Western Conference:
Pacific Division: Vancouver, Victoria, Calgary, Edmonton.
Central Division: Saskatoon, Regina, Winnipeg, Brandon.
Eastern Conference:
Ontario Division: Toronto, Hamilton, Ottawa, London
Atlantic Division: Montreal, Quebec City, Moncton, Halifax
Regular season could be a home and away against division opponents. And one game against all remaining teams. (Rotate the home and away of these "outer division opponent" matchups from one year to the next. Adds up to an 18 game regular season per team.
Playoffs would see each Conference seed teams as Division winners #1 and #2 in order of records. #3 thru #8 in order of records and any needed tie breaker schemes. Top 6 seeds in each Conference make the playoffs.
Playoffs would be:
Conference Quarter Finals: #3 versus #6 & #4 versus #5. Winners advance to Conference Semis.
Conference Semi Finals: #1 versus lowest remaining seed & #2 versus second lowest remaining seed.
Conference Finals: Two remaining teams, in each Conference, play to make it to the Grey Cup Game.
TV ratings and revenue sharing could see a league this big one day. Inter-provincial rivalries in all of the major Provinces would be excellent. Labour day matchups could be reshaped to compliment this. The NFL is 100% more watched on television (per capita) than the CFL in Canada. So I think the TV ratings would need to double, what they currently are, for a 16 team CFL to fly. Maybe TSN and Sportsnet could form this kind of TV viewership growth from coast to coast. A second major network would allow for some scheduling flexibility for teams in every market too. Instead of one network applying a scheduling strain that has to work with time zones from east to west.
Changes in team names would include Vancouver Lions and Regina Roughriders. (To become football partners with interprovincial rivals in both BC and Saskatchewan. If CFL football became the same kind of passion, as we see in the USA, then this 16 team league would be a simple feat to behold. It's up to the fans to go to games, and to watch the games on TV. To write politicians and the CFL to explore expansion in their respective regions.
Before and after expansion to 16 teams is like asking what came first the chicken or the egg. Do you say "build it and they will come" or do you say "don't build it because they may not come!" lol. Cudos to TSN for presenting the CFL at it's highest quality of broadcasting ever. The coverage leading up to the Grey Cup game was exceptional. The only thing this league really needs is more teams and a bigger TV audience on two major networks and the game played from coast to coast.
Dominic In Vancouver
P.S. 1977 Lions logo & uniforms or bust in 2010 and beyond!
