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Posted

I would even go as far as saying a top college team could beat a CFL team. Do you not think that Luck when he was in college couldn't dismantle the Argos' defense?

Posted

To be honest since the ball is bigger, Fitz would not be able to throw it at all. But the bills would still win but we could use ricky ray instead of Fitz. He would be just fine and just won the Grey cup, guys on a roll!

Posted

You folks do realize the leagues play by completely different rules? If you made the Bills play by CFL rules they might get caught off guard on defense At the very least it would be a shoot out.

 

PTR

 

Posted

From August 1950 through August 1961, teams from the NFL and CFL played six times during the NFL preseason, in Canada. (For the Canadian teams, the games were exhibitions played during the CFL regular season.)

It started in 1950, when the Giants beat the Rough Riders in Ottawa, 27-6. The following year, the Giants thumped the same team in the same town, 41-18.

The series resumed eight years later, when the Chicago Cardinals clobbered the Argonauts, 55-26, in Toronto. In 1960, the Steelers slammed the Argonauts in Toronto, 43-16.

The exercise ended the following year, with a pair of contests played three days apart. On August 2 in Toronto, the Cardinals (which had since moved to St. Louis) cold-cocked the Argonauts, 36-7. On August 5, the Bears bested the Alouettes in Montreal, 34-16.

But the Canadians saved a little face three days after that. In the one and only AFL-CFL game, the Tiger-Cats took apart the Buffalo Bills in Hamilton, 38-21.

Posted

From August 1950 through August 1961, teams from the NFL and CFL played six times during the NFL preseason, in Canada. (For the Canadian teams, the games were exhibitions played during the CFL regular season.)

It started in 1950, when the Giants beat the Rough Riders in Ottawa, 27-6. The following year, the Giants thumped the same team in the same town, 41-18.

The series resumed eight years later, when the Chicago Cardinals clobbered the Argonauts, 55-26, in Toronto. In 1960, the Steelers slammed the Argonauts in Toronto, 43-16.

The exercise ended the following year, with a pair of contests played three days apart. On August 2 in Toronto, the Cardinals (which had since moved to St. Louis) cold-cocked the Argonauts, 36-7. On August 5, the Bears bested the Alouettes in Montreal, 34-16.

But the Canadians saved a little face three days after that. In the one and only AFL-CFL game, the Tiger-Cats took apart the Buffalo Bills in Hamilton, 38-21.

 

We would be the only team to lose.

Posted (edited)

I dunno, times have changed a lot since back then. Depends on rules of course and field, but I give the better CFL teams a slight advantage on their turf, and on American turf it wouldn't evev be close, IMO.

 

Tim-

Edited by D521646
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