National championships before 1909 Serious efforts to organize a national governing body and eventually a Dominion championship for what at that time was still a game called and practically identical to
rugby union began in the early 1880s, culminating in the creation of the Canadian Rugby Union in 1891 and the first CRU-recognized national championship the following year. After that,
national championship games were held every year prior to the creation of the Grey Cup except 1899, 1903 and 1904.
Creation and early years (1909–1921) While the
Stanley Cup was created in 1893 as the Canadian amateur hockey championship, professional teams were openly competing for the trophy by 1907.
Albert Grey, 4th Earl Grey, the
Governor General of Canada, planned to donate a new trophy to serve as the senior amateur championship; however,
Sir Montague Allan donated the
Allan Cup before he could finalize his plans. Grey instead offered an award for the Canadian amateur rugby football championship beginning in 1909. He initially failed to follow through on his offer; the trophy was not ordered until two weeks prior to the first championship game. The
first Grey Cup game was held on December 4, 1909, between two Toronto clubs: the
University of Toronto Varsity Blues defeated the
Parkdale Canoe Club 26–6 before 3,800 fans. The trophy was not ready for presentation following the game, and the Varsity Blues did not receive it until March 1910. The University of Toronto failed to reach the
1912 Grey Cup, which was won by the
Hamilton Alerts over the Argonauts. The Varsity Blues refused to hand over the trophy on the belief they could keep it until they were defeated in a title game. They kept the trophy until
1914 when they were defeated by the Argonauts, who made the trophy available to subsequent champions. Canada's participation in
World War I resulted in the cancellation of the championship from 1916 to 1918, during which time the Cup was forgotten. The Montreal Gazette claimed that the trophy was later rediscovered as "one of the family heirlooms" of an employee of the Toronto trust company where it had been sent for storage. The Grey Cup game was also cancelled in 1919 due to a lack of interest from the
Interprovincial Rugby Football Union (IRFU) and the intercollegiate unions, along with rules conflicts between the
Canadian Rugby Union (CRU) and the western union; Canada was still struggling in its recovery from the
Spanish flu epidemic that occurred during the last months of World War I. Competition finally resumed in 1920 with the
8th Grey Cup game, won 16–3 by the Varsity Blues over the Argonauts. It was the University of Toronto's fourth, and final, championship.
Western participation (1922–1932) Competition for the Grey Cup was limited to member unions of the CRU, the champions of which petitioned the league body for the right to challenge for the national championship. The
Western Canada Rugby Football Union (WCRFU) was formed in 1911, but the CRU did not come to a participation agreement with it until 1921, allowing the
Edmonton Eskimos (no lineage to the
team that used that name 1949–2020) of the WCRFU to challenge. Facing the Argonauts in the
9th Grey Cup, the Eskimos became the first western teamand the first from outside Toronto or Hamiltonto compete for the trophy. The Argonauts entered the game with an undefeated record, having outscored their opposition 226 to 55 during the season. They dominated Edmonton, recording the first
shutout in Grey Cup history with a 23–0 victory. Multi-sport star
Lionel Conacher was Toronto's top player, scoring 15 of his team's points before leaving the game after the third quarter to join his hockey team for their game. Western teams continued to vie for the trophy, but were consistently outclassed for several years. Eastern teams and critics felt the quality of the western game was inferior to theirs, and when Queen's defeated the
Regina Rugby Club 54–0 in the
1923 final, the critics felt they deliberately ran up the score to prove that point. Regina was western Canada's dominant team, appearing in the Grey Cup on six occasions between 1928 and 1934, but lost to their eastern opponents each time. Regina helped revolutionize Canadian football in
1929, however, as they attempted the first
forward pass in Grey Cup history. While the Grey Cup was slow to achieve national popularity, the advent of the east versus west format helped make the game the nation's largest sporting event.
Progress towards professionalism (1933–1956) As the quality of senior football improved, university teams realized they were no longer able to compete on equal footing and withdrew from competition for the Grey Cup in 1933. By 1938, only three unions continued to compete under the banner of the CRU: the IRFU (now commonly known as the Big Four) and the
Ontario Rugby Football Union (ORFU) in the east, and the
Western Interprovincial Football Union (WIFU) in the west. The CRU experimented with a two-game, total points series to determine the champion in
1940. The
Ottawa Rough Riders won both games against Toronto's
Balmy Beach, 8–2 and 12–5. The Grey Cup returned to its one-game format the following year. Both the Big Four and WIFU suspended operations in 1942 due to the
Second World War. Grey Cup play was expected to be suspended along with the unions; however, the military felt the game and sport would serve as a morale booster and organized teams at bases across the country. For the following three years, Grey Cup competition was limited to military teams, and in the
1942 Grey Cup, the
Toronto RCAF Hurricanes defeated the
Winnipeg RCAF Bombers 8–5 to become the first non-civilian team to win the national championship. The conclusion of the war led to the reformation of civilian teams; the Big Four resumed play in 1945, and the WIFU the following year. Field conditions at Toronto's
Varsity Stadium were so poor in 1950 that the game has since gained infamy as the "Mud Bowl". Deep ruts in the field and poor weather in the days leading up to the game resulted in a sloppy field covered in large puddles of water. The game also gained notoriety for the near drowning of Winnipeg's
Buddy Tinsley, who was found face down in a large puddle, apparently unconscious. Tinsley later said that he had not lost consciousness, but his leg had gone numb from a hard hit to a preexisting injury. Toronto won the game 13–0, the last time a team has been shut out in a Grey Cup game. The Eskimos faced the
Montreal Alouettes in three consecutive Grey Cups in the mid-1950s, winning all three. Edmonton's first title in 1954 ended in bizarre fashion after
Jackie Parker scored a touchdown (converted by Bob Dean) from a fumble recovery late in the game that gave Edmonton a 26–25 lead. At the time in Canadian football, touchdowns were only worth 5 points. Parker's 90-yard fumble return was the longest in league history until Toronto's Cassius Vaughn returned a Calgary fumble 109 yards in the 2017 Grey Cup game which was won by Toronto. The 1954 game also marked the end of the amateur era as the top teams completed their transition to professional organizations. As the 1950s wore on, the Big Four and WIFU distanced themselves from the CRU, forming the Canadian Football Council in 1956 to administer the game at the professional level. Two years later, on January 18, 1958, the CFC withdrew from the CRU and the Big Four & WIFU merged into the
Canadian Football League (CFL). The new league formally assumed control of the Grey Cup from the CRU.
Canadian Football League kicks off (1957–1969) In the CFL's initial seasons, the
Hamilton Tiger-Cats were the league's dominant team, appearing in nine Grey Cups and winning four titles between 1957 and 1967. The Winnipeg Blue Bombers opposed Hamilton on six of those occasions, winning four titles. Toronto-based lawyer and fan David Humphrey had talked his way past stadium security and had been allowed to watch the game from the sidelines. Ten minutes into the fourth quarter, Hamilton's
Ray Bawel intercepted a pass and it appeared he would return the ball for a touchdown when Humphrey stuck his leg out and tripped Bawel as he ran up the sideline. The incident did not affect the final score, as Hamilton won 32–7. The league also created a new rule during the
1961 Grey Cup as it was the first in history to end regulation time in a tie: CFL Commissioner Sid Halter determined the teams would play an
overtime period that consisted of two five-minute halves. That rule remained the CFL standard into the 2000s. Winnipeg and Hamilton met again in 1962, the
50th Grey Cup, immortalized as the "Fog Bowl". By the fourth quarter, the players were unable to see the sideline markers and the fans unable to see the play. It was the first title game completed on a Sunday; the Grey Cup moved from its traditional Saturday start to Sunday in 1969; however, the game was played on a Saturday for the last time in 1970. The Saskatchewan Roughriders won their first ever Grey Cup in
1966 when they defeated the Ottawa Rough Riders 29–14 at Empire Stadium in Vancouver before 36,553 fans.
Eskimos' dynasty (1970–1988) The Montreal Alouettes'
1970 Grey Cup championship, an upset win over the favoured
Calgary Stampeders, served as a morale booster for the city of Montreal, which was reeling in the aftermath of the
October Crisis. reaching the Grey Cup nine times between 1973 and 1982. The team competed in three consecutive finals early in the decade, losing to Ottawa in
1973 and Montreal in
1974, before winning the franchise's fourth championship in
1975. The 1975 championship was held in Calgary and was the first Grey Cup played on the
Canadian Prairies. A young woman infamously
streaked across the field during the national anthem despite frigid temperatures well below freezing. The only time the Eskimos did not reach the Grey Cup final during this span was in
1976, when the Saskatchewan Roughriders met the Ottawa Rough Riders, in the final all-"Roughriders" Grey Cup game. Both teams fought a see-saw battle, which was decided in the dying seconds of the game when Ottawa quarterback
Tom Clements threw to
Tony Gabriel, which stood out as the winning touchdown, 23–20. The
1977 Grey Cup was the first held at
Olympic Stadium in Montreal, contested by the home town Alouettes and the Eskimos in front of a record crowd of 68,318. Both teams reached the final game, which Edmonton won 20–13. It was the first of five consecutive championships, a streak that remains unmatched in the history of the Grey Cup. The Eskimos'
dynasty dominated the league, losing a total of only six games during the three seasons from 1979 to 1981. The
1981 Grey Cup was expected to be yet another easy win for Edmonton, who posted a 14–1–1 record during the season and were considered overwhelming favourites against the surprise Eastern champions, the 5–11 Ottawa Rough Riders. The first half did not go as Edmonton hoped, though, as Ottawa, led by rookie quarterback
J.C. Watts, emerged with a 20–1 lead. Quarterback
Warren Moon led the Eskimos back in the second half, and with the game tied at 23,
Dave Cutler kicked the game-winning field goal with just three seconds remaining. Edmonton's championship run came to an end in
1983 when they lost in the West Semi-Final game; the Argonauts defeated the
BC Lions to win the championship that year, ending the team's 31-year Grey Cup title drought. The crossover rule was eliminated and not revisited until a decade later due to Montreal's folding (ironically, the crossover rule returned with the Alouettes' revival). Reduced to eight teams, the CFL shifted Winnipeg to the East Division, making the
1988 Grey Cup between the Blue Bombers and Lions the first championship game between two
western Canadian teams.
CFL USA (1989–1995) The
1989 Grey Cup is considered one of the finest games in Canadian football history: The Saskatchewan Roughriders won their second championship by defeating the Hamilton Tiger-Cats 43–40 in the highest scoring Grey Cup game of all time. Declining interest in the CFL during the 1990s left the league in financial difficulty. Hoping to restore the league's credibility with fans, a new ownership group featuring
Bruce McNall, hockey player
Wayne Gretzky and actor
John Candy purchased the Toronto Argonauts in 1991 and lured American college standout
Rocket Ismail to Canada with a four-year, $26.2 million contract which made him the highest paid player in football history at that time. The Argonauts reached the
1991 Grey Cup and defeated the Calgary Stampeders 36–21. With 261 all-purpose yards on the game, including a then-Grey Cup record 87-yard
kickoff return for a touchdown, Ismail was named
Grey Cup Most Valuable Player. The potential for the league to enter the American market was discussed in 1987 when operators of the defunct
United States Football League approached the CFL about merging the two leagues. The league showed little interest at the time, but as it continued its decline, the CFL reevaluated its position. In 1992, the CFL announced that it would
expand into the United States. The
Sacramento Gold Miners joined the league and became the first American team eligible to win the Grey Cup. The league added three additional American teams in 1994 and two in 1995 (with one team folding), but the initiative failed in most markets, and by 1996, the CFL again operated exclusively within Canada. The lone successful American market was in Baltimore, home to the
Stallions. The team averaged over 35,000 fans per game in its inaugural season, nearly double that of Toronto or Hamilton. They matched that success on the field by becoming the first American team to play in the Grey Cup. The BC Lions kept the Grey Cup in Canada with a 26–23 victory in the
1994 final. Baltimore returned to the title game
one year later and became the only American team to win the trophy by defeating the Calgary Stampeders, 37–20. The
establishment of the
National Football League's
Baltimore Ravens in 1996 caused the Stallions to seek a new city to avoid direct competition with an NFL team. The team moved to Montreal, forming the current incarnation of the Alouettes franchise and ending the CFL's excursion into the United States.
Renaissance (1996–present) looks down field with the ball during the
2005 Grey Cup against the Edmonton Eskimos at
BC Place Stadium.|alt=The quarterback, holding the football, looks down field for a teammate to pass to while several of his teammates push up against four opposing players attempting to reach him. The league approached the
1996 Grey Cup in dire financial straits: the American expansion had been a failure, the 120-year-old Ottawa Rough Riders franchise ceased operations at the conclusion of the regular season, and out of the eight remaining teams, seven had lost money and two required direct assistance from the league to stay afloat. The Edmonton Eskimos could not afford to bring their players' families to the championship game. The
Toronto Star echoed fears spoken by fans and media across the country when it asked if the 1996 championship, won by Toronto over Edmonton, would be the final Grey Cup. The strength of the contest allowed the league to endure its challenges. The CFL survived into 1997 and was buoyed by an interest-free loan from the NFL, a new television deal with
The Sports Network which, along with the launch of its popular
Friday Night Football program, has been credited with saving the league.
That year's Grey Cup, held in Edmonton and won by Toronto, drew nearly 22,000 more fans than the previous year. The Calgary Stampeders matched the Lions' feat
the next year by becoming the second 8–10 team to win the Grey Cup, defeating the Winnipeg Blue Bombers by a 27–19 score in front of 65,255 fans, the second largest crowd in the game's history. The
2005 Grey Cup was the second overtime game in Grey Cup history, and the first one using the league's shootout overtime format (introduced in 2000). Both the Eskimos and Alouettes scored touchdowns on their first possessions, while Edmonton scored a field goal in its second and held Montreal scoreless to win the game by a 38–35 score. The
100th Grey Cup game was played on November 25, 2012, at the
Rogers Centre in Toronto between the Toronto Argonauts and the Calgary Stampeders. The Toronto Argonauts won the Grey Cup with a score of 35–22. As per a new title sponsorship deal with
Shaw Communications announced in May 2015, the event was thenceforth known as the
Grey Cup presented by Shaw. The
104th Grey Cup game was played at
BMO Field in Toronto, which became the new home of the Argonauts beginning in the 2016 season. The 104th turned out to be one of the most memorable, with the Ottawa Redblacks winning their first Grey Cup by a score of 39–33 over the heavily favoured Calgary Stampeders as Henry Burris passed to Ernest Jackson for a touchdown in overtime—only the third overtime game in the history of the Grey Cup. After having been promised the
102nd Grey Cup game as an incentive to rejoin the league, Ottawa hosted the
105th Grey Cup at
TD Place Stadium in 2017, as part of
celebrations to mark 150 years of
Confederation. The
55th Grey Cup, played at the end of the
1967 CFL season, was also held in Ottawa as part of
celebrations to mark 100 years of Confederation. In May 2020, due to postponement of the regular season and other factors relating to the
COVID-19 pandemic, it was announced that the
108th Grey Cup festivities in
Regina, Saskatchewan (which were to be the first to be hosted by the new
Mosaic Stadium) had been cancelled and postponed to 2022, and that the site of the game, if held, would be based on regular season records rather than as a
neutral site. The Grey Cup itself was later cancelled in August along with the
2020 CFL season, which was the first year that the Grey Cup was not contested since 1919. ==Trophy==