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53rd Grey Cup
1965 Canadian Football championship game
1965 Canadian Football championship game
| Field | Value | |
|---|---|---|
| number | 53 | |
| type | Grey Cup | |
| date | November 27, 1965 | |
| stadium | CNE Stadium | |
| city | Toronto | |
| visitor name | Hamilton Tiger-Cats | visitor colour=Hamilton Tiger-Cats |
| home name | Winnipeg Blue Bombers | home colour=Winnipeg Blue Bombers |
| visitor coach | Ralph Sazio | |
| home coach | Bud Grant | |
| visitor record | 10–4 | |
| home record | 11–5 | |
| visitor1 | 10 | |
| visitor2 | 0 | |
| visitor3 | 12 | |
| visitor4 | 0 | |
| home1 | 0 | |
| home2 | 13 | |
| home3 | 0 | |
| home4 | 3 | |
| anthem | Local Men’s Chorus | |
| referee | Ray Boucher | |
| attendance | 32655 | |
| network | CBC, CTV, SRC |
The 53rd Grey Cup, also known as the Wind Bowl, was hosted at CNE Stadium in Toronto on November 27, 1965. The Hamilton Tiger-Cats defeated the Winnipeg Blue Bombers 22–16.
Weather conditions and change in punting rule
Because of strong winds of up 30-40 mph, CFL officials, in agreement with both head coaches, Bud Grant for Winnipeg and Ralph Sazio for Hamilton, changed a punting rule prior to the game, perhaps unprecedented in CFL if not in football history. Instead of all punts having to be being returned without the fair catch rule as is standard in Canadian football, punts into the wind would be ruled dead as soon as the returner touched the ball, a sort of forced fair catch rule, the rule being voluntary in the American football. Without the rule change, it was thought that the team going against the wind would lose the viable option of punting and be forced instead to try to convert on third downs all the time.
Key elements in the game
A strong wind prevailed throughout the game, and all scoring occurred while the team who received the points was going with the wind. To retain possession of the ball, the Blue Bombers conceded one safety touch in the first quarter and two in the third quarter while struggling against the wind. In the fourth quarter with the wind at their backs, the Bombers began a last-minute drive, snuffed out when fullback Art Perkins was stopped cold by the Hamilton defence on a third-and-one gamble. The Bombers lost by 6 points, the margin of the three yielded safeties. They would next return to the Grey Cup game 19 years later, the 72nd Grey Cup in 1984.
Box score
First Quarter
Hamilton – Single –
Hamilton – TD – Dick Cohee 7 yard run (Don Sutherin convert)
Hamilton – Safety –
Second Quarter
Winnipeg – TD – Art Perkins 8 yard run (Norm Winton convert Failed)
Winnipeg – TD – Leo Lewis 5 yard run (Norm Winton convert)
Third Quarter
Hamilton – TD – Willie Bethea 69 yard pass from Joe Zuger (Don Sutherin convert)
Hamilton – Safety –
Hamilton – Safety –
Hamilton – Single – punt by Joe Zuger
Fourth Quarter
Winnipeg – Field goal – Norm Winton
Rule change implemented because of this game
As a result of the strategy employed by the Blue Bombers, in which they voluntarily conceded safeties to keep the ball, the rules were changed for the following 1966 CFL season. Teams scored against on a safety touch would no longer be entitled to keep the ball. Instead, they would be forced to kick the ball away to the other team.
Music
The Royal Military College of Canada Pipes and Drums played at halftime.
Videos
Photos
References
References
- 2014 Sports Illustrated almanac
- "From the CBC archives: Blue Bombers in 1965 Grey Cup final".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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