Hamilton Tiger-Cats | |
2011 Hamilton Tiger-Cats season | |
|
|
|
|
Founded | 1950 |
Based in | Hamilton, Ontario, Canada |
Home field | Ivor Wynne Stadium (1950–2012) Pan American Stadium (2014–future) |
League | Canadian Football League |
Division | East Division |
Colours | Black, gold, and white |
Nickname(s) | Ti-Cats, Tigers, Tabbies |
Head coach | Vacant |
General manager | Bob O'Billovich |
Owner(s) | Bob Young |
Grey Cup wins | 1953, 1957, 1963, 1965 1967, 1972, 1986, 1999[1] |
Mascot(s) | TC, Stripes & Pigskin Pete |
Website | www.ticats.ca |
Uniform |
The Hamilton Tiger-Cats are a Canadian Football League team based in Hamilton, Ontario, founded in 1950 with the merger of the Hamilton Tigers and the Hamilton Wildcats.[2] Throughout the history of football in Hamilton, football clubs there have had a variety of names: Tigers, Alerts, Wildcats, Flying Wildcats. The Tigers had won 2 Canadian Rugby Union Championships (1906, 1908) and 5 GREY CUPS (1913, 1915, 1928, 1929, 1932) competing as one of the Big Four (Interprovincial Football Union), and the Wildcats, created as a service club during WWII, won the 1943 Grey Cup and remained in the Ontario Rugby Football Union after the war. The name Tiger-Cats was adopted in 1950 when the Hamilton Tigers and the Hamilton Flying Wildcats merged.
The Tiger-Cats play their home games at Ivor Wynne Stadium, and plan to move to a new stadium for the 2014 season. Since the 1950 merger, the team has won the Grey Cup championship eight times, most recently in 1999.[1] The Tiger-Cats historical lineage dates back to 1869 and when we Include it we see that the Hamilton football clubs have won the league championship in every decade of the 20th century, a feat matched by only two other North American professional sports franchises, the Triple-A Rochester Red Wings of the International League, and the Montreal Canadiens of the NHL. None of these teams won a championship in the first decade of the 21st century.
Contents |
The owner/caretaker of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats Football Club is business man Bob Young, who purchased the club on October 7, 2003. He was born in Ancaster, Ontario, Canada and graduated from Victoria College at the University of Toronto. His fortune was earned in the software industry and he is currently the owner and CEO of Lulu, a self-publishing web-site.[4]
As of 2011 the Hamilton Tiger-Cats Executive Committee consisted of three people: Bob Young, Caretaker; Scott Mitchell, President and Doug Rye, Executive Vice President.
Although the current Hamilton Tiger-Cats were only founded in 1950, football in Hamilton however goes back much further than that. The city of Hamilton has one of the oldest traditions of football of any city in the North America.[5] The history of Hamilton Tiger-Cats Football Club can be traced back to November 3, 1869 in a room above George Lee’s Fruit Store, when the Hamilton Football Club was formed.[6] The Hamilton football club played their first game on December 18, 1869 against the 13th Battalion (now Royal Hamilton Light Infantry). In 1872 the Hamilton Football club began play at the 'HAMILTON AAA GROUNDS and they became known as the Tigers in 1873.[7]
The Hamilton Tigers played in the ORFU (Ontario Rugby Football Union) playoffs in 1883. Back then there was no regular seasons, just playoff rounds to determine the league champion. In 1883, the Tigers lost to the Ottawa F.C. 14-9 in the semi-final. The first championship team in Hamilton football history came in 1890 when the Tigers beat Queen's University 8-6 in the ORFU final. The ORFU began playing a regular season in 1898, and the Tigers fnished second with a 4-2 record. The Tigers continued in the ORFU until 1907, when the IRFU (Interprovincial, Rugby Football Union) was formed. The IRFU consisted of the Tigers, Toronto Argonauts, Ottawa Rough Riders and the Montreal Winged Wheelers. The IRFU later became known as the Big Four and eventually, the IRFU became the East division of the modern CFL in the 1950s. The Hamilton Tigers joined the newly-formed Interprovincial Rugby Football Union in 1907. The Tigers faced stiff local competition with the Ontario Rugby Football Union's Hamilton Alerts who, in 1912, won the City of Hamilton its first Grey Cup by beating the Toronto Argonauts 11–4.
In the following season (1913), the Tigers won their first of five Grey Cups when they beat the Parkdale Canoe Club by the lopsided margin of 44–2. The Alerts were refused entry into the ORFU in 1913 with many of its players opting to join the Tigers, while the Alerts gradually faded from existence.[8] The Alerts gave way to a team under the name Hamilton Rowing Club from 1913-1915, who also played in the ORFU. 1914 saw the complete amalgamation of the Hamilton Alerts and the Hamilton Tigers and the football club continued playing under the name "Tigers".[9]
The advent of World War I caused the IRFU and ORFU to suspend play from 1916 to 1918. In 1915, in the final pre-war season, the Hamilton Tigers won the Grey Cup. The city of Hamilton was represented in football in 1916 by the Hamilton 205th Battalion who played in a military league. Both the Tigers and the Hamilton Rowing Club returned in 1919 when the IRFU and ORFU resumed play. After not playing for two years, the Hamilton Rowing Club returned from 1922 to 1925. In 1926, the team was called the Hamilton Tigers II. The club got a slightly more dignified name in the Hamilton Tiger Cubs in 1927. The Tiger Cubs lasted from 1927 to 1936. The cat theme continued with the Hamilton Panthers in the ORFU for one season in 1937. There was no team in 1938 and 1939. In 1940 the name Hamilton Alerts was revived for one season for the Hamilton team in the ORFU. The Hamilton Tigers won the Grey Cup championship game in 1928, 1929 and 1932.
The 1941 season saw the Tigers suspend play for the remainder of World War II. The Hamilton Tigers folded, largely because a number of players had gone into the armed services. It is believed by some that the failure of the Tigers is what caused the IRFU to be dissolved, and the ERFU (Eastern Rugby Football Union) to be formed.[10] The ERFU consisted of the Toronto Argonauts, Ottawa Rough Riders, Montreal Bulldogs and Toronto Blamy Beach. The latter moving over from the ORFU. In Hamilton, the Hamilton Wildcats were formed to play in the ORFU. The Wildcats were given permission to use players from the Hamilton Tigers, but not the traditional black and yellow colors of the Tigers. The red and white Wildcats played in a three team ORFU with the Toronto Indians and the Kitchener Panthers. In 1943, the Hamilton Flying Wildcats won the Grey Cup. The Flying Wildcats were led by coach Brian Timmis and one of the greatest players in Canadian football history, Joe Krol.
Things returned to normal in 1945 when the IRFU and the Hamilton Tigers resumed play while the Wildcats (no longer known as the Flying Wildcats) continued on in the ORFU. In 1948 the Hamilton Wildcats joined the IRFU to replace the Tigers who joined the Ontario Rugby Football Union. The swtich is believed to have been prompted by a dispute between the Tigers and the IRFU over the salary of Frank Filchock. The Tigers had signed Filchock, a star Quarterback, who had been suspended by the NFL over some (unproven) gambling issues in 1947. But, Filchock's high $7000 salary caused problems for the Tigers who wanted the other IRFU teams to help pay for it. The Tigers felt the other IRFU teams were benefiting from the increased attendance that Filchock inspired. The Tigers however were prevented from benefiting because of their small stadium size. The other IRFU teams refused to help pay Filchock's salary, and consequently the Tigers left the IRFU and moved to the ORFU. The ORFU agreed to a salary sharing proposal to help try and revive their flagging fortunes.
After World War II, the Tigers and the Hamilton Wildcats competed for fans, talent and bragging rights so vehemently that neither team could operate on a sound financial level.[11][12] The Tigers and Wildcat switch only lasted two years (1948-49), and things didn't go well. The Tigers wanted back into the IRFU, the Wildcats didn't want to leave and the IRFU solution was to merge the two clubs and create the Tiger-Cats. 1950 saw the Tigers and Wildcats amalgamate to form the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in the IRFU.[13] Under the guidance of prominent and distinguished local leaders such as Ralph "Super-Duper" Cooper and F.M. Gibson, it was decided that the two teams should merge as one that would represent Hamilton. The Tiger-Cats were born in 1950 with Cooper as team president and Carl Voyles serve as head coach and general manager. A contest was held among the fans to determine the colors for the newly formed football club; the result was a combination of the two clubs' colors: yellow, black, red, white and blue. Over the years, the colors have evolved to gold, black and white and remain to this day.[14] In 1950, the Hamilton Tiger-Cats begin play in IVOR WYNNE STADIUM. With the Alouettes having been formed in 1946 and with the Toronto Argonauts and Ottawa Rough Riders already in place, the modern CFL was complete.
CFL league annals show the Tiger-Cats to be the only team in North American professional sports history to win a championship in every decade of the 20th Century![15]
The Ti-Cats had great success throughout the 1950s and 1960s, in the 1950s and 1960s the club appeared in 10 Grey Cups. They finished first in the East thirteen times from 1950 to 1972. During that same time span, they appeared in eleven Grey Cup finals winning the championship six times. Players, such as Angelo Mosca, Bernie Faloney, Joe Zuger and Garney Henley became football icons in the Steel City. Beginning in 1957 under coach Jim Trimble (who left the team after the 1962 season), the Tiger-Cats played in every national final through 1967, except for those of 1960 and 1966, winning 4 Cups (1957, 1963, 1965 and 1967).
The Cats 1972 Grey Cup win, 13–10 over the Saskatchewan Roughriders, was led by two sensational rookies, Chuck Ealey who had an outstanding college career at the University of Toledo and Ian Sunter, an 18-year old kicker who booted the deciding field goal that gave Hamilton the cup.
During this era, the Tiger-Cats also became (and remain to this day) the only Canadian team to have ever defeated a current National Football League team; on August 8, 1961, they defeated the Buffalo Bills by a score of 38–21 (at the time, Buffalo was still a part of the American Football League).[16][17]
In 1978, Toronto Maple Leafs owner, Harold Ballard assumed ownership of the Tiger Cats. Ballard claimed to be losing a million dollars a year.[18] The Tiger-Cats contended on and off during the rest of the 1970s and 1980s, reaching the Grey Cup final in 1980 and winning the East Division by a mile in 1981 with an 11–4–1 record under head coach Frank Kush, but were stunned by the Ottawa Rough Riders, who finished a distant second at 5–11, in the East final. The Tabbies' defense was very stout, talented and hungry that decade, led by standouts Grover Covington, Ben Zambiasi, Howard Fields and Mitchell Price. They were complemented very well on offense with quarterbacks Tom Clements and Mike Kerrigan throwing to Rocky DiPietro and Tony Champion leading to three straight trips to the Grey Cup in 1984, 1985 and 1986, the latter resulting in winning the title over the Edmonton Eskimos by a score of 39–15. In 1986, Ballard publicly called the Tiger-Cats a bunch of overpaid losers.[18] After the Tiger-Cats beat the Toronto Argonauts in the 1986 Eastern Final, Ballard said “You guys may still be overpaid, but after today, no one can call you losers.”[18] A few days later, the Tiger-Cats won the 1986 Grey Cup by beating the Edmonton Eskimos 39–15; Ballard said it was worth every penny.
Hamilton businessman David Braley bought the team in 1989, and he would eventually sell the team to a community-based group in 1992 due to continued poor attendance. Hamilton returned to the Grey Cup in 1989, but were on the losing end of a 43–40 thriller to Saskatchewan.
The 1990s were marked by financial instability, and constant struggles on the field. Quarterback was a weak spot for the Ti-Cats, as in the first half of the decade had names like Don McPherson, Damon Allen, Timm Rosenbach, Matt Dunigan, Lee Saltz and Todd Dillon taking their turns at the pivot. Despite the excellent play of Eastern All Star Earl Winfield rewriting the team's record books for pass catching, Hamilton struggled to attract crowds to Ivor Wynne Stadium. It was not until 1998 with the arrival of head coach Ron Lancaster and the pitch-and-catch duo of Danny McManus and Darren Flutie plus the pass rush abilities of Joe Montford that led Hamilton back to the CFL's elite, reaching the Grey Cup finals in 1998 and winning the cup the following year.
Native Hamiltonian Bob Young has owned the Tiger-Cats since 2004, and although the team has had a resurgence in home attendance, corporate sponsorship plus a brand new "Tiger Vision" scoreboard at Ivor Wynne, it has struggled with its on field performance. Last place finishes both in 2005 (5–13) and 2006 (4–14), have resulted in an overhaul of the coaching staff for 2007. The moves still did not immediately help, as the team continued to lag in last place in 2007 and 2008 despite numerous apparent upgrades. In 2009, their fortunes turned around when they finished in second place in the East, qualifying for the playoffs for the first time in several years. However, they failed to win the Grey Cup, marking the 2000s as the first decade since the 1890s that Hamilton failed to do so.
On August 31, 2011, the Tiger-Cats announced plans to close Ivor Wynne Stadium in 2012 and begin play in the long-planned Pan American Stadium in 2014.[19] The team has not finalized plans for the 2013 season, when the new stadium will be under construction and the old one will have been demolished; people from Moncton have been negotiating to bring the Tiger-Cats to Moncton Stadium for a portion of the Tiger-Cats' 2013 home schedule, and other proposals include relocating to Ron Joyce Stadium, TD Waterhouse Stadium in London, UB Stadium in Buffalo or another regional stadium, with another possibility being converting the Tiger-Cats into a traveling team for the year (which would be only the second such team in CFL history).[20][21]
The Tiger-Cats logo for many decades was an exact reverse of the Princeton University Tigers athletic logo. The artwork for the original "leaping tiger" is claimed by Hamilton. Both logos have since been revised or replaced.
Since 1873, the arch-rivals of the Ti-Cats have been the Toronto Argonauts. The first ever meeting between the two teams took place on October 18, 1873 at the University of Toronto where the Argonauts defeated the Hamilton Football Club by a Goal and a Try to Nil.[8] Hamilton and Toronto are merely 51 km apart along the Queen Elizabeth Way (QEW) highway and are currently the only CFL teams in Ontario. The two teams have recently played each other every year at Hamilton's Ivor Wynne Stadium during the Labour Day Classic, with the 2011 season being a recent exception. On some occasions, the two teams would have a rematch the following week at Toronto's Rogers Centre. On November 14th, 2010 the Tiger-Cats were defeated by the Toronto Argonauts in the East Division Semi-Final game in the first playoff meeting between the two teams since 2004.
Corus Radio Hamilton is the official radio broadcast rights holder for the Tiger-Cats and they have been the official voice for CFL football in the Greater Hamilton Area for over 40 years. AM900 CHML, together with brother station Y108, offers coverage of all Tiger-Cats games, including pre-season games.[22][23] Hamilton Tiger-Cats games broadcasted on CHML or anchored by the announcers team of Rick Zamperin, John Salavantis, and Matt Holmes. Zamperin, CHML's sports director, became the play-by-play announcer in 2007 after six seasons as sideline reporter. Color commentator John Salavantis is a former football coach with the Tiger-Cats, Ottawa Rough Riders, Montreal Machine, and the Ottawa University Braves. CHML's Matt Holmes is the pre-game show host and sideline reporter. The post-game show, "The Fifth Quarter", is hosted by Ted Michaels.
Years | Flagship station | Play-by-Play | Color Commentator |
---|---|---|---|
1950–59 | CHML | Norm Marshall | |
1960–66 | CHML | Norm Marshall | Perc Allen |
1967–78 | CHML | Perc Allen | John Michaluk |
1979–83 | CHAM | Norm Marshall | Bobby Dawson |
1984–87 | CHML | Perc Allen | John Michaluk |
1988–92 | CHML | Bob Bratina | John Michaluk |
1993 | CHML | Bob Bratina | John Salavantis and Bob Hooper |
1994 | CHML | Bob Bratina | John Bonk |
1995 | CHML | Bob Bratina | Bob Hooper |
1996 | CHML | Bob Bratina | Russ Jackson |
1997–2001 | CHML | Bob Hooper | Russ Jackson |
2002 | CHML | Bob Bratina | Guest Analysts |
2003 | CHML | Bob Bratina | John Salavantis |
2004–06 | CHML | Tim Micallef | John Salavantis |
2007 | CHML | Rick Zamperin | John Salavantis |
2008 | CHML/CJXY | Rick Zamperin | Ron Lancaster |
2009–present | CHML | Rick Zamperin | John Salavantis |
Quarterbacks
Running Backs
Wide Receivers
Slotbacks
|
Offensive Linemen
Defensive Linemen
|
Linebackers
Defensive Backs
Special Teams
|
Injured List
Practice Roster
Italics indicate Import player |
|||
East: HAM · MON · TOR · WIN • West: BC · CAL · EDM · SAS |
Front Office
Head Coaches
Offensive Coaches
|
Defensive Coaches
Special Teams Coaches
|
|||||
East: HAM · MON · TOR · WIN • West: BC · CAL · EDM · SAS |
|
|
|
|
|