2022_CFL_season

2022 CFL season

2022 CFL season

Sports season


The 2022 CFL season was the 68th season of modern-day Canadian football. Officially, it was the 64th season of the Canadian Football League. The regular season began on June 9 and ended on October 29, with 18 games played per team over 21 weeks.[1] Regina hosted the 109th Grey Cup on November 20, 2022.[2][3]

Quick Facts Duration, East champions ...

League business

Collective bargaining agreement and strike

The three-year agreement that was ratified between the CFL and CFL Player's Association expired just prior to this season, on May 15, which was the first day of scheduled training camp.[4][5][6] After the CFL and CFLPA failed to come to an agreement before the deadline, players from seven of the nine teams formally went on strike on May 15, with players from the two teams located in Alberta voting to strike on May 19 in accordance with provincial labour laws.[7][8][9] This was the first CFL labour strike since 1974.[10] On May 18, the CFL and CFLPA reached a tentative agreement on a new seven-year collective bargaining agreement (CBA).[11] However, on May 23 the players voted against the tentative agreement, despite its approval by the bargaining committee and being recommended by team player reps.[12] On May 26, the CFLPA and CFL agreed to a revised tentative CBA agreement.[13] A few hours later the players voted to ratify the new collective bargaining agreement.[14] The CFL Board of Governors officially ratified the agreement on May 31.[15] Topics of negotiation include compensation, partially guaranteed contracts, revenue sharing, player safety, and league revenue generation following two seasons heavily impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic in Canada.[16] However, much of the debate revolved around the Canadian-American player ratios.[17]

The 2022 salary cap was $5,350,000 ($118,888 per active roster spot). Minimum salaries were $65,000 for National and American Players and $54,000 for Global Players.[4][18] This was the last year minimum salaries were tiered (in 2023, the minimum rose to $70,000 for the entire league). Players also share $136,111 per club ratification bonus and $100,000 per club in community relations payments.

Schedule

The league released the season's full schedule on December 16, 2021, just four days after the 108th Grey Cup. The league returned to an 18-game schedule following a pandemic-shortened 2021 CFL season.[19] The regular season began on June 9, with the Calgary Stampeders hosting the Montreal Alouettes.[1] The Grey Cup rematch game between the Winnipeg Blue Bombers and Hamilton Tiger-Cats did not occur until week 3, which was the first time since 2018 that this game was not featured in week 1 of the regular season.[1] Similar to the planned 2020 CFL season and the schedule from 2021, this year again featured more intra-divisional games, with BC, Calgary, and Edmonton playing 12 such games, Saskatchewan and Winnipeg playing 11 divisional games, and the East Division teams playing 10 divisional games.[1] This was done to reduce cross-country travel.[19]

The schedule featured all intra-divisional matchups in the last two weeks of the regular season.[19] This year also featured more home-and-home matchups, with every team having at least two and Saskatchewan, Toronto, and Ottawa having five of these matchups.[1] The Toronto Argonauts played a neutral site game on July 16 against the Saskatchewan Roughriders at Raymond Field, in Wolfville, Nova Scotia; with the stadium capacity increased from 3,000 to 10,000.[20] It was the first CFL match held in Atlantic Canada since the 2019 season. All previous regular season games of the Touchdown Atlantic series were held in Moncton, New Brunswick.[21] Tickets for the match sold out in less than one hour.[22]

Rule changes

On April 27, the league announced a series of rule changes with the intention of improving game flow, and increasing offensive production.[23]

  • Narrowing of the field hashmarks from 28 yards from the sidelines instead of 24, making them nine yards apart instead of 17. This centralized the offence in the middle of the field, increasing the effective space the defence had to cover. It also aligned field goal kickers closer to the uprights so they did not have to kick on such drastic angles, which improved accuracy, and thus scoring.
  • Increasing the no-yards penalties on punts from 5 yards to 15 yards. Previously special teams were willing to take a five-yard penalty to prevent a longer punt return.
  • Changing the starting location of the offence. Kickoffs were moved back from the 35-yard line to the 30-yard line. After a field goal or a single rouge the team that was scored on could scrimmage from the 40-yard line instead of the 35-yard line. Both of these changes had the effect of the offence starting their drives closer to the opposition end-zone.
  • Punting teams were also penalized for any ball that went out of bounds before the opponent’s 15-yard line, instead of the 20-yard line.
  • A communications coordinator from the officiating department was on the sidelines of each team to enable faster communication between head coaches and on field officials.
  • Expansion of the types of plays the Command Centre could review without requiring a coach’s challenge or an officials’ huddle (possession rulings, boundary rulings and administrative rules such as a formation without an end or ineligible receivers downfield)
  • Teams were allowed to have two quarterbacks on the field at one time to allow creative plays.
  • Penalties that occurred at the end of the first or third quarters could be applied to the start of the next quarter.
  • Quarterbacks who fake giving themselves up were assessed an objectionable conduct penalty.
  • Automatic ejection of any player for two unnecessary roughness or objectionable conduct penalties.

Player movement

Free agency

The 2022 free agency period officially began on February 8 at 12:00 p.m. ET.[24] Pending free agents and teams were able to negotiate offers for one week starting January 30 and ending February 6.[25] All formal offers to a player during this time were sent to both the league and the players union and could not be rescinded.[25][26]

Regular season

Standings

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Postseason

The Grey Cup was played at Mosaic Stadium in Regina, Saskatchewan, on November 20. The Toronto Argonauts won their league leading 18th Grey Cup and their first since the 2017 season.

Playoff bracket

November 6:
Division Semi-Finals
November 13:
Division Finals
November 20:
109th Grey Cup
Mosaic StadiumRegina
         
E1 Toronto Argonauts 34
East
E2 Montreal Alouettes 27
E2 Montreal Alouettes 28
E3 Hamilton Tiger-Cats 17
E1 Toronto Argonauts 24
W1 Winnipeg Blue Bombers 23
W1 Winnipeg Blue Bombers 28
West
W2 BC Lions 20
W2 BC Lions 30
W3 Calgary Stampeders 16

Broadcasting

The CFL continued to be broadcast on TSN and RDS across all platforms in Canada as part of their current contract.[27] The broadcast rights were extended through 2025.[28] The CFL entered a new partnership with Visaic providing streaming options for 130 countries and territories around the world. This service is available to anyone outside of Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, and the United States, where the rights are held by TSN, RDS, ESPN and BT Sports.[29] Prices ranged from US$4.99 for a single game, to $99.99 for every regular season and playoff game.[30]

Award winners

CFL Top Performers of the Week

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Source[31]

CFL Top Performers of the Month

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Source[31]

2022 CFL All-Stars

Offence

Defence

Special teams

Source[32]

2022 CFL Western All-Stars

Offence

Defence

Special teams

Source[33]

2022 CFL Eastern All-Stars

Offence

Defence

Special teams

Source[33]

2022 CFL Awards


References

  1. "2022 CFL Schedule". Canadian Football League. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
  2. "Saskatchewan Grey Cup Moved To 2022". Canadian Football League. May 5, 2020. Retrieved November 20, 2021.
  3. Dunk, Justin (January 7, 2020). "The comprehensive CFL collective bargaining agreement". 3DownNation. p. 119 via Canadian Football League. Collective Bargaining Agreement
  4. "CFL-CFLPA talks break off without new agreement". ESPN.com. 2022-05-15. Retrieved 2022-05-16.
  5. 3Down Staff (2022-05-15). "Stampeders, Elks players voted 99 percent in favour of strike after receiving open letter from commissioner Randy Ambrosie". 3DownNation. Retrieved 2022-05-16.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. Miari, Caio. "CFL, union fail to reach CBA agreement; teams to reportedly strike". theScore.com. Retrieved 2022-05-16.
  7. "CFL statement on CFLPA's ratification of CBA". CFL.ca. 2022-05-27. Retrieved 2022-05-27.
  8. "CFL board of governors ratifies new CBA - TSN.ca". TSN. 2022-05-31. Retrieved 2022-06-01.
  9. Dunk, Justin (January 7, 2020). "The comprehensive CFL collective bargaining agreement". 3DownNation. p. 96 via Canadian Football League. Collective Bargaining Agreement
  10. TSN ca Staff (2022-03-24). "CFL touches down with Atlantic Canada game in July - TSN.ca". TSN. Retrieved 2022-03-25.
  11. "2022 Touchdown Atlantic CFL game sells out within one hour". 3DownNation. 2022-04-26. Retrieved 2022-04-27.
  12. "Rule changes build on strengths of the CFL game". CFL.ca. 2022-04-27. Retrieved 2022-04-28.
  13. "International streaming delivers CFL football to the world". CFL.ca. 2022-06-01. Retrieved 2022-06-01.
  14. "Home | CFL". cfl.yaretv.com. Retrieved 2022-06-01.

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