- Source: 2021 CFL season
The 2021 CFL season was the 67th season of modern-day Canadian football. Officially, it was the 63rd season of the Canadian Football League. The regular season began on August 5 and ended November 20. Each team played 14 regular season games over 16 weeks. Previously, the season was scheduled to begin on June 10 and end on October 30, with 18 games being played per team over 21 weeks, but this was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada. Hamilton hosted the 108th Grey Cup on December 12, 2021.
League business
= Resumption of play
=The 2020 season was postponed on numerous occasions because federal and provincial governments forbade attendance at sporting events in an effort to stop the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada. The league ultimately decided to hold a shortened season in a "bubble" without fans in attendance. However, on August 17, the league called off the season. The federal and provincial governments refused to provide the subsidies needed to cover the expenses necessary for the season to be held. Additionally, public health officials could not guarantee they could approve the league's "bubble" proposal in time to complete the season before Canada's harsh winters set in. At the same time, commissioner Randy Ambrosie guaranteed a return to play in 2021, with fans in attendance at full capacity, without regard to the status of the pandemic by that time.
= Renaming of the Edmonton team
=On June 1, 2021, Edmonton's CFL team announced that it adopted a new name, the Edmonton Elks. The team had previously retired its "Edmonton Eskimos" branding on July 21, 2020, and started to temporarily use "Edmonton Football Team" and "EE Football Team", on grounds that the term Eskimo had been considered an offensive term to refer to Inuit.
= Salary cap
=According to the new collective bargaining agreement, the 2021 salary cap was scheduled to be $5,350,000 (or an average of $118,888 per active roster spot). That number was subject to change as players would have revenue sharing of 20% from broadcast deals, but could also change due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Individual minimum salaries were set at $65,000 in 2021 for National and American players. Since no 2020 CFL Draft pick signed a contract in the cancelled 2020 season, this was the first season with all CFL Draft picks subject to a pay scale, with the first overall pick earning approximately $85,000.
= Schedule
=The league originally released the season's full schedule on November 20, 2020, which featured a 21-week regular season schedule. The regular season was scheduled to begin on June 10 with a rematch of the 107th Grey Cup with the defending champion Winnipeg Blue Bombers hosting the Hamilton Tiger-Cats. Notably, the schedule featured more intra-divisional games, with BC, Calgary, and Edmonton playing 12 such games, Saskatchewan and Winnipeg playing 11 divisional games, and the East Division teams playing 10 divisional games (an increase of one to two divisional games per team). This was done to reduce cross-country travel. The Toronto Argonauts were scheduled to play a neutral site game on July 19 against the Calgary Stampeders at a location that was supposed to be announced at a later date.
However, due to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, the league confirmed on April 21 that the season would be delayed until at least August 5, with a revised schedule released on June 15. This version featured 14 regular season games with even more of a focus on intra-divisional games as the Blue Bombers and Redblacks did not play against each other in the regular season and each team played approximately eight divisional games. As the league anticipated capacity limits to be more lenient in Western Canada, the CFL aligned its schedule to have all East division teams begin their seasons at West division opponents for at least the first two weeks of the season.
If a game postponed due to a COVID-19 outbreak could not have been made up within the regular season schedule, the team(s) affected by the outbreak would be charged with losses by forfeit. If at least 85% of a team's players had received at least one vaccine dose, players received their salary for the unplayed game and the team was credited with a 1–0 win.
= Potential partnership with the XFL
=On March 10, the CFL confirmed it was pursuing discussions with the consortium that owns the XFL about some form of partnership, the details of which were not made public. The XFL, which was slated to return in 2022 following its abrupt shutdown and sale in March 2020, paused plans to return pending the results of those discussions. The discussions ended on July 7, with no action taken. The XFL subsequently confirmed it would not resume play until 2023 at the earliest.
= Global players
=After first being introduced for the 2019 CFL season, the league featured two active roster spots for players designated as "global" players for each team. Each team also had up to three spots on their practice rosters for global players. Global players were defined as those who did not hold Canadian or American citizenship nor did they qualify as a National player in any other way. This was subject to change after the cancellation of Global Combines in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
= COVID-19 restrictions
=Some CFL teams enforced limitations on spectator capacity for their games. Even without capacity restrictions, teams still employed enhanced health and safety protocols, such as increased access to sanitization, paperless transactions and digital tickets. With announcements by the Edmonton Elks and Saskatchewan Roughriders on August 30, all CFL teams announced plans to require that spectators present proof that they are vaccinated for COVID-19, either as the result of a voluntary decision, or as the result of provincial public health orders requiring proof of vaccine (British Columbia, Manitoba, and Quebec).
Player movement
= Signing moratorium
=With the 2020 CFL season initially postponed and then ultimately cancelled, the league had placed a moratorium on re-signing players. Teams were able to re-sign players after December 7, 2020, at 12:00 p.m. ET.
= Free agency
=The 2021 free agency period began on February 9 at 12:00 p.m. ET. Similar to the previous off-season, pending free agents and teams were able to negotiate offers for one week starting January 31, ending February 7. All formal offers to a player during this time would be sent to both the league and the players union and could not be rescinded.
= Trade deadline
=The in-season trade deadline was on October 27 at 5:00 pm ET.
Regular season
= Standings
=Postseason
The Grey Cup was played at Tim Hortons Field in Hamilton, Ontario, on December 12. The Winnipeg Blue Bombers won their second consecutive championship, defeating the Hamilton Tiger-Cats in a re-match 33–25, in overtime.
= Playoff bracket
=*-Team won in Overtime.
Broadcasting
The CFL was broadcast on TSN and RDS across all platforms in Canada as part of their contract. The broadcast rights were reported to have been extended through 2025.
Award winners
= CFL Top Performers of the Week
=Source
= CFL Top Performers of the Month
=Source
2021 CFL All-Stars
= Special teams
=K – Rene Paredes, Calgary Stampeders
P – Richie Leone, Ottawa Redblacks
ST – DeVonte Dedmon, Ottawa Redblacks
Source
2021 CFL Western All-Stars
= Special teams
=K – Rene Paredes, Calgary Stampeders
P – Cody Grace, Calgary Stampeders
ST – Mike Miller, Winnipeg Blue Bombers
Source
2021 CFL Eastern All-Stars
= Special teams
=K – Boris Bede, Toronto Argonauts
P – Richie Leone, Ottawa Redblacks
ST – DeVonte Dedmon, Ottawa Redblacks
Source
2021 CFL Awards
CFL's Most Outstanding Player Award – Zach Collaros (QB), Winnipeg Blue Bombers
CFL's Most Outstanding Canadian Award – Bo Lokombo (LB), BC Lions
CFL's Most Outstanding Defensive Player Award – Adam Bighill (LB), Winnipeg Blue Bombers
CFL's Most Outstanding Offensive Lineman Award – Stanley Bryant, (OL), Winnipeg Blue Bombers
CFL's Most Outstanding Rookie Award – Jordan Williams (LB), BC Lions
John Agro Special Teams Award – DeVonte Dedmon (KR), Ottawa Redblacks
Tom Pate Memorial Award – Mike Daly (DB), Hamilton Tiger-Cats
Jake Gaudaur Veterans' Trophy – Chris Van Zeyl (OL), Hamilton Tiger-Cats
Annis Stukus Trophy – Mike O'Shea, Winnipeg Blue Bombers
Commissioner's Award – Nurse Sara May, Hamilton-area nurse to honour her work during Covid-19 pandemic
Hugh Campbell Distinguished Leadership Award – Doctors McCormack and Naidu, CFL Chief Medical Officers
Jane Mawby Tribute Award - Carol Longmuir, director of finance and administration, BC Lions
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- BC Lions
- Stadion Alumni (Guelph)
- 2021 CFL season
- 2024 Toronto Argonauts season
- 2022 CFL season
- 108th Grey Cup
- 2021 CFL draft
- Canadian Football League
- 2023 CFL season
- 2021 CFL global draft
- 2020 CFL season
- Winnipeg Blue Bombers