Toronto Argonauts bid the Rogers Centre farewell after 27 CFL seasons | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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Toronto Argonauts bid the Rogers Centre farewell after 27 CFL seasons

Original Publication Date November 06, 2015 - 7:20 PM

TORONTO - The CFL season continues for the Toronto Argonauts but their era under the dome is over.

The Argos exited the Rogers Centre on a winning note Friday after 27 seasons at the stadium, defeating the Winnipeg Blue Bombers 21-11 in a meaningless game for both teams. Toronto's 2015 season is not yet done but it will play its post-season on the road. Winnipeg is finished for the year.

Next season the Argos will call BMO Field home — and hope that the outdoor lakefront stadium might lure fans back in the same way that Montreal's move to the more intimate Percival Molson Stadium revitalized interest in that CFL team.

The last CFL game at the Rogers Centre drew an announced attendance of 17,511.

Winnipeg coach Mike O'Shea, a longtime Argo player, was an assistant coach when Toronto won the 2012 Grey Cup.

"After playing so many times when it wasn't full, coming out in front of 50,000 pro-Argos fans was great," he recalled.

Toronto coach Scott Milanovich recorded his first victory at the Rogers Centre, against Calgary, and was at the helm for the 2012 Cup win.

"There's a lot of good memories for me in this building. So it was a little sad to see it go, yeah."

Toronto running back Chad Kackert, the MVP of the 2012 Grey Cup, was also sorry to say goodbye.

"I'm going to miss it," he said. "It's a special place for me. Some of the best moments of my life have occurred here. It'll be tough to see it go. But there's always more memories to be made."

There was some symmetry to the Argos' home finale coming against Winnipeg. Toronto's first game at what was then known as SkyDome was a 17-16 pre-season victory over the Bombers on June 29, 1989.

There was little emotion to the final evening, although the giant scoreboard did flash Rogers Centre memories throughout the game.

The switch to BMO Field takes the Argos back to the CNE, where they used to flourish at Exhibition Stadium before taking up residence in 1989 at SkyDome.

The Argos exit with a 123-96-1 record at the downtown stadium. But mostly they leave with a whimper rather than a bang, given their second banana status to the Blue Jays this season.

Toronto went 49 days without playing at the Rogers Centre due to the busy baseball schedule, forced to shift two late-season home games to Hamilton and one to Ottawa. The Argos home opener, meanwhile, took place 3,800 kilometres away at Fort McMurray, Alta.

The four previous CFL games this season at the Rogers Centre drew 14,236, 17,694, 14,748 and 20,642. In essence, the team was in limbo — more so given a change in ownership from David Braley to Bell Canada and Larry Tanenbaum, chairman of Maple Leaf Sports and Entertainment.

What was once seen as an engineering marvel billed as the eighth wonder of the world — the venue can fit eight 747 planes on the field while in baseball mode and its retractable roof is still an impressive engineering feat — had become an oversized, unfriendly and character-lacking football home.

Still the lack of interest in the football team came in stark contrast to the sellout crowds that packed the venue for the surging Blue Jays.

The Argos were essentially shown the door by the Jays ownership, which wants to install natural grass at the venue which it also owns.

Toronto made its regular-season debut at SkyDome on July 12, 1989, when a crowd of 32,527 watched Toronto lose 24-15 to Hamilton. The Argos averaged 35,069 that first year. Last season, average attendance was 17,791.

Mike (Pinball) Clemons, the Argonauts' vice-chair and former coach and star player, was a CFL rookie back in 1989. Injured, he watched his first game from the 500 level, the top tier of the stadium.

"All of a sudden everything made sense ... Watching it from up there, you understood the advantage you can get from coming downhill in motion, you understood the width of the field," he recalled.

While he had spent some time in the NFL, Clemons was still taken by the size of the stadium and its trademark Jumbotron screen.

"This stadium was like no other, just a beautiful facility," he recalled.

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News from © The Canadian Press, 2015
The Canadian Press

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