Toronto Rifles Continental Football League

Toronto Rifles

Continental Football League (1965-1967)

Tombstone

Born: February 6, 1965 – The Quebec Rifles relocate to Toronto
Folded: September 21, 1967

First Game: August 15, 1965 (W 20-0 vs. Wheeling Ironmen)
Last Game
: September 16, 1967 (L 16-3 @ Hartford Charter Oaks)

Continental Football League Championships: None

Stadia

Marketing

Team Colors:

Ownership

Owners: Harold Sussman, et al.

 

Our Favorite Stuff

Toronto Rifles
Logo T-Shirt

Trivia: 55 years after playing their final game in 1967, the Continental Football League’s Toronto Rifles remain the last Canadian professional football team to play using American rules of the game rather than the considerably different Canadian format. 
This shirt is available today in sizes Small through 5XL from our friends at Old School Shirts!

 

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Background

Along with a new league, the Rifles had a new home in 1965.  The club relocated from Montreal to Toronto, a shift that got off to a rocky start when the University of Toronto refused to offer a lease at Varsity Stadium.  The club reluctantly set up shop at Maple Leafs Stadium, a baseball stadium used by the city’s triple-A baseball team. Etcheverry did not make the move to Toronto and was replaced as Head Coach by former Alouettes assistant Leo Cahill.

Under Cahill, the Toronto Rifles went 11-3 in 1965 and earned a trip to the Continental Football League championship game. They lost to the Charleston Rockets 24-7.  The backfield duo of Joe Williams and Bob Blakely finished top two in the league in rushing. Wide receiver Dick Limerick paced the circuit with 17 touchdowns.

John Henry Jackson, a holdover the from the team’s Quebec days, took the snaps at quarterback again, with the exception of one October night in Charleston, West Virginia.  FBI agents entered the Rifles’ locker room moments before kickoff and arrested the 26-year old on draft evasion charges.  Charleston’s owner courteously paid Jackson’s $1,000 bond. Jackson made it back to the stadium in time to watch the final three minutes of the game.

1966 Toronto Rifles Media Guide from the Continental Football League

1966: Move To Varsity Stadium

In 1966, the Rifles got the Varsity Stadium lease they coveted and moved across town.  Jackson lost his starting job to Tom Wilkinson, a rookie out of the University of Wyoming.   Wilkinson passed for 18 touchdowns and earned league Rookie-of-the-Year honors.  Williams and Blakely finished 1-2 in the league in rushing for the second straight year, both going over 1,000 yards.

Cahill’s Rifles were a top club once again and their 9-5 record was good enough to get back to the Continental League playoffs.  In the semi-final, they met the Philadelphia Bulldogs in a rematch of the 1965 title game.  Once again, the Bulldogs got the best of it, eliminating the Rifles 31-14.

The End

In April 1967, Cahill moved across town to take the head job with the dreadful Toronto Argonauts of the CFL.  The Rifles signed CFL legend Jackie Parker to take over coaching duties.  It was the first coaching gig for the recently retired 35-year old.  But during the pre-season, Parker became alarmed at the desperate state of the team’s finances. He resigned two days before the season opener.

The Rifles ownership folded on September 5th, 1967 after only two regular seasons games.  Continental Football League officials met in emergency session and agreed to collectively fund and operate the team through the end of the season, possibly as a travel-only team.  Now a ward of the league, the Rifles played their third and final game of 1967 on September 16th. They lost 16-3 to the Hartford Charter Oaks in a game shifted from Toronto to Connecticut.

Shortly thereafter, the Continental League’s new Akron Vulcans franchise – owned by a con artist named Frank Hurn who bought the club with Chicago mob money – collapsed as well.  Unable to operate two clubs at league expense, the league folded by both the Rifles and the Vulcans on September 21st, 1967.

The Rifles ran significant deficits throughout their brief history.  The club lost a reported $300,000 in 1965 and $400,000 in 1966.

Aftermath

The Continental Football League folded after the 1969 season.

After the Rifles folded, Tom Wilkinson joined Leo Cahill across town with the Argonauts.  He went on to play 15 seasons in the CFL, winning five Grey Cup titles as a member of the Edmonton Eskimos between 1975 and his final season in 1981. He earned the league’s Most Outstanding Player Award in 1974.

Rifles President Alan Eagleson introduced the player agent era to the National Hockey League by representing the teenage Bobby Orr in the mid-1960’s.  As Executive Director of the NHL Players Association he became one of the sport’s primary power brokers in the 1970’s and 1980’s and was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1989.  In the 1990’s Eagleson’s ethical and financial misdeeds as an agent and leader of the NHLPA came to light as the result of investigations by Lawrence Eagle-Tribune reporter Russ Conway and complaints by retired NHL players, including Orr.   Eagleson was ultimately indicted in the U.S. and Canada on charges of fraud, embezzlement and racketerring.  He served a prison sentence in Canada in the late 1990’s.

 

Toronto Rifles Shop

Our Favorite Stuff

Continental Football League
Logo T-Shirt

 Variously described as everything from “semi-pro” football to the “third Major League” behind the NFL and AFL during the late 1960’s, the Continental Football briefly established a sprawling network of pro football clubs that stretched from Florida to Mexico City to British Columbia. The Continental League helped launch the careers of Hall-of-Famers Bill Walsh and Ken Stabler and other NFL stars of the 1970’s including Otis Sistrunk, Bob Kuechenberg and Coy Bacon.
Our friends at Old School Shirts make the only Continental League shirt we’ve found and like all of their retro Americana tees, it’s soft and fits great!
 
When you make a purchase through an affiliate link like this one, Fun While It Lasted earns an affiliate commission at no additional cost to you. Thanks for your support!

 

 

 

Links

Continental Football League Media Guides

Continental Football League Programs

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Comments

3 Responses

  1. I remember going to Delorimier Downs to watch the Rifles in 1964.They played most of their games on Sunday nights and it was a lot of fun.We knew a lot of the players because some of them had played in the CFL.
    The big game in Montreal occured late in the season when former Alouettes coach Perry Moss brought his Charleston Rockets to town and blew the Rifles out.If I remember correctly,the Rockets went on to win the UFL title.

  2. I am trying to confirm that my brother Lincoln Earl Murphy was a member of this team in 1967 to 68. Please advise thanks gwen

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