Times Colonist

OBITUARY: LEO CAHILL Colourful Argos coach known as ‘Leo the Lip’

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TORONTO — Leo Cahill, the colourful former coach and general manager of the Canadian Football League’s Toronto Argonauts, died Friday. He was 89.

“Leo The Lip” was Toronto’s coach from 1967-72 and 1977-78, and general manager from 1986-88.

“In the long and colourful history of the Canadian Football League, few have left as lasting an impression, or added as much colour, as Leo Cahill,” CFL commission­er Randy Ambrosie said in a statement. “He was truly one of a kind.”

Under Cahill’s guidance, Toronto lost in the Grey Cup in 1971 and 1987. He wrote a book titled Goodbye Argos in 1973.

“Leo had a knack for identifyin­g players, a talent for getting the best out of them on the field, and a passion for promoting the game he loved,” the Argos said in a statement.

Cahill played at the University of Illinois, appearing in the 1947 Rose Bowl, and served in Korea in the U.S. Army. He entered coaching at his alma mater and had stops at Lewis, South Carolina and Toledo before breaking into the CFL in 1960 as a Montreal assistant.

After his first coaching stint with the Argonauts, Cahill returned to football in 1974 as the GM of the World Football League’s Toronto Northmen. But the Canadian government said it would pass legislatio­n banning the league from taking root in Canada, so the Northmen moved to Memphis, Tennessee.

 ??  ?? Leo Cahill, seen here in 1985, died Friday at age 89.
Leo Cahill, seen here in 1985, died Friday at age 89.

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