Showing posts with label Ottawa Rangers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ottawa Rangers. Show all posts

Sunday, April 4, 2021

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. 

Sunday, March 1, 2020

Whither the Perley Trophy?

It is often the case that researching one subject will unexpectedly reveal some tiny detail which propels me onto my next search.

Yesterday, in the midst of writing the post about Ottawa Tech's late 40s/early 50s dominance, I came across the following portion of an article. It was written following Tech being toppled from the high school football throne by Glebe in 1951.


It was?

In a standard search for "Perley Trophy", I found an article by Martin Cleary for the Citizen from March of 2007. Someone else was searching for the trophy 13 years ago, a couple of decades after it was last handed out.


The article directed readers to a website which is no longer operational. It also included the following image.


This search also came up in an article by Rob Brodie for canoe.com in April 2007. It included something of an update on Mr. MacRea's "quest".
The search for the old trophy, which has a history that dates back to the 1930s, has been frustrating. MacRae...says he's "hit dead end after dead end," but isn't giving up yet. 
"I'm hoping," he said. "I don't know what will happen. It's a real nice trophy, almost the size of the Grey Cup, about three feet high." 
MacRae said if his quest comes up empty, "without a doubt" the current championship trophy will be rededicated to honour Graham and Wills. But he clearly hopes it doesn't come to that.
Then come November 2007, at least that much was confirmed in an uncredited story in the Citizen.
St. Mark will face Sir Wilfrid Laurier Lancers in the championship game on the Minto Sports Field at the Nepean Sportsplex. Game time is 7 p.m. It will be a battle of undefeated teams as the Lions and Lancers are 8-0 this year. 
This will be the 80th Ottawa high school senior football championship and the first one to present the inaugural Bob Wills and Ron Graham Cup to the winning team. The championship trophy has undergone a complete makeover, courtesy of an interested alumni group from the former Laurentian High School headed by Bud MacRae, who is a teacher at Bell High School. The new trophy is named after Bob Wills and Ron Graham, who coached at Laurentian for a quarter century and produced many successful teams.
So was the cup ever found? I would think that if it had been, it would have been a bigger part of the story in 2007.

I'm curious as to the Perley Trophy's story now because for as much as I've read about high school football in Ottawa, the name of the trophy didn't ring any bells.

I think that's a matter of the trophy being handed out well after the season, at least in some cases, rather than immediately after the game. This image appeared in the Citizen on December 10th, 1954, a couple of weeks after the championship was actually won.


Complicating matters, searches reveal a trophy of the same name being awarded to local baseball  and hockey teams and even women's curling champions. Also, the awarding of the trophy was not always reported in the sports section. It occasionally made its way into the local news instead. As a result, tracking it becomes quite tricky.

What we do know is that the trophy did come into play in 1931 but the first article above stating that it was intended to be used to recognize the winner of the Riders/Rangers game appears to be the accurate one. The first such game was played on November 11th, 1931.


In an article from the day before the game, Perley is referred to as a "well-known member of the Rough Riders executive". I believe he was later a Central Ward councilman.

I can not seem to locate other instances of the trophy serving to recognize a Riders/Rangers winner, but it pops up in a list of hardware handed out at an event at Ottawa Tech in 1937. Again, this is consistent with what is stated in the first article above.


After that, it is mentioned periodically, mostly in articles relating to a school event in which a number of trophies and awards are handed out. The last picture of it I've come across is from 1969...


...and the last significant mention of it, until Mr. Cleary's 2007 article, is from 1972 when St. Patrick and Fisher Park were forced to "share" the trophy as a result of their championship contest ending in a tie.

And that may be why the trophy went dormant, for lack of a better term. In 1973, for the first time, the city champion was determined by having the respective winners of the Ottawa and Carleton school boards meet. Perhaps a new playoff structure resulted in a new trophy being handed out. This 1978 celebration photo certainly seems to support the theory.


Whatever the case may be, I'm interested in its prior use as a "bragging rights" award between the Rough Riders and Rangers, similar to Pedro for the Panda Game between Ottawa U. and Carleton or the Old Boys Cup between Ashbury and Bishop's years ago. I hope to come across those results at some point.

Bud MacRae, by the way, is responsible for creating a list of high school champions dating back to 1927 that I used first for the Capital Region Football website I ran a few years ago then as the "skeleton" for the high school page on this site.

I've never met him; the list was given to me second-hand, but I've always hoped that he's seen me express my gratitude for that list. It was an invaluable starting point in tracking the history of football at that level in the region.

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.