Winnipeg Blue Bomber Report Record: 7–11–0
Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Grant to relive glory days
Iconic leader returning for Hall of Fame gala
Blue Bombers coach Bud Grant tipples from the Grey Cup in 1958, with a helping hand from Keith Pearce. (WINNIPEG FREE PRESS ARCHIVES)
Bud Grant in 1967, his final year in the CFL. (WINNIPEG FREE PRESS ARCHIVES)
They are still this town's sporting royalty -- the Blue Bombers of the late '50s and early '60s -- and Bud Grant remains their iconic leader.
Grant and some his troops will be together again this September to relive the glory days of this franchise during the Canadian Football Hall of Fame celebration. The local organizing committee of the event, led by Paul Bennett, is expected to announce Grant's involvement in the festivities today.
"This is a neat deal for me, a great honour," said Grant from the office he still keeps with the Minnesota Vikings. "I'm not big on banquets, but coming to Winnipeg, that's a little different. There will be people I know there, I know Winnipeg and even though I'm 82 and some of my contemporaries are gone I still have some friends left.
"Whoever came up with this idea, it's a great one. Every town in Canada with a CFL team has its hall-of-fame members and if they could move it around and get those people back that would be wonderful. It's a great promotional thing for the Canadian Football League and the hall of fame. I'm tickled to death to be a part of it."
Yes, for just the second time in its history, the Hall of Fame induction ceremonies -- and all the festivities that go with it -- will he held outside of the shrine's home in Hamilton during the week of Sept. 24 with the annual Hall of Fame Game featuring the Toronto Argonauts in town to face the Bombers on Sept. 26.
This year's inductees include players Alondra Johnson, Jim Mills, Rudy Phillips and Glen Weir along with builder Tony Anselmo.
Grant will head north -- even though it's hunting season -- to attend the banquet, see some of his old team and rub shoulders with their still-adoring public.
Grant came north to the Bombers from the Philadelphia Eagles in 1953 for an increase in pay -- Winnipeg offered him a 33 per cent raise over the NFL -- and was an all-star three times before becoming head coach. He amassed a club-record 102 wins and won four Grey Cups in 10 seasons before becoming the Minnesota Vikings' head coach in 1967.
Grant was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame in 1983 and the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1994.
"We had quite a run there for eight or nine years," said Grant. "What I remember most was the bond. We didn't have a lot of turnover and when we got the players, in most cases they played long careers there. We built quite a team back then and, you know, the nucleus of that team was mostly Canadians. We had a really good group of Canadian players and the American players we brought in just fit in really well.
"We had good experiences with those guys and that's why people remember them -- you tend not to remember the bad experiences."
Grant played in two Grey Cups, losing to Hamilton in both 1953 and 1957, before coaching the club to four championships in five years (1958, 1959, 1961 and 1962) and then losing in 1965.
And those games and the experiences around them are still as vivid as if they happened last weekend.
"When I first came to Canada we went to the Grey Cup (losing to Hamilton 11-6). I knew the importance of the game but I didn't know of the significance of it," Grant recalled.
"I remember when I was coaching we were in Vancouver for a Grey Cup and they shut the streets down because there were so many revellers for three or four days before the game. We'd go to the Royal York Hotel in Toronto during the Grey Cup and they took all the furniture out of the lobby because there were too many revellers getting wild.
"John Diefenbaker said one time at one of the dinners in Toronto, 'This is the greatest uniting force we have in Canada today, bringing East and West together.' I was so impressed with how vitally important the game is to Canada.
"It was great to be a part of something like that. Those are the things that bond you."
Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition July 23, 2009 C3
- Rate this

-
-
We want you to tell us what you think of our articles. If the story moves you, compels you to act or tells you something you didn’t know, mark it high. If you thought it was well written, do the same. If it doesn’t meet your standards, mark it accordingly.
You can also register and/or login to the site and join the conversation by leaving a comment.
Rate it yourself by rolling over the stars and clicking when you reach your desired rating. We want you to tell us what you think of our articles. If the story moves you, compels you to act or tells you something you didn’t know, mark it high.
The comment period for this story has ended.
Ads by Google
- Back to Top
- Return to Bomber Report
-
Working in Winnipeg
A close-up look at the jobs people do and why they do them
-
Helping Haiti
Where to make donations
-
Open Secrets
Red River students mine government data banks
-
Ski with WFP
Register here to ski Asessippi with the Winnipeg Free Press
-
Random Acts of Kindness
Your encounters with goodness
Poll
Most Popular
- No peace for dead girl's mom
- Falls from operating table prompt new procedures at hospitals
- Murder charges against top CFB Trenton officer leave military community reeling
- Bombers sue over cancelled Aerosmith concert
- Should have been listening, Tiger
- Councillors nix oversized rolling garbage bins
- No support for Winnipeg's 'Homeless Hero' in days before attack: stepdaughter
- MPI playing politics with poll question: Tories
- Checking out sex show all part of journalist's job
- Would you pay more to supersize your garbage bin?
- Little boy left cold, crying outside locked daycare
- Woman arrested in Faron Hall beating
- Pilot burnt plane as signal before walking to shore
- Storm warning issued
- Built-in text messages ruined life, says city man
- LaPolice named as Bomber head coach
- City streets very slippery; several vehicles involved in crashes
- No peace for dead girl's mom
- 26 cats too many, woman told
- Car stolen at gunpoint recovered
- Guns N' Roses show a massive rock 'n' roll spectacle
- Extended family pulls together
- Water pressure drop caused by power outage: city
- Little boy left cold, crying outside locked daycare
- Avoid Perimeter: RCMP
- Two dead after crash on Bishop Grandin
- Winter storm warnings issued for Winnipeg, southern Manitoba
- Woman arrested in Faron Hall beating
- Pilot burnt plane as signal before walking to shore
- Cheap Vancouver rentals, if tiny's OK
- Larger garbage carts may become available
- No peace for dead girl's mom
- Councillors nix oversized rolling garbage bins
- MPI playing politics with poll question: Tories
- City looking at adding bike lane on Pembina
- Take one downtown, fill it with people
- No support for Winnipeg's 'Homeless Hero' in days before attack: stepdaughter
- Got more trash? It'll cost you
- Sinclair inquest should be an inquiry: family
- Bombers sue over cancelled Aerosmith concert
- Little boy left cold, crying outside locked daycare
- 300 pounds of marijuana found in semi
- LaPolice named as Bomber head coach
- Sick days spike during blizzard
- Woman arrested in Faron Hall beating
- 26 cats too many, woman told
- Car stolen at gunpoint recovered
- Shielding buyers, or 'cash grab'?
- Bad cocaine results in grave illness, hospitalization
- Built-in text messages ruined life, says city man
- 300 pounds of marijuana found in semi
- Girl not a bully, shouldn't have been suspended, says mom
- Arrest tape kills auto-theft case
- Little boy left cold, crying outside locked daycare
- Don't dock students for missing deadlines: NDP
- Alleged mobsters seek to stay
- RCMP investigating after video shows police beating suspect
- U.S. fighter slams Canada's 'Third World' health system
- LaPolice named as Bomber head coach
- Drunk cop crashes motorbike, gets fined
- Site for parents' sore eyes
- Iran playing its hand
- Falls from operating table prompt new procedures at hospitals
- First female boss for Destination Winnipeg
- No peace for dead girl's mom
- Food for thought
- Sinclair inquest should be an inquiry: family
- Happy 111th birthday to oldest Manitoban
- Cyclist getting his klicks
- Murder charges against top CFB Trenton officer leave military community reeling
- Little boy left cold, crying outside locked daycare
- LaPolice named as Bomber head coach
- Cat came back: 14 years later
- 26 cats too many, woman told
- A super-lab to fight superbugs
- Hutterite biography to debut despite legal chill
- Site for parents' sore eyes
- Pilot burnt plane as signal before walking to shore
- Built-in text messages ruined life, says city man
- Happy 111th birthday to oldest Manitoban
- 'Tough guys' wanted as film extras
- Nylons still smooth as silk
- Bath & Body Works coming to St. Vital
- Cat came back: 14 years later
- Little boy left cold, crying outside locked daycare
- Guns N' Roses show a massive rock 'n' roll spectacle
- Winnipeg desserts are a piece of cake
- LaPolice named as Bomber head coach
- VIDEO: A winter wonderland?
- Harper really is dangerous
PREVIOUS

2 Comments
Posted by: Richard Olson
July 23, 2009 at 4:03 PM
In the summer of 1956, at Orioles Community Centre, the Bombers had a football clinic with Tom Casey, Leo Lewis and Indian Jack Jocobs lobbing passes to me and my friends while Bud Grant gave us receiving instructions. I can still recall catching a pass over my shoulder and Bud congratulating me with a pat on the back. Once you saw Bud's famous blue eyes the image stayed with you since his intense gaze never wavered. A wonderful role model and Winnipegers can be proud he, and his kindred Americans, brought class and honour to our sports fame across Canada.
Richard Olson
Posted by: craig
July 23, 2009 at 11:17 AM
Hey Bud. Do you want to coach the Bombers again?