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CFL on CBC

CFL on CBC
StarringElliotte Friedman
Mark Lee
Chris Walby
Sean Millington
Greg Frers
Khari Jones
Steve Armitage
Darren Flutie
Country of originCanada
Production
Running time360 minutes+
Original release
NetworkCBC Sports (19522007)

CFL on CBC was a presentation of Canadian Football League football aired on CBC Television. CBC held broadcast rights for the CFL from 1952 to 2007. The exclusive broadcasting rights for the league moved to TSN starting from the 2008 CFL season.

Schedule

The broadcast schedule changed several times in its history, but in the final years of the run, CBC showed a game every Saturday. CBC also showed the Labour Day Classic, a Labour Day Monday CFL Doubleheader which always featuring the Toronto Argonauts versus the Hamilton Tiger-Cats and the Edmonton Eskimos versus the Calgary Stampeders. The CFL on CBC also showed the Thanksgiving Day Classic (Monday) doubleheader. From 1991 until 2007, the CBC had exclusive coverage of all playoff games and the Grey Cup Championship Game.

The CFL on CBC ended its run on November 25, 2007, airing the 95th Grey Cup from the Rogers Centre in Toronto, Ontario, after which the CFL left broadcast television and signed a six-year contract with cable network TSN. The CFL granted a no-bid extension to the TSN contract in 2013 (and has offered additional no-bid extensions since then), after which the CBC announced it would no longer pursue professional sports broadcasting rights of any kind.[1]

Commentators

At the end of its run, the CFL on CBC was hosted by Elliotte Friedman, and featured the panel of Sean Millington, Greg Frers, and Khari Jones. Mark Lee and Chris Walby formed the lead broadcast team. The secondary broadcast team was Steve Armitage and Khari Jones. From August 20 – October 4, 2005, the CFL on CBC had no on-air announcers due to a CMG strike.[2]

On-air personalities of the CFL on CBC

Play-by-play

Colour commentary

Hosts

Studio analysts

Sideline reporters

References

  1. ^ CBC to cut 657 jobs, will no longer compete for professional sports rights. CBC. Retrieved April 12, 2014.
  2. ^ "Brockpress.com". Archived from the original on 2013-02-15. Retrieved 2008-01-22.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "No title". The Drummondville Spokesman. September 30, 1955. Retrieved 26 February 2024.
  4. ^ a b c d Dube, Bernard (August 19, 1958). "Dial Turns". The Montreal Gazette. Retrieved 26 February 2024.
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