Calgarians to ride horse into Toronto hotel for Grey Cup - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 15, 2024, 03:23 AM | Calgary | -5.2°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Calgarians to ride horse into Toronto hotel for Grey Cup

Members of Calgary's Grey Cup committee started leaving for Toronto today to take part in festivities surrounding the CFL's championship game this weekend, including a tribute to the 1948 Grey Cup where a horse was paraded through the downtown Royal York Hotel.

'We've already got a room booked for the horse,' says Ald. Ray Jones

The Calgary Grey Cup Committee has travelled to every host Grey Cup city to put on parties, pancake breakfasts and other events for the last six decades. (CBC)

Members of Calgary's Grey Cup committee started leaving for Toronto today to take part in festivities surrounding the CFL's championship game this weekend.

Ald. Ray Jones, a longtime council representative on the Calgary committee, says heis looking forward toseeing rowdy Calgariansattempt toparade a horse through the lobby of the Royal York Hotel on Thursday morning just like they didin 1948.

"We've already got a room booked for the horse, so it should be pretty exciting," he said."It's tough to get, you know we can't bring our own horse from here.We have to get them down there so we hope we don't get one that's spooky."

The year 1948is often remembered fondly by Calgaryfootball fans as being the city's first Grey Cup win and a year that saw localfans bring pageantry to thechampionship festivities in Toronto.

"Back in 1948, the Grey Cup was just another football game until a bunch of Calgarians showed up down there, brought their horses, brought the pancakes, put on a great show and that's the Grey Cup tradition, that's where it started," said Bruce Eggen of the Calgary Grey Cup Committee.

"The Grey Cup festival itself started in 1948 with Calgary going down there, we're just upholding that tradition. Here we are again, doing the same thing. We'll be doing our pancake breakfasts, VIP reception, school visit where we put on a show for the kids, we've got our horse, we've got our mascots, we've got the band, we've got everybody. We're ready for this one."

Jones says the Grey Cup events tend to get overlooked in Toronto, but he's hoping that with the hometown team in the big game this year Torontonians will get involved in some of the hoopla leading up to Sunday.

Up to 5,000 expected at pancake breakfasts

The Calgary Grey Cup Committee's preparations are already in full swing for the 100th Grey Cup.

The group, which is made up of about 100 volunteers fromCalgary, has travelled to every host Grey Cup city to put on parties, pancake breakfasts and other events for the last six decades.

Committee chair Fletcher Armstrongflew out of Calgary this morning.

"Now it just makes it so much better that the Stampeders are in the final and playing in Toronto like they did in 1948 when the party first started," he said.

"We'll still bring to the table two breakfasts 2,500 people per breakfast passion for the game, passion for the Stampeders [and]passion for the CFL all around."

Stamps season ticketholder Don Strangwardis also getting ready to meet a group of friends from across Canadain Torontofor the last, and most important game of the year.

"10 tickets, 11th row midfield we're gonna light 'er up," he said as he walked out of the Stamps store at McMahon Stadium with a bag of Stampeders gear.

"A couple of the other fellas didn't have enough Stamps stuff so I'm loading here up here."

Eggen said it was unbelievablethat the Stampsbeat Saskatchewan and then took downB.C. to make it into the game.

"What's interesting is that almost 20 years to the day we're playing Toronto again, we played 'em in 1971, in 1991, and here we are 21 years later doing the same thing," he said.

"So it's our turn to win again."