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100 Grey Cups: This Is Our Game

par Stephen Brunt

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"This country and its people are made of the same hardy stuff that makes our game and our league. The Grey Cup has helped unite our country for 100 years now. And it has revealed us, built our pride and our sense of Canadianness in annual tributes to effort, sweat and toil. But what does 100 years of history and cultural relevance add up to? When we Canadians look at the Grey Cup, we see far more than a gleaming football trophy; we see a reflection of ourselves. After its first years as an amateur challenge cup, the Grey Cup would go on to be awarded to the best football team in Canada, with Western challengers traveling back east to fall at the hands of the more established Toronto teams. That is, until a group of frustrated Winnipeggers paid an enormous sum during the Depression to buy up star players and bring the cup west for the first time. Following this, the games became about the pride of the country, East versus West, the national identity fought over the gridiron, all chronicled dutifully by bestselling author Stephen Brunt. From the birth of the modern CFL in 1958, through the dynastic Edmonton Eskimos and into the nineties, attempted USA expansion, franchise re-birth… (plus d'informations)
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Although there are a lot of sidebars and inserts that interrupt the story, which is not chronological in any case, this still makes for an interesting history of the sport and of Canada. Brunt is able to bring out the excitement of the game in his writing. ( )
  VivienneR | Feb 21, 2013 |
If the Canadian Football League’s Grey Cup were to go head-to-head with the National Football League’s Vince Lombardi Trophy, which is awarded to the Super Bowl champions, our Canadian prize would win with an extra down to spare. Although the Super Bowl might be bigger, the Grey Cup is older. And as sportswriter Stephen Brunt writes in 100 Grey Cups, we’ve been blessed with more than a century of fascinating, idiosyncratic and distinctly Canadian football.

Brunt, a columnist and broadcaster at Sportsnet and the author of several bestselling sports books, has collected countless anecdotes, photographs and historical snippets in what is essentially a scrapbook woven together by a rich narrative. Each chapter explores a different notable Grey Cup, of which there are many: the inaugural Grey Cup game in 1909, when the trophy donated by Lord Grey was won by the University of Toronto; the 1948 victory by the Stampeders that sent a rowdy crowd of Calgarians whooping it up in downtown Toronto long into the night; the 1957 cup, when a player was tripped by a spectator on the sidelines — a mysterious figure who, after outing himself 20 years later, turned out to be an Ontario Superior Court of Justice judge; even the 1995 championship that was won by Baltimore during the CFL’s brief expansion into the United States.

100 Grey Cups has been published in time for this autumn’s 100th Grey Cup championship. Although it can be difficult to take in every sidebar, news clipping and stat box while following the main narrative, the sometimes jumpy flow of the book is a testament to the overwhelming volume of information presented. Complete with appendices, 100 Grey Cups is a compelling read for even the most casual of CFL fans.
ajouté par VivienneR | modifierCanadian Geographic, Jesse Tahirali (Dec 1, 2012)
 
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"This country and its people are made of the same hardy stuff that makes our game and our league. The Grey Cup has helped unite our country for 100 years now. And it has revealed us, built our pride and our sense of Canadianness in annual tributes to effort, sweat and toil. But what does 100 years of history and cultural relevance add up to? When we Canadians look at the Grey Cup, we see far more than a gleaming football trophy; we see a reflection of ourselves. After its first years as an amateur challenge cup, the Grey Cup would go on to be awarded to the best football team in Canada, with Western challengers traveling back east to fall at the hands of the more established Toronto teams. That is, until a group of frustrated Winnipeggers paid an enormous sum during the Depression to buy up star players and bring the cup west for the first time. Following this, the games became about the pride of the country, East versus West, the national identity fought over the gridiron, all chronicled dutifully by bestselling author Stephen Brunt. From the birth of the modern CFL in 1958, through the dynastic Edmonton Eskimos and into the nineties, attempted USA expansion, franchise re-birth

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