The grounds will be alive in those games,” Copeland said, “and that brings something just a little bit more special to our season this year.”

Almost forgotten in all the hoopla surrounding the team’s off-season sale and move is the actual squad itself, the leader of which isn’t sure how all the changes will affect his troops. It will definitely be better than the last few years, when Rogers Centre treated them terribly and forced them to play home games on the road or go long stretches without a contest actually in Toronto.

“It’s really hard to say,” head coach Scott Milanovich said. “All I can go on is what I’ve seen so far, and it’s things like Michael and his staff being down at mini-camp and at the draft. I’m careful to be critical of what we were in the past, but I will say this: It seems to be a much more cohesive unit with everybody pulling in the same direction, and that’s what everybody wants in an organization, whether it’s football or the Winnipeg Sun or whatever your case may be.

“We’re all really excited. We’re excited about BMO. Again, I’m only a couple months into this with our new ownership, our new president and all those things, but it feels really good so far. That’s about all I can tell you at this point.”
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  #6  
Old Posted May 17, 2016, 11:28 PM
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Pretty exciting for the CFL this year. It's going to be one of the best seasons ever. The Argos are going to have so much more exposure. Awesome their expectations are to have sellouts for every game. It's ironic that Rogers Toronto sports talk tried to bash the league this morning. Good on the Argos and their massive marketing campaign.
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  #7  
Old Posted May 17, 2016, 11:39 PM
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Originally Posted by Hackslack View Post
Pretty exciting for the CFL this year. It's going to be one of the best seasons ever. The Argos are going to have so much more exposure. Awesome their expectations are to have sellouts for every game. It's ironic that Rogers Toronto sports talk tried to bash the league this morning. Good on the Argos and their massive marketing campaign.
Didn't feel very ironic to me... Just business as usual...
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  #8  
Old Posted May 18, 2016, 6:05 PM
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Didn't feel very ironic to me... Just business as usual...
Yea true... Equate this to a Moscow radio host bashing the KHL and Moscow Dynamo, saying things like the KHL is bush, ask 100 players in the KHL if they'd rather play in the NHL what the answer would be, etc. Do you think that would ever happen?

You'd think that being the largest media market in Canada they'd have a little more pride for both a Toronto and Canadian institution. It's actions like this that, to me, separate Toronto from the rest of this country, especially the West.
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  #9  
Old Posted May 18, 2016, 8:11 PM
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CFL goes on marketing offensive in its biggest markets
New league-centric campaign is meant to work alongside new Argos rebrand
Morgan Campbell Staff Reporter thestar.com May 18, 2016

Hope you’re ready for the CFL, because avoiding the league’s marketing message is about to become difficult.

The CFL kicked off a marketing campaign Wednesday, based on the “What We’re Made Of” re-brand unveiled at last year’s Grey Cup, and aimed at strengthening its presence in Toronto, Montreal and Vancouver.

For now the blitz consists mainly of posters showcasing attributes — like “Grit,” “Heart” and “Soul” — that endear the league and its players to would-be fans. But it will grow to include billboards and on-screen commercials at Cineplex theatres, says the CFL.

The league’s campaign unfolds the same week the Argos are going public with their brand makeover, and soon TSN’s CFL-themed advertising will begin appearing around Toronto.

CFL spokesperson Paulo Senra says the three marketing blitzes spring from a months-long planning process designed to ensure they complement each other instead of drowning out each other’s messages.

Senra says the first posters connected with the CFL’s campaign will begin appearing in strategically-targeted neighbourhoods, like Queen St. West and Liberty Village, that surround BMO Field, which will host both the Argos and the Grey Cup this season.
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  #10  
Old Posted May 18, 2016, 8:58 PM
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  #11  
Old Posted May 19, 2016, 4:20 PM
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Sounds to me like he explicitly admitting he's a troll.
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  #12  
Old Posted May 19, 2016, 4:27 PM
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Marty York
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  #13  
Old Posted May 19, 2016, 4:36 PM
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Sounds to me like he explicitly admitting he's a troll.
Isn't that pretty much what he's been doing for the last 25 years or so? I have to admit I always found him pretty amusing, I wish he still had a national media pulpit.
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  #14  
Old Posted May 19, 2016, 4:39 PM
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Isn't that pretty much what he's been doing for the last 25 years or so? I have to admit I always found him pretty amusing, I wish he still had a national media pulpit.
He definitely adds some flavour to the mix. Gotta say much of Toronto's local sports media come off as sycophants.
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  #15  
Old Posted May 20, 2016, 3:08 PM
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TSN2 to broadcast Marlies-Bears AHL Eastern Conference Finals series, series starts tonight in Hershey.

http://www.tsn.ca/tsn-follows-marlie...chase-1.492450
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  #16  
Old Posted May 23, 2016, 9:58 PM
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Argonauts' ad campaign is their most ambitious in decades (video and photos)
Andrew Bucholtz 55 Yard Line Yahoo!Sports May 23/2016

2016 is a huge year for the Toronto Argonauts, who are now under the ownership of Bell and Larry Tanenbaum and moving to BMO Field, and it looks like the new owners have given the team the marketing budget it deserves to promote these major changes. That's particularly notable, as marketing funds were especially lacking for the last few years under former owner David Braley. Under the new owners, the team's now doing some new and innovative marketing things, including buying fans drinks this past weekend and creating a large ad campaign on a scale we haven't seen from them in decades, including a new high-quality commercial that will first air on TSN during Monday night's Raptors - Cavaliers NBA playoff broadcast. Here's the commercial:

Video Link


This is an excellent ad, emphasizing the team, the experience at the new stadium (including the new tailgating setup, which is huge), and their ties to the city. It's also just part of a much larger campaign (developed with Argos’ agency of record Bensimon Byrne) planned for the next few weeks, which will include TV, radio, digital and out-of-home advertising. Here's what Argos' president Michael Copeland (the former CFL president and chief operating officer) said about this new approach in a release sent out Monday:
“With training camp opening this weekend, it’s the perfect time for us to introduce the new Argos to Torontonians,” said Michael Copeland, President and CEO for the Argos. “And when we talk about the new Argos, its not just the players we added in free agency or through the CFL Draft. It’s about new ownership, a new stadium and an entirely new Argos experience that will happen in and around BMO Field this year. It’s about an authentic football experience to compliment our great team on the field. We can’t wait to show our city what Argos Football really is.”

Here are some of the ads that will be posted around the city:


These are terrific, emphasizing the team's connection to the city (and bringing up some memories of the Tim Tebow CFL Chronicles for some of us; fortunately, the Argos' "taking it outside" here only refers to an outdoor stadium rather than going Bound For Street). Here's another good one promoting the new tailgate experience:



The overall approach is a long way from anything we've seen from Toronto on the marketing front in decades, and is perhaps the most ambitious since the John Candy/Wayne Gretzky/Bruce McNall ownership triumvirate's days in 1991, featuring everything from Rocket Ismail to the Blues Brothers. The team's found some great on-field success since then, including Grey Cup wins in 1991, 1996, 1997, 2004 and 2012, but they've had plenty of off-field ownership and marketing issues. It's fantastic to see the new owners investing heavily in marketing this team and their new stadium experience. Hopefully that investment will pay off with new fans and returning old ones, and lead to the Argonauts finding off-field success as well as on-field wins.
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  #17  
Old Posted May 24, 2016, 1:15 AM
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This is an excellent ad, emphasizing the team, the experience at the new stadium (including the new tailgating setup, which is huge
Tailgating is drinking and eating in the parking lot of the stadium before a game, right? What kind of setup has been created to facilitate this?
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  #18  
Old Posted May 24, 2016, 3:54 AM
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Tailgating is drinking and eating in the parking lot of the stadium before a game, right? What kind of setup has been created to facilitate this?
My understanding from past utterances (subject to correction) is that there will be three tail gate experiences. One for kids/families, one for the corporate set and one for the rowdies.

I believe I heard booze will have to be purchased onsite but you can bring/cook your own food. Again subject to correction but taking the liquor laws into consideration the Argos' prime objective is to have a genuine tail gate experience replicating US college football.
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  #19  
Old Posted May 24, 2016, 11:52 AM
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My understanding from past utterances (subject to correction) is that there will be three tail gate experiences. One for kids/families, one for the corporate set and one for the rowdies.

I believe I heard booze will have to be purchased onsite but you can bring/cook your own food. Again subject to correction but taking the liquor laws into consideration the Argos' prime objective is to have a genuine tail gate experience replicating US college football.
You are correct - http://www.torontosun.com/2016/05/16...l-new-branding

Quote:
The one attraction the Boatmen are really banking on is tailgating, which will be allowed in areas around BMO Field this season.

The only catch is it isn’t BYOB due to Ontario liquor laws. Beer will be sold at “very fair prices,” according to Copeland, and patrons are allowed to bring their own food and barbecues. There will be areas for games of catch and other attractions.
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  #20  
Old Posted May 24, 2016, 12:13 AM
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Ticats’ Dyakowski touts fake study, conducts fake radio interview
Drew Edwards 3DownNation May 21, 2016

Hamilton Tiger-Cats offensive lineman Peter Dyakowski pulled an amazing troll job on Roughrider fans yesterday – and duped an unsuspecting Saskatchewan radio host in the process.

It starts with this Tweet from Dyakowski yesterday.

Predictably, this Tweet got Rider fans – who view themselves as the league’s pre-eminent fan base and are more than willing to shout down anyone with audacity to suggest otherwise – all up in arms. There were dozen of Tweets like these…

Dyakowski played along, Tweeting out a few other “facts” about the study but things really took a turn when Jamie Nye, a Regina radio host, asked him to provide the “professor” who authored the “study.”

So Dyakowski sent him a response…

For those of you following the U.S. presidential race, “John Miller” is the name Donald Trump used back in the 1990s when he acted as his own fake spokesperson. But Nye dutifully interviewed “Professor Miller” on his show yesterday… and it’s remarkable how much Miller sounds like one Peter Dyakowski.

You should really listen to the entire interview but Dyakowski plays it completely straight, making up all kind of “facts” and sounding like, well, a boring math professor defending his study. Their chat goes on for nearly eight minutes and Nye never appears to clue in, inviting him back when the “full study” is released at the start of CFL regular season.

Dyakowski finally confessed to the hoax on Twitter….

Well done, Peter. Well, done.
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