'Make the Canadian Football League cool' again to re-connect with younger fans: CFL expert
CBC
At the Tim Hortons Field concession stand Will Kish sells fresh tacos, sliders and drinks. He notices that, at Hamilton Tiger-Cats games, very few of his customers are anywhere close to his age.
"I do work at Tim Hortons Field, so I do know a little bit about the Tiger-Cats," said Kish, a 15-year-old student at Westmount Secondary School in Hamilton. "When serving the fans, I mostly serve adults. Not many people under the age of 13 come up to order. However, I do serve teenagers now and then."
"I think a lot of young people aren't very interested in the sport, and even those that are, mostly pay attention to the NFL rather than the CFL," Kish said.
A 2018 study conducted by Angus Reid said that the age group most likely to prefer the CFL to the NFL are "men over the age of 55."
In Canadian sports the Grey Cup and the CFL are special. The Grey Cup was first awarded in 1909, before World War I. On Sunday, it will be awarded for the 108th time. You can track how Canada has changed by watching Grey Cup finals for over a century. And for most of that time it's been a place where Canadian football players can play in front of Canadian audiences and connect fans from B.C. to Quebec.
That's true of Ali Ahmad. He plays for coach Pain on the Westmount Wildcats in Hamilton. He loves the game but can't name three players on his hometown team.
"I can't. Sorry, I'm not a Tiger-Cats follower," he said. "I'm more of an NFL fan and I watch their games much more, (but) I would love to get to watch the CFL more."
Journalist Dave Naylor says it wasn't always this way.
Naylor is a member of the Canadian Football Hall of Fame and TSN's "Football Insider". Much like coach Pain, Naylor grew up a fan of the CFL.
"I was a young person who was attracted to the CFL, as people my age were at that time," he says.
And he has an idea why the game isn't as popular with young people right now.
"I think it has to do with the gliss and glam of other major league sports," he says. "A lot of people look at it (the CFL) as sort of the poor cousin of major league sports — when you compare it to the NBA, the NFL and the NHL."
Naylor says the league needs to improve the stadium experience for younger fans.
"There's a 'how do you make it cool' factor that somebody smarter than me has to figure out," Naylor says. "Kids like stuff that's cool...make the Canadian Football League cool."