CFL Draft and a plan to save the 2020 season
In previous years the CFL draft would be something that would be interesting to follow, especially here in football appreciative western Canada. As a result of increase coverage of the NFL draft and the fantasy football world where people get to indulge their armchair GM, it’s fun to see the players and try to figure out how they might pan out as pros.
A few years ago Saskatchewan hosted the CFL combine and I took advantage to take in sessions and see how teams responded to players showing their skills and especially how the players responded. It’s a different generation and the old ways of trying to coach players just doesn’t work as effectively as it once did and teams are discovering newer ways of evaluating players to determine their future success in pro ranks.
This year with Covid-19, the combines were eliminated because of concerns of spreading the disease and CFL teams now had to rely on game tape and lots of tape and personal connections. It’s a situation that also affected the NFL which puts on a glitzier show but this year reverted to a more approachable and accessible video draft which went without a hitch.
The NFL also benefits from having a more extensive system of scouting than the CFL does with its football operations cap. This means teams have to go back to the days when their director of scouting had to develop contacts across the States and hope to find a player suited to the CFL but either too small or light for the NFL.