Friday, November 07, 2008

Ontario is always holding Canada West back. Just ask them (updated)

CIS football fans can watch three of the four conference finals this weekend. You can brush up on your French by watching Laval - Concordia on RDS. Fire up your PC or MAC to watch SMU and St. FX on Eastlink's webcast. And, as always, the Ottawa-Western Yates Cup match-up can be watched on The Score.

Missing is the Hardy Trophy (not cup, that's hockey) match-up. Fans of Simon Fraser (!) and Calgary will be forced to hunt down an Internet radio broadcast if they want to keep tabs.

You can almost hear the Let-The-Eastern-Bastards-Rot indignation from here. For years, CanWest fans have been convinced that the eastern media has had it out for them, conspiring to keep their teams off the tube while making sure that "inferior" OUA teams get top billing. It doesn't matter how many times they are told that the OUA pays The Score to broadcast the games, it's still a case of the east snubbing them.

Generally, the western fans will then follow-up by informing the eastern guys that the OUA is holding them back in all kinds of ways. That CanWest is a forward thinking organization, weighed down by old fashioned Ontario pointy heads.

(Update, Nov. 7: The FAN 590 personality Mike Hogan has spilled over cisfootball.org.)

But, here is the thing. The Score was prepared to go out and broadcast the Hardy. Eager, even. The network has a vested interest in seeing interest in CIS football grow. Al the network asked for was a commitment from CanWest on what time the game would start. Apparently, that was too much to ask for. The western ADs decided that locking in a starting time for a football game was an appropriate line to draw in the sand and as a result the Hardy is not going to be on TV.

Fans lose. The CIS loses. And, most importantly, the players and their families lose.

But, at least CanWest maintained the flexibility to start its game at 1 p.m. or 1:30 p.m. local time.

Let's be clear here. The reason the Hardy isn't on TV is because the ADs in CanWest didn't think it was a priority. So, if you are looking for someone to blame... blame CanWest.

Please read what Mr. Hogan has to say in its entirety, which is exactly how The Score would have liked to have shown tomorrow's Canada West final between Calgary and Simon Fraser.

11 comments:

sager said...

I hope some day the West rises up and dsomeday we will have a prime minister from Western Canada, a hit CTV sitcom set in Western Canada, maybe even a Winter Olympics in Western Canada.

Western Canada rocks. But it's got get past the eastern thing. We are just pesnion plan puppets, after all.

And yes, Canada West is so progressive that two member schools want to join the NCAA!

Robert C. said...

Wonder when Western Canada started calling Ontario "the east". I'm from the East Coast and no one ever calls Ontario "the west". LOL.

Duane Rollins said...

Ontario in the Maritimes = "Upper Canada"

[/former Fredericton resident]

sager said...

I can recall a classmate I had calling Ontario part of the West.

[/former Halifax resident]

Hey, I did update the Ottawa-Queen's recap. Check out the post Andrew wrote over at Sporting Madness.

Anonymous said...

the game is on local tv.... shaw

sager said...

Any way to stream that online?

Duane Rollins said...

You might be able to get it on Star Choice...I've watched CanWest games on TV in Ontario on my parents dish before...

Andrew Bucholtz said...

Shaw does a pretty good job of covering the Western games, actually: similar to the Score, from what I've seen, and Shaw's probably in more Western households than the Score is: they're the big service provider out west.

Duane Rollins said...

It's still local TV and it doesn't help the Ontario kid playing for Calgary or SFU. It's a shortsighted move.

John Edwards said...

Nice strawman, Duane.

You can't praise the AUS for putting their game on Eastlink and rip CW for having theirs on Shaw. They're exactly the same.

And how many Ontarians are really on SFU or Calgary?

sager said...

I did check as per John's comment ... there are more players from Austria in the Hardy Trophy game than from Ontario on SFU. It has one and he's a 19-year-old freshman offensive lineman whom I don't believe is dressing.

Calgary's starting linebacker Andrea Bonaventura is from Hamilton (I believe he's a relative of Joe Bonaventura, who played for Blake Nill at Saint Mary's). Other than that their squad is virtually all-Albertan with a few B.C. boys and a starting QB and kicker from Saskatchewan.