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CFL commissioner working to bring Vanier Cup back to Grey Cup week

The Vanier Cup will become part of Grey Cup again if the CFL commissioner gets his way. Incorporating the Canadian university football championship into Grey Cup week is high on Randy Ambrosie's to-do list.

'We'd like to see it happen as early as next year in Saskatchewan,' says Randy Ambrosie

The Montreal Carabins celebrate their victory over the Acadia Axemen in the Uteck Bowl university football championship. The Grey Cup will be played one day after the Vanier Cup this Sunday. (Andrew Vaughan/The Canadian Press)

The Vanier Cup will become part of Grey Cup again if the CFL commissioner gets his way.

Incorporating the Canadian university football championship into Grey Cup week is high on Randy Ambrosie's to-do list.

"The opportunity to bring Grey Cup and Vanier Cup together is a very real possibility," Ambrosie told The Canadian Press.

"There are some details to be worked out, but it is something we're committed to working towards."

"I don't think it's out of line to say we'd like to see it happen as early as next year in Saskatchewan. I always try to be as ambitious as I possibly can so 2020 looks perfectly good to me."

The 2019 Vanier Cup featuring the Calgary Dinos and Montreal Carabins is Saturday in Quebec City.

The CFL's Hamilton Tiger-Cats and Winnipeg Blue Bombers are Grey Cup combatants the following day in Calgary.

U Sports chief executive officer Graham Brown also wants the university football championship included in Grey Cup week.

"The CFL has done an amazing job of creating that five-day festival football experience and lots going on," he said.

"At the end of the day, you need to have fans in the stands and the partnership with the CFL and aligning Grey Cup and Vanier Cup pretty much assures that. That is really important to us right now."

Previous partnerships

The Vanier Cup was played in the Grey Cup host city two days before the CFL's championship game in 2012 and 2007 in Toronto, and 2011 in Vancouver.

The Laval Rouge Et Or and McMaster Marauders met in both games with each winning a title.

Defensive lineman Ben D'Aguilar, a CFL alum of the Calgary Stampeders and Tiger-Cats, played in both Vanier Cups for McMaster.

University of Calgary Dinos players celebrate defeating the McMaster Marauders in the U Sports Mitchell Bowl football game. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

"It's almost like an opening act for a top rock star," D'Aguilar recalled. "For us, as players, I feel like it amplified the experience.

"A lot of us were trying to go to the CFL, so it's cool to kind of set the stage for them and really see what it's all about first hand."

The 2012 Vanier Cup in Toronto's Rogers Centre set an attendance record of 37,000.

"I remember coming out of the locker room and going out onto the field and feeling 'man, this is big time,"' D'Aguilar said.

"McMaster, I think we had a five-thousand seat capacity stadium and we'd only ever sell three thousand so to have thirty-some thousand people show up to the game, it was pretty cool. It felt like that's the stage we deserve to have."

Television rights

Television rights and scheduling are hurdles to be cleared, however.

CFL rightsholder TSN also had Vanier Cup rights in 2011 and 2012, so meshing the two properties worked.

But the Vanier rights were transferred to Sportsnet for several years until this year.

CBC is carrying Saturday's 55th Vanier Cup. TSN is broadcasting Sunday's Grey Cup.

Whether TSN would insist on having Vanier Cup rights, or is willing to allow a CBC property into one of its biggest weeks, is unclear.

"We don't comment on rights negotiations," Bell Media Sports spokesman Rob Duffy said in an email.

Aligning schedules

The 2020 Grey Cup in Regina on Nov. 22 is scheduled a week earlier than the Vanier Cup, Brown said.

"By moving it a week earlier next year, it's very difficult for our leagues to finish a week earlier," he explained. "We already start football two weeks before university classes start.

"Right now, all of our conferences are looking at how we could adjust our schedules to accommodate the alignment of the Grey Cup and Vanier Cup a week earlier. Tons of work is going on this right now. I hope we can get over the line. The conferences have got to ultimately support this."

Quebec City's Laval University will host the Vanier for the fourth time in seven years at its 12,000-seat stadium Saturday.

The Dinos understandably would have liked to be included in the Grey Cup in their home city.

"I was at the 2011 Grey Cup in Vancouver when it was there," Dinos receiver Jalen Philpot said. "I was at the Grey Cup and the Vanier Cup and the atmosphere was just crazy.

"Everyone loves Canadian football and those CFL fans just want to see the development of Canadian football. So, for sure, if they could bring that back, that would be awesome."

Mixed feelings

But former Laval running back Patrick Lavoie from Saint-Flavie, Que., has mixed feelings about locking in an annual Grey-Vanier combo in a CFL city.

The Saskatchewan Roughrider helped the Rouge et Or win the Vanier Cup in Vancouver in 2011.

"We pretty much had the Grey Cup week experience right there," Lavoie recalled. "When you bought a ticket for the Grey Cup, you got tickets to the Vanier too so there was a lot of people.

"The Vanier Cup being in the same city as the Grey Cup was a great experience, but I want the Vanier Cup in Quebec City."


You can watch live coverage of the Vanier Cup final between the Calgary Dinos and the Carabins de Montreal beginning on Saturday at 1 p.m. ET on CBC TV and CBCSports.ca