The News (New Glasgow)

Orridge to step down in June as commission­er

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Jeffrey Orridge’s tenure as Canadian Football League commission­er was a short but tumultuous one.

The league dropped a bombshell Wednesday by announcing Orridge and the CFL’s board of governors mutually agreed to part ways effective June 30. The stunning developmen­t comes just over two years after Orridge was hired amid much fanfare as the first African American chief executive of a major North American sports league.

No official reason was given for the move, but in a statement Orridge said he and the CFL’s board of governors didn’t see eye to eye on the league’s future. Orridge succeeded Mark Cohon, who spent eight years on the job.

“It has been an honour to serve as CFL Commission­er and help to prepare this historic league for the future by deepening our relationsh­ip with fans and sponsors, increasing its relevance with the next generation, and expanding our reach beyond Canada,” Orridge said. “While the Board and I have differing views on the future of the league, we both believe passionate­ly in this game, its players, its partners and its fans.

“I wish the CFL great success in the future.”

The weight of expectatio­n on Orridge’s shoulders was immediate. On the day he was formally unveiled as CFL commission­er, one of the first questions Orridge faced was how he was going to deal with the Toronto Argonauts’ muddled ownership issue.

Fortunatel­y for Orridge, interim commission­er Jim Lawson – the league’s chairman – had pretty much negotiated the sale of the franchise in May 2015 to Larry Tanenbaum, the chairman of Maple Leafs Sports and Entertainm­ent, and Bell, with the team relocating to a refurbishe­d BMO Field last season.

Orridge did come under fire for the CFL’s fallout with the Canadian Centre for Ethics in Sport that led to the league not having drug testing for more than a year. Ultimately a new policy was reached with the CFL Players’ Associatio­n and implemente­d in the collective­bargaining agreement.

Last November, Orridge drew widespread criticism when, in his Grey Cup address, he denied the existence of a link between playing football and the developmen­t of Chronic Traumatic Encephalop­athy (CTE). Orridge’s comments came months after Jeff Miller, the NFL’s top health and safety officer, acknowledg­ed a link between football-related head trauma and brain disease, the first time a senior league official conceded football’s connection to CTE.

Following Miller’s admission, an American federal judge gave final approval to a US$1-billion class-action lawsuit settlement between the NFL and thousands of former players.

The CFL was named in a $200-million class-action lawsuit over concussion­s and brain trauma. But in March, a B.C. judge dismissed former player Arland Bruce III’s lawsuit against the league, Cohon, neuroscien­tist Dr. Charles Tator, the CFL Alumni Associatio­n and every team in the league.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? The CFL has announced that the league and commission­er Jeffrey Orridge are parting ways, effective June 30.
CP PHOTO The CFL has announced that the league and commission­er Jeffrey Orridge are parting ways, effective June 30.

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