The Province

Calvillo earns highest honour

Pro football’s all-time leading passer takes place among CFL greats

- HERB ZURKOWSKY

MONTREAL — It was about a month ago when the call came in. Anthony Calvillo doesn’t normally answer his cellphone when the number isn’t recognized, but something about the 416 area code told him he should this time.

He recognized the voice — Canadian Football League commission­er Jeffrey Orridge — advising Calvillo he was part of the Canadian Football Hall of Fame class of 2017.

“I was ecstatic, to be honest. I still get goosebumps thinking about that call. It was an exciting day,” Calvillo said during an exclusive interview with Postmedia.

The hardest was been keeping the secret from his family before the announceme­nt was made Wednesday night at Mosaic Stadium as part of CFL Week in Regina.

Calvillo will be joined by Kelvin Anderson, Geroy Simon and Mike O’Shea in the player category, while former Calgary Stampeders president Stan Schwartz and University of Saskatchew­an head coach Brian Towriss go into the builder’s division.

The formal induction ceremony will be held later this year.

The inclusion of Calvillo should come as no surprise. Over 20 seasons with Las Vegas, Hamilton and the final 16 in Montreal, he passed for 79,816 yards, the most in pro football history. Calvillo won three Grey Cups, was named the CFL’s most outstandin­g player three times and was a finalist for the award seven times. He was a five-time CFL allstar.

Calvillo enters the Hall in his first year of eligibilit­y. The final game of his career was played at the old Mosaic Stadium in August 2013, when he received a concussion on what appeared to be an innocuous hit. Not even the great Damon Allen, another legendary CFL pivot, made it in his first year of eligibilit­y.

“It should happen one day. When? We don’t know,” Calvillo said. “It caps off my career ... playing for 20 years, three different teams, accomplish­ing the things I did. It just puts a stamp on everything.”

Calvillo’s greatness didn’t prevail until 2000, his first year as the Als’ starter following Tracy Ham’s retirement. Montreal went 12-6, reaching the Grey Cup game, but lost to a British Columbia squad that was only 8-10 in what had to be considered an upset. That theme would be repeated.

Calvillo and the Als made it to eight Grey Cups during an 11-year period, winning a modest three. The record might have been better. A double-overtime loss to Edmonton in 2005 could have gone either way. Another setback at the hands of the Eskimos two years earlier generally was blamed on head coach Don Matthews, who started two rookies at cornerback.

If it’s become easy to knock Calvillo for the Als’ record in title games, his value and importance have repeatedly been demonstrat­ed in retirement — with Montreal incapable of finding a replacemen­t the last three years, the last two culminatin­g in losing records and no playoff berths.

“I never thought about my legacy. I was more concerned about trying to win another title,” said Calvillo, 44, the Als’ quarterbac­ks coach after an 18-month period during which the inexperien­ced mentor struggled as offensive co-ordinator.

“After 20 years ... I’m happy and have no regrets. The 3-5 record (in Grey Cup games) is what it is. I have no complaints about that. I’d like more rings, but I gave everything I had and I’m very proud of what I was able to accomplish.”

There’s no doubt former Als general manager Jim Popp surrounded Calvillo with a strong supporting cast, making his job easier. Calvillo credits Matthews, Montreal’s head coach from 2002-06, for changing the course of his career.

Marc Trestman, who began a fiveyear run as head coach in 2008, took Calvillo’s game, already seemingly on cruise control, to the apex.

Calvillo was injured in 2001 and left the team in 2007 to be with his wife, who was battling cancer. It would have been easy for both Matthews and Trestman to move on without him. But Matthews told a nervous Calvillo he was going to build the team around him.

“That’s where, I believe, my career started to take off,” Calvillo said. “And Trestman, the small details he brought to our offence. He had the pulse of the room and knew what to say. The small details that were required to play in his offence — the drops, footwork, timing of the receivers. If everything wasn’t perfect, a player could disrupt the dynamic of a play.”

Calvillo accomplish­ed all this without being vocal and demonstrat­ive, traits generally considered essential for playing quarterbac­k. Instead, he decided to lead by example, speaking only when necessary.

Calvillo ensured that, when he stepped on the field, he knew everything and wouldn’t have to second-guess any decision. He was never satisfied, hungry to remain on top.

“I’ve never taken anything for granted,” he said.

hzurkowsky@postmedia.com twitter.com/HerbZurkow­sky1

 ?? — POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Former Als quarterbac­k Anthony Calvillo has been named to the Canadian Football Hall of Fame. Now Montreal’s quarterbac­k coach, Calvillo was inducted in his first year of eligibilit­y.
— POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Former Als quarterbac­k Anthony Calvillo has been named to the Canadian Football Hall of Fame. Now Montreal’s quarterbac­k coach, Calvillo was inducted in his first year of eligibilit­y.

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