Hamilton Tiger-Cats

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Hamilton Tiger-Cats
Hamilton Tiger-Cats helmet Hamilton Tiger-Cats logo
Founded 1950[1]
Based in Flag of Canada Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
Home field Ivor Wynne Stadium
League Canadian Football League
Division East Division
Colours Black and gold
Nickname(s) Ti-Cats, Tigers, Tabbies
Head coach Charlie Taaffe
General manager Bob O'Billovich
Owner(s) Bob Young
Grey Cup wins 1954, 1957, 1963, 1965
1967, 1972, 1986, 1999[2]
Mascot(s) TC & Stripes
Website www.ticats.ca

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 Flying Wildcats.[1] The Tiger-Cats play their home games at Ivor Wynne Stadium. Since the 1950 merger, the team has won the Grey Cup championship eight times, most recently in 1999.[2]

Including their historical lineage, Hamilton football clubs won league championships in every decade of the 20th century, a feat matched by only one other franchise in professional sports, the Montreal Canadiens of the NHL.

Contents

Founded: 1950, a merger of the Hamilton Tigers (merged with the Hamilton Alerts) and the Hamilton Flying Wildcats.[1]
Formerly known as: The Hamilton Tigers and Hamilton Flying Wildcats.
Helmet design: Black background with a leaping tiger
Uniform colours: Black, Gold and White.
Home stadium: Ivor Wynne Stadium (1950-present), Hamilton Amateur Athletic Association Grounds (1872-1949)
Current Owner: Bob Young
Eastern regular season championships: 21 — 1950, 1952, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1961, 1962, 1963, 1964, 1965, 1967, 1970, 1972, 1980, 1981, 1984,1985, 1986, 1989, 1998, 1999
Grey Cup final appearances:: 29 — 1910 - Tigers (lost), 1912 - Alerts (won), 1912 - Tigers (won), 1915 - Tigers (won), 1927 - Tigers (lost), 1928 - Tigers (won), 1929 - Tigers (won), 1932 - Tigers (won), 1935 - Tigers (lost), 1943 - Wildcats (won), 1944 - Wildcats (lost), 1953 (won), 1957 (won), 1958 (lost), 1959 (lost), 1961 (lost), 1962 (lost), 1963 (won), 1964 (lost), 1965 (won), 1967 (won), 1972 (won), 1980 (lost), 1984 (lost), 1985 (lost), 1986 (won), 1989 (lost), 1998 (lost), 1999 (won)[2]
Grey Cup wins:: 15 (Alerts - 1, Tigers - 5, Wildcats - 1, Tiger-Cats - 8)
Main Rivals: Toronto Argonauts (see Labour Day Classic).
2006 Regular Season Record: 4 wins, 14 losses, 0 ties.
The "Tigers" of Hamilton, Ontario circa 1906. Founded 1869 as the Hamilton Foot Ball Club, they eventually merged with the Hamilton Flying Wildcats to form the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, in the Canadian Football League.
The "Tigers" of Hamilton, Ontario circa 1906. Founded 1869 as the Hamilton Foot Ball Club, they eventually merged with the Hamilton Flying Wildcats to form the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, in the Canadian Football League.[3]
The Hamilton Tigers playing an unknown Ottawa team, 1910
The Hamilton Tigers playing an unknown Ottawa team, 1910
Hamilton Tiger-Cats vs. Toronto Argonauts, October 27, 2005 at Rogers Centre
Hamilton Tiger-Cats vs. Toronto Argonauts, October 27, 2005 at Rogers Centre
Ivor Wynne Stadium, home of the Tiger-Cats
Ivor Wynne Stadium, home of the Tiger-Cats

The history of Hamilton Tiger-Cats can be traced back to November 3, 1869 in a room above Nick Lawrence's Sausage Factory when the Hamilton Football Club was formed.[4] Known as the Tigers, they joined the Interprovincial Rugby Football Union in 1907. They also faced local competition with the Alerts, in which they won the first Grey Cup for Hamilton in 1912, beating the Toronto Argonauts 11-4. This was followed by the Tigers the following season (1913) when they beat the Parkdale Canoe Club by the lopsided margin of 44-2. Later, in 1914, both teams would merge under the moniker of Tigers. After World War II, the Tigers and the newly-formed Wildcats competed for fans, talent and bragging rights so great that neither team could operate on a sound financial level.

Under the guidance of prominent local leaders such as Ralph 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.

The Ti-Cats had great success throughout the 1950s and 1960s, they finished first in the East thirteen times from 1950 to 1972. During that same timespan, they also 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. Their 1972 Grey Cup win, 13-10 over the Saskatchewan Roughriders, were 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.

In 1978, Toronto Maple Leafs owner, Harold Ballard assumed ownership of the Tiger Cats. Ballard claimed to be losing a million dollars a year. [5] 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. [5] 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.” [5] A few days later, the Tiger Cats won the 1986 Grey Cup by beating the Edmonton Eskimos 39-15 and Ballard said it was worth every penny. 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 wasn't 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 have struggled with their on field product. Last place finishes both in 2005 (5–13) and 2006 (4–14), have resulted in an overhaul of the coaching staff for 2007.

The Tiger-Cats logo for many decades was an exact mirror-image 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.



Active roster


Injured roster

Developmental roster

  1. ^ a b c The Tiger-Cats where founded in 1950 as a merger of the Hamilton Tigers (founded 1869 as the Hamilton Foot Ball Club,[1] later merged with the Hamilton Alerts) and the Hamilton Flying Wildcats.
  2. ^ a b c There is some contention regarding the number of times that this franchise has won the Grey Cup. Many people include all the teams that merged to form the team: Hamilton Tigers (5 championships), Hamilton Flying Wildcats (1 championship) and the Hamilton Alerts (1 championship) in addition to the 8 as the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, while others do not agree and only count the wins since the 1950 merger.
  3. ^ Canadian Football Timelines (1860 – present). Football Canada. Retrieved on 2006-12-23.
  4. ^ Tiger-Cats History. Retrieved on 2007-09-24.
  5. ^ a b c All Work and All Play: A Life in the Outrageous Sport, p.124, John Wiley and Sons Canada Ltd., Mississauga, ON, 2005, ISBN 0-470-83552-4


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