The CFL is a different type of game played by different types of
players at positions with different responsibilities. The NFL is the
best marketed sports product in the world. It has the hype that sells.
The NFL game is very, very structured. They require players who can
play a highly structured game. There are reads off of reads off of
reads. There is not a lot of improvisation. Frankly, there is no room
for it. In the NFL, there are huge bodies on a relatively small field.
There is no separation between down lineman making athleticism
secondary to size in line play. Running backs, linebackers and even
quarterbacks need to be of a certain body type in order to succeed. I
used to have this argument with people who would always refer to Sam
Mills. They would say "There is a 5'9" linebacker succeeding in the
NFL." It does happen. But this scenario is so anomalous it is
noteworthy. This is the point, in the CFL small players don't draw that
type of attention because it is normal.
CFL players are selected on the basis of talent. The large field opens
the game up and allows improvisational talents to be utilized. We have
seen running backs of all shapes and size in our league. Do you
remember Robert Mimbs? He did not look like a running back. He did not
hit the line hard or run with power. He could move laterally like no
one else and he could read the play. He could pick and slide his way
through the line of scrimmage. This was his talent and few could match
him in this regard. The CFL is a game that allowed Robert Mimbs use his
unparalleled lateral abilities. In the NFL, these skills are useless.
It's all about hitting the line and hitting it hard. The CFL is more
talent focused.
Gizmo Williams and Pinball are players the NFL would consider too
small. Their talent and athleticism were superior to any NFL returner.
The CFL provided a game that enables talent to overcome size. That is
what the CFL game does. It allows talent to overcome size. You cannot
claim that the athletes are inferior. That is far too simplistic and
ignores so much.
How many times have we seen NFL players come to the CFL and fall flat
on their face. Lots. Particularly quarterbacks. Vince Ferragamo, Eric
Kramer, Lee Saltz and many more. Winnipeg has Tee Martin, his NFL
credentials created the assumption he would be an effective CFL
quarteback. He can throw, but he can't survive outside an incredibly
structured game matrix. This is why he cannot succeed. Tim Rosenbach
signed with Hamilton some years ago. He was supposed to be the next
great quarterback. He is an NFL style passer. It does not work in the
CFL. You don't have all day to sit in a short pocket and wait for a
play to develop. Rosenbach was a flop. CFL quarterbacks need more
skills. The only NFL style QB to ever have success was David Archer
because of his intelligence. Doug Flutie succeeded because he is a CFL
style quarterback. Doug could improvise, create and execute. He was the
best I've ever seen. No one could match what he did in the CFL.
Brett Favre and Steve Young are quarterbacks who would have had CFL
success, but I doubt they would have matched Flutie. Donovan McNabb,
Michael Vick and Duante Culpepper are great quarterbacks, especially
McNabb, 20 years ago these men would have been CFL quarterbacks. The
CFL, on many occasions in the past, has benefitted from the best
quarterbacks. The CFL still has access to many of the best athletes at
quarterback because of the size requirements for an NFL quarterback. An
NFL quarterback needs to be tall enough to find passing lanes through
enormous linemen. A CFL quarterback can move the pocket and use his
mobility to create his own passing lane.
I could continue a position by position breakdown but that would take
hours. The bottom line is that CFL athletes are second to none. The NFL
has all the hype but you must look beyond hype to substance. Rod Rust
was a very successful NFL coach. He says many of the best athletes he
coached were CFL players. Different game played by different players at
different positions. Highly structured vs. continually changing.
If the NHL were to remove the red line, play on olympic sized ice and call penalties for obstruction, you would see personnel changes galore in the NHL. They would need different players. This may already be happening. The NHL may desire players who can be creative and fast rendering the large-bodied grinders less effective. What does everyone want to see? A different game requires different abilities. There are similarities and constants, but we cannot assume that differences relate to quality. Furthermoe, we cannot look at the salaries involved and expect that to be an accurate barometer of quality, it doesn't work.