Grey Cup: Difference between revisions

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The Grey Cup has long served as an unofficial Canadian fall festival generating a large amount of national media coverage, celebration and fan interest from coast to coast. Many fans travel from across the country to partake in the week of festivities that lead up to the game. Historians date the carnival-like activities associated with the game back to 1948, when fans of the [[Calgary Stampeders]] dressed in western gear, square danced, flipped flapjacks, partied in the streets of Toronto and rode a horse through the lobby of the posh [[Royal York Hotel]].
 
With the addition of American-based teams beginning in 1993, the possibility of the Grey Cup being hoisted by a team south of the 49th parallel loomed large. In 1994 the Baltimore CFLs (as they were referred to then because of an injunction issued on the behalf of the NFL to prevent this team from using the COLTS name) played in the Grey Cup in Vancouver against the home B.C. Lions. A late fumble on the goal line by Baltimore quarterback Tracy Ham gave the B.C. Lions a chance and Lui Passaglia connected on a game-winning FG as time expired, driving the sellout crowd at BC Place into a nationalist frenzy. This patriotic nationalism would be tested further in 1995 when the Baltimore Stallions returned to the Grey Cup against the favored Calgary Stampeders led by Doug Flutie. Baltimore won the game 37-20 and took the Grey Cup south for a bittersweet parade as Art Modell, owner of the NFL Cleveland Browns, announced his move to Baltimore for the 1996 season only one week before the Grey Cup. After the 1995 season, American-based teams, many of whom were running into financial problems, folded. Only Baltimore remained and they relocated to Montreal. As of this writing the Baltimore Stallions are the only American team to win Canada's Grey Cup.
 
The Grey Cup has been broken several times. The trophy was broken in 1978 when [[Tom Wilkinson (football player)|Tom Wilkinson]] and [[Danny Kepley]] dropped it, and in 1987 when a celebrating [[Edmonton Eskimos]] player sat on it. It was again broken in 1993 when it was head-butted by Edmonton's [[Blake Dermott]]. During the victory celebration immediately following the [[94th Grey Cup]] game in [[2006]], the winning [[BC Lions]] accidentally broke the cup from its base, which contains the engraved names of the players on each years' winning team. It was repaired the following Monday.<ref name="CBC">{{cite web |url=http://www.cbc.ca/canada/manitoba/story/2006/11/20/cup-fixed.html |title=Welder didn't fumble chance at Grey Cup |accessdate=2007-06-07 |author=[[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation|CBC News]] |date=[[November 20]] [[2006]] |publisher=[[Canadian Broadcasting Corporation]]}}</ref> Other notable events include a [[1947]] fire which almost destroyed the trophy and a [[1969]] theft in which the trophy was held for ransom.