Valley City Times-Record

Upside Down Under: Longer, wider faster...

- By Marv Baker Marvin Baker is a former editor of the TimesRecor­d and current editor of the Kenmare News.

There’s a program in the Canadian Football League called Touchdown Atlantic in which two of the nine teams in the CFL give up one date a season to play a game in Atlantic Canada. It was created because of a strong interest to put an expansion team in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Halifax has wanted a CFL team since the early 1980s when a focus committee created the name Atlantic Schooners. In the past few years, the CFL commission­er has endorsed this plan and the CFL announced that it would indeed place an expansion team in Halifax.

What we don’t know is when, even though the investment group for the Atlantic Schooners has paid its expansion fee to join the CFL?

But Touchdown Atlantic has created a spinoff that could become quite interestin­g. In a move similar to the NFL playing outside the United States, the CFL has played games in Mexico City and has a long-term expansion plan to develop a fan base in Mexico’s capital.

If you are football fan, you may remember that in the early ‘90s, the CFL expanded into the United States with several teams, most notably the Sacramento Gold Miners which was the first U.S. team in 1993. The following year, Shreveport, Memphis, Miami, Las Vegas, Baltimore, Birmingham and San Antonio all had teams.

By the end of the 1995 season, the U.S. division, including the Sacramento Gold Miners, was gone and the CFL considered it a failed experiment.

Now, because of Touchdown Atlantic’s success, the CFL is exploring neutral venues other than those cities in Atlantic Canada. As an example, the Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s would play in Saskatoon, the Montreal Alouettes would play in Quebec City and the Winnipeg Blue Bombers would play in Thunder Bay, Ontario.

This idea is also where we come in, here in North Dakota.

A plan is being pushed to have the CFL teams play at neutral sites, close to their home base in American cities. So

I’ll get right to the chase here. The plan includes the Calgary Stampeders playing in Bozeman, Mont., the Winnipeg Blue Bombers playing in Grand Forks, the Edmonton Elks playing in Anchorage, Alaska and the Saskatchew­an Roughrider­s playing in either Bismarck or Minot.

In past years, Fargo was mentioned as a possible place to expand the CFL. This time around, Fargo isn’t mentioned in the Touchdown Atlantic scenario.

If you think about it, now that the worst of Covid is behind us and the internatio­nal boundary is open again, on any given day, you’ll see Canadian vehicles in Minot and Grand Forks with a handful in Bismarck, with many more on our highways.

The only venue a CFL team could use in Grand Forks would be the Alerus Center and because the CFL field is longer and wider, it would be a tight fit to get a CFL field in that building. In Minot, it would have to be the Minot State University football field and in Bismarck, the Community Bowl.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States