Toronto Star

CFL expected to announce Randy Ambrosie as new commission­er on Wednesday

- DAN RALPH

Randy Ambrosie has been officially hired as the next commission­er of the CFL, a league source has confirmed to The Canadian Press.

The source said the CFL has scheduled a news conference in Toronto on Wednesday to formally announce the appointmen­t of the 14th commission­er in league history.

Ambrosie will take over from Jeffrey Orridge, who stepped down last month after just over two years on the job. Board chairman Jim Lawson has been serving as interim commission­er since Orridge’s departure.

Word surfaced last week that Ambrosie had been hired to replace Orridge. But league officials said the reports were premature because the move hadn’t been made official with the board’s vote on Ambrosie’s appointmen­t.

Ambrosie, a 54-year-old Winnipeg native, played nine CFL seasons as an offensive lineman with Calgary, the Argonauts and Edmonton (1985-93), winning a Grey Cup his final season with the Eskimos.

The six-foot-four, 250-pound Ambrosie was taken in the first round, second overall, by Calgary in the 1985 CFL draft out of the University of Manitoba. In 1992, he also served with the CFL Players Associatio­n.

Ambrosie was a finalist for the CFL commission­er’s position when Orridge was ultimately hired.

Upon retiring from football, Ambrosie became the North American head of sales at HSBC Securities. In 2004, he joined AGF Management Ltd. as its head of sales and marketing and two years later was appointed president of AGF Funds Inc.

After serving as president and CEO of Accretive 360 Inc. (2010-2012), Ambrosie joined MacDougall, MacDougall & MacTier — then Canada’s oldest investment firm — as president and CEO. The company was sold in 2016 to Raymond James.

While the season has kicked off, Ambrosie will have one issue to address as commission­er, that being the state of the Argos.

The club drew just 11,219 fans to its 28-13 home loss to the B.C. Lions on Friday night, its lowest attendance since relocating to BMO Field to start last season.

This was after 13,583 fans attended Toronto’s 32-15 season-opening win there over the Hamilton Tiger-Cats on June 25.

Last year, 24,812 spectators watched Hamilton beat Toronto 42-20 at BMO Field to open the ’16 regular season.

 ??  ?? Randy Ambrosie played nine seasons in the CFL as an offensive lineman.
Randy Ambrosie played nine seasons in the CFL as an offensive lineman.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada