Showing posts with label Intermediate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Intermediate. Show all posts

Sunday, April 4, 2021

The Forward Pass Is Introduced

The portions of a game summary posted earlier today, between the Ottawa Rangers and the Quebec Aquatic Club ("Swimmers") and making reference to the excitement caused by the forward pass, made me question when the first legal forward pass was used by a player representing the capital.

Not surprisingly, it's not an easy question to answer. It may, in fact, be impossible to answer, or depend heavily on your criteria.

The forward pass was well in use by the time that playoff game between Rangers and Swimmers took place in 1931. So we can start by moving backwards from there.

The 1931 Rough Riders opened the season in Montreal on October 11th. They got walloped something fierce, 32-06. But they did attempt a forward pass during that contest. 


Wait...Ogilvie? 

That's awesome. About 18 months ago, I came across Ogilvie's name (as "Ogilvy") while tracking down a game summary for the 1927 senior high school championship. The statement that Ogilvie had entered the "Gallery of the Gods" of the Glebe sporting element tickled me to no end but damned if he may not, in fact, hold the distinction of throwing the first ever professional football forward pass in the city's history.

It's important to quantify that he did so as a professional. The Rough Riders played a game the week before in which a few passes were thrown, but that was an exhibition game. Three junior games were also played that day as the Junior City League began its season and at least one of those games included forward passing. 

Gladstone beat the Ottawa Seconds as the "curtain-raiser" to the Rough Riders game. 


Damn, this Crain dude was a natural! 

Two games would be played on St. Patrick's field that day, the first of which featured the host St. Patrick's team against a club known as the Rangers (not to be confused with the intermediate squad of the same name). The recaps of the action in that contest, won by St. Pat's 08-06, make no mention of the forward pass.

Meanwhile, in Brockville, the intermediate Rangers were welcoming that town's new entry into the QRFU with a 15-01 beating. 


Tommy is hall of fame inductee Andy Tommy Sr. Arnie Morrison played with the Rough Riders for several years and later coached the Carleton Ravens. Morrison-to-Tommy is one hell of a historical connection.

But was it the first? For one thing, it's not clear that the pass above was a forward one, being that Tommy went around right wing. It may have been a lateral. When the pass was a forward one, the summary usually made that distinction.

There's another significant factor at play. Most local teams started using the forward pass in 1931 but junior high school programs began using it in 1929 (one article claimed they started using it in 1927 but I've seen no evidence of that). So to be completely accurate, it was probably a player at the junior high school level who uncorked the first one. 

Unfortunately, the recap of the first junior high school game of the season doesn't see fit to specify who threw it.


In a game about two weeks later in the season, a Lisgar pass attempt was made by one R.A. "Beaner" Sheppard to a teammate named Zelikovitz. Zelikovitz might be Ottawa Sports Hall of Fame inductee Joe Zelikovitz. I'm a little unsure about that as Lisgar's Athletic Hall of Fame states that Joe started playing there in 1930.

Either way, it's difficult to know if Sheppard handled all the throwing duties for the Lisgar team (in fact, it seems doubtful) but if so, it could be that the first forward pass thrown by an Ottawa player almost a century ago was a by a dude nicknamed "Beaner". 👍

1931: Ottawa Rangers 24, Quebec "Swimmers" 07

The Ottawa Rangers, nicknamed "blue shirts" on occasion, were not around very long but they may have left a very specific mark on football in the region.

They began play on 1930, officially, in the Quebec Rugby Football Union, posting a 3-3 record. Under Leo Gleeson the following year, they won four contests, lost two, and reached the semi-finals. 

That semi-final game turned into an exhibition of the forward pass. It was not the first instance of the forward pass being put in use, that took place in 1929, according to the CFL website:

1929
CRU adopted use of the forward pass on a limited basis in Junior, Interscholastic, Western Canada Rugby Union, Western Intercollegiate Union and the Grey Cup final. First legal pass in Canada was thrown by Gerry Seiberling and the first reception was by Ralph Losie of Calgary Altomah-Tigers against Edmonton on September 21... 

1931
CRU approved the forward pass for all leagues and the first TD pass in Grey Cup history was a Warren Stevens to Kenny Grant play in Montreal's 22-0 win over Regina. Convert scrimmage line was moved to the five-yard line, and the point could be scored by a drop-kick, place kick, run or pass.
...but the semi-final game summary certainly makes it sound like its first heavy usage in a game and perhaps the game in which it became better accepted as an exciting feature.



The Rangers scored another unconverted touchdown in a drive that began at their own 40 to take a 12-00 lead. Arnie Morrison punched that one in, he of the "lifetime ban" for his involvement in a brawl in 1929 following a game against the St. Thomas Tigers while he was a member of the Rideaus


The final Rangers touchdown came off an interception return by Clair Forster.

Now this makes me want to track down the first recorded forward pass by an Ottawa team. If if wasn't in this game (and I doubt it was) it had to have taken place no more than weeks prior to this game being played. Let's see what we find. 

Saturday, December 26, 2020

The 1958 St. Anthony Rough Riders

The St. Anthony's junior football club was quite successful in the 1950s, albeit playing in a very small local league with only two or three other teams. They were ridiculously dominant in 1957 in particular, going 7-0 and scoring 352 points while allowing only 15.

The league in which they played, the Junior Interprovincial Football League, ceased operation following that season. A similar, three-team league emerged in 1959 but it did not include St. Anthony's. The following year, the Ottawa Sooners joined up and have cemented their place in Ottawa's football landscape since.

While filling out the Sooners history page, I came across an article which mentioned that the Sooners were a retooled version of the St. Anthony Saints. I had never heard that before so it was time to go fact hunting. 

St. Anthony did continue to play in 1958, just in a different format.  


St. Anthony became directly affiliated with the Ottawa Rough Riders in a program similar to a farm system in hockey, playing the other Big Four affiliates. They achieved limited success, however, posting a 2-4 record. 

Sep  6th: St. Anthony's 07 @ Brantford Tiger-Cats 14   L
Sep 13th: East York Argonauts 27 @ St. Anthony's 13    L
Sep 20th: Lakeshore Alouettes 00 @ St. Anthony's 27    W
Sep 27th: St. Anthony's 07 @ Lakeshore Alouettes 22    L
Oct  4th: St. Anthony's 11 @ East York Argos 33        L
Oct 11th: Brantford Tiger-Cats 00 @ St. Anthony's 13   W

The image below is from the September 15th Ottawa Journal and the only one I recall coming across in St. Anthony game recaps for that year. 


The article below is, as you'll see, for the game played the following week in which they dominated the league's Montreal entry.


The season was difficult financially, however, and caused the Saints (or Rough Riders, I guess) to bow out in 1959. The professional version of the Rough Riders started a relationship with a team in Cornwall instead as St. Anthony's closed up shop, football-wise.



The Sooners then showed up as a new entry into a local intermediate league in 1960 and have been hanging around for the past 60 years.


I have not been able to find a direct link between the Saints and Sooners aside from Bruce Hamilton and Don Holtby being heavily involved with both clubs. Being that Hamilton is recognized as the founder of the Sooners, however, and not St. Anthony's, it's difficult to think of the Sooners as the continuation of a prior club. 

Saturday, December 19, 2020

Just Added: 1961 Ottawa Sooners Championship Recaps

That's "recaps", in plural form, because as was often the case back then, the championship game was a two-game series.

It was not the Sooners' first playoff  appearance. They made the playoffs in their inaugural season in 1960 but lost that game to the Hull Tigers. So this series includes both their first playoff victory in game one and their first crown in game two.

Game 1

Game 2

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

National Defence Football League

There will be a new page going up soon for the National Defence Football League. This was a small league made up largely of police and military personnel that began play in 1968.

As the article below from a November 1968 issue of the Ottawa Journal explains, the RCMP Huskies were quite dominant initially and that may have made for some lackluster contests in that initial season.



If not particularly competitive, the league seemed to strike a chord with folks. Its teams became better organized and professional in appearance and for the next couple of years, their games were often said to draw in the range 1,500 to 2,500 spectators.


In 1970, a fifth team joined the league, the Trenton Broncos but at the start of the 1972 season, the Uplands team was no longer included.

Coverage of the league is minimal in 1973 and non-existent beyond that year from what I can gather so perhaps the novelty wore off. But the league did capture the imagination for a few years in the late 60s and early 70s and for that, I plan on keeping a record of its results.

Monday, January 27, 2020

The Shortest Championship Season Ever

The Ottawa Rangers played at the intermediate level in the early 1930s. I'm going to look into their origins more closely at a later time but for now I want to review the back end of their existence.

In 1934, the Quebec Rugby Football Union was struggling. There was some question as to whether it would even attempt to play a season, at least at the intermediate level. They decided to proceed after all, with the plan being that two sections (divisions, basically) of four teams would compete to determine a champion.

Things clearly deteriorated from there because Ottawa was given a bye...for the entire regular season. Only two exhibition games were scheduled and of those, only one came to pass. The article below is from October 12th of that year.


Canadian National would win their section and take a trip into town for the "play downs". So not only did Ottawa make the playoffs without playing a single regular season game, they hosted it!


Emerson Ogilvie. Remember him? He was the guy who entered "The Gallery of the Gods" with his performance for Glebe in the 1927 high school championship game.

The intent was for this to be a semi-final game, but things didn't quite work out that way.


So by virtue of winning the single contest in which they participated, Ottawa Rangers won the championship.

But that would not be enough for our plucky Rangers! They challenged St. Thomas for the Dominion championship!


That game was played on December 9th on a frozen field. Go figure. Ottawa lost 5-2, the two points being scored off the foot of football god Emerson Ogilvie.

Recently, I was impressed that the Ottawa Sooners played 16 games in order to secure a national championship in 1974. At the other end of the spectrum, no one will ever win a championship in fewer games that our 1934 Ottawa Rangers.

I have not located any results for the Rangers in 1935 so evidently, they went out (Québec) champions.