I usually don't do a post on Sunday nights, but today was so great I just had to put this one together.
Earlier today our son said that after the year we had -- Canada didn't win the Stanley Cup nor did we win the World Series -- he was trying to prepare himself for disappointment again tonight.
I pointed out that at least this time a Canadian team would win the Grey Cup - but it wasn't actually very funny, was it.
Anyway, I think the whole province was feeling the same way -- hopeful, but a little worried too.
In the end, no need - the Riders won definitively!
Riders win! #GreyCup
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— Saskboy from Saskatchewan (@saskboy.bsky.social) November 16, 2025 at 8:51 PM
The Grey Cup is our Canadian game, and maybe never more than when Saskatchewan wins it. I’m still unsure how the rule changes will affect the league, but this was a good example of how the CFL works, and should work. www.thestar.com/sports/footb...
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— Bruce Arthur (@brucearthur.bsky.social) November 16, 2025 at 11:49 PM
Bruce Arthur / Toronto Star
The Saskatchewan Roughriders win the last Grey Cup of its kind. It couldn’t have been more Canadian
...Sunday night, the Saskatchewan Roughriders defeated the Montreal Alouettes 25-17 in the 112th Grey Cup in Winnipeg. The CFL matters so much in Saskatchewan, and the rarity of Roughriders success only makes the wins mean more. Any Riders fan could name the Grey Cup years, which shine like little towns dotting the emptiest part of the Prairies: 1966, 1989, 2007, and 2013 at home in the last Grey Cup at Taylor Field. The Riders hadn’t been back to the big game since.
Now 2025 will be added to the Saskatchewan’s sainted list....
...Saskatchewan won, with Riders legend Ron Lancaster’s grandson, Marc Mueller, as their offensive co-ordinator. Riders offensive lineman and Melville, Sask. native Logan Ferland fought back tears with TSN’s Claire Hanna and said: “We’re forever champs. We’re forever champs.” In Saskatchewan, that’s more true than anywhere else in Canada.
...This was the last CFL game before the rule changes [league commissioner] Johnston has pushed through for 2026 and 2027. Next season, the rouge will be all but eliminated and the play clock, which is the source of so many only-in-the-CFL comebacks in the final three minutes, will be changed to a 35-second play clock, rather than the discretionary 20-second clock that only starts when the officials are ready.
In 2027, the field will be reduced from 110 to 100 yards, with goalposts moved to the back of a slightly shallower end zone. The commissioner spent the week re-emphasizing that the league will remain robustly Canadian despite the changes, which tells you he has gotten some feedback.
And then came the game, and it was Canadian all right. It was the kind of game that starts with a rouge, where the final three minutes still mattered, where a lifer CFL quarterback wins his first Grey Cup, and where Saskatchewan finally wins again under a Prairie sky. It’s still our big Canadian football game. That won’t change.
I think this was the play of the game -- the Alouettes had momentum and were coming back strong, but they couldn't get the touchdown, they dropped the ball, and the Riders recovered it just inside the end zone (so we would start back down the field at the 25, not the 1) - you could almost feel the Als go pfffft!
Finally, I thought this was hilarious:
But they're not bitter, oh no....