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https://canadianfootballhistory.ca/2026/03/05/cfl-ends-u-s-expansion-retreats-back-to-canada/ · 5 Mar 2026
On Friday February 2, 1996, the Canadian Football League officially ended its American expansion efforts. During the CFL’s annual winter meetings, the league announced that the Birmingham Barracudas, Memphis Mad Dogs, San Antonio Texans, and Shreveport P...
https://canadianfootballhistory.ca/2026/02/27/pirate-ball-comes-to-the-cfl/ · 27 Feb 2026
Of all the U.S. cities that the CFL awarded teams to as part of its American expansion in the 1990s, Shreveport had to be the most obscure choice. Whereas the other cities had teams in the defunct World League of American Football (e.g., Sacramento, San An...
https://canadianfootballhistory.ca/2026/02/11/a-fan-remembers-the-baltimore-stallions/ · 11 Feb 2026
Baltimore Stallions logo (SportsLogos.Net) Doug Phillips was just five years old when his father took him to his first football game at Memorial Stadium in Baltimore, Maryland. He got to see the Johnny Unitas, the legendary quarterback of the old Baltimore...
https://canadianfootballhistory.ca/2026/01/21/winnipeg-leads-opposition-to-cfl-american-expansion/ · 21 Jan 2026
When the Canadian Football League rolled out American expansion in the early 1990s, support for the idea was far from unanimous. Yes, proponents argued that U.S. expansion was the way forward to grow the league and to help stabilize the struggling Canadian...
https://canadianfootballhistory.ca/2026/01/07/the-cfl-expands-to-the-usa/ · 7 Jan 2026
When I first started following CFL football in the early 1990s, two issues dominated the league: struggling Canadian franchises and U.S. expansion. They kind of went hand in hand, the idea being that an injection of American money and new markets would hel...