Regina Leader-Post

Involving star players could benefit CFL 2.0

League shutting out best ambassador­s for its global push

- DAN BARNES dbarnes@postmedia Twitter.com/sportsdanb­arnes

The Canadian Football League will wave the flag all over the globe in 2020, as its ambitious internatio­nal outreach takes major strides forward.

The rapid expansion of the so-called CFL 2.0 initiative is necessary, since the league will double its complement of global players on each team’s active roster to two next season. The nine CFL teams are also likely to park two or three global players on the practice roster, in case of injury or performanc­e issues.

That means the internatio­nal talent pool has to grow accordingl­y, quickly and cost effectivel­y. To that end, the league hired Greg Quick in November to centralize its global scouting procedures, and the CFL will hold player combines in Helsinki, Stockholm, Frankfurt, Paris, Bristol, Florence, Tokyo, Osaka, Mexico City and Copenhagen between Jan. 11 and March 15 in 2020. Local federation­s and leagues are picking up the bulk of the tab.

The best players from those events will attend the CFL combine in Toronto from March 26-28, and some of those players will be selected by CFL teams in the global draft on April 16.

Unearthing worthy candidates from 10 internatio­nal combines amounts to a lot of work for a skeleton crew of CFL staffers, including Quick, head of football operations Greg Dick, and senior director of football operations Ryan Janzen.

It should also have been seen as an opportunit­y to involve active

CFL players in both the combines and in news conference­s with local media. But there won’t be an active CFLER on hand, as commission­er Randy Ambrosie explained in an interview with Postmedia in Calgary during Grey Cup week.

“Our strategy with the combines was, we didn’t want to create a big cost structure, so a very small group will travel. So the spirit in which I have approached our governors on our internatio­nal strategy is with a very tight cost model. It’s not filled with excesses. So, not having the players (at the combines) is not about not wanting them there. It’s (about operating) the way we promised the governors we would.

“Keep it tight. Let’s get this first big year out of the way, and see how it went. And maybe in future years that can be part of the conversati­on.”

It really should have been a topic for this winter. Presumably, local media will want to cover the combines. It would have made sense to have a CFL star on hand to talk up the virtues of the league while telling his own story, and it wouldn’t have been terribly cost prohibitiv­e for a single active player to attend perhaps a handful of combines. It amounts to an opportunit­y missed.

“We’ve offered the support of the players on this,” said CFL Players Associatio­n executive director Brian Ramsay. “As 2.0 goes global, we can’t see better ambassador­s for our game than some of the stars of the show now. Some of our players actually reside in some of these countries in the off-season, so it makes sense from our point of view to have the players involved. And they would happily do so. We chatted about it before (with the CFL). We haven’t talked about it recently.”

Granted, there are other issues of importance on the table now. The CFLPA filed a grievance after the league prevented veteran players from signing NFL practice roster agreements in the off-season. On Monday, Ramsay said the two sides are making progress on the issue, but he wouldn’t offer details.

Ambrosie has made a point of stressing that players, coaches and alumni will be brought into the CFL’S big tent in a more meaningful way than ever before. If that’s the case, the league could have started with the players and 2.0. The CFLPA supports the initiative, and its members stand to gain financiall­y from its success.

“We’ve bought into this,” said Ramsay. “The league is taking this approach, and part of this conversati­on is saying how can we have as much success as possible. With CFL 2.0 and the global push, if were going to go down this road, then everyone has to be in it to find ways to set up for success.”

Ramsay understand­s and supports the league’s desire to limit costs associated with 2.0, so he isn’t raising too much of a fuss over the exclusion of players this time. But the league and the players have to act more like partners on everything going forward.

 ?? AL CHAREST ?? Commission­er Randy Ambrosie says shutting players out of the ambitious CFL 2.0 initiative was simply a matter of constraini­ng costs rather than an attempt to shut them out of the process.
AL CHAREST Commission­er Randy Ambrosie says shutting players out of the ambitious CFL 2.0 initiative was simply a matter of constraini­ng costs rather than an attempt to shut them out of the process.
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