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・ 1981 Can-Am season
・ 1981 Canada Cup
・ 1981 Canada Cup rosters
・ 1981 Canadian Grand Prix
・ 1981 Canadian Ladies Curling Association Championship
・ 1981 Cannes Film Festival
・ 1981 CARIFTA Games
・ 1981 CART PPG Indy Car World Series
・ 1981 CCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament
・ 1981 CDCP Road Builders season
・ 1981 CECAFA Cup
・ 1981 Centennial Cup
・ 1981 Central African Republic coup d'état
・ 1981 Central American and Caribbean Championships in Athletics
・ 1981 CFL Draft
1981 CFL season
・ 1981 CFU Championship
・ 1981 Challenge Cup
・ 1981 Champ Car season
・ 1981 Chapeltown riot
・ 1981 Chatham Cup
・ 1981 Chengdu-Kunming rail crash
・ 1981 Chicago Bears season
・ 1981 Chicago Cubs season
・ 1981 Chicago White Sox season
・ 1981 Chilean telethon
・ 1981 Cincinnati Bengals season
・ 1981 Cincinnati Open
・ 1981 Cincinnati Reds season
・ 1981 Clemson Tigers football team


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1981 CFL season : ウィキペディア英語版
1981 CFL season
The 1981 Canadian Football League season is considered to be the 28th season in modern-day Canadian football, although it is officially the 24th Canadian Football League season.
==CFL News in 1981==
The Eastern and Western Football Conferences, which had carried on as separate and autonomous entities since the founding of the CFL in 1958, agreed to a full merger prior to the start of the 1981 season.
With the merger, the Eastern and Western Football Conferences were dissolved and renamed as the East and West Divisions.
The merger authorizes the CFL to have full authority over decisions, including the adoption of a full interlocking schedule for both divisions. Teams played each other twice, once home and once away, regardless of division.
In addition, the merger set up the CFL Board of Governors and the CFL Management Council to replace the Executive Committee and the General Managers Committee. After the 1980 season, after owning the team for over ten years, Montreal Alouettes owner Sam Berger retired and sold the team to Nelson Skalbania, who brought in high priced NFL talent, that couldn't adapt to the Canadian game, bringing a terrible losing season to Montreal (they did however make the playoffs due to the weak division that year), and with it, a loss of fan support, and he lost money and because of the high priced talent he bankrupted the team. So the team folded after the season, but a year later, a new team, the Montreal Concordes, owned by Expos owner Charles Bronfman took over the teams players and history.
The East was so weak this season that the Calgary Stampeders, despite being the West's fifth place team, finished with a better record than the second place Ottawa Rough Riders. Ottawa nevertheless upset the Hamilton Tiger-Cats and qualified for the Grey Cup despite winning only five games in the regular season finishing seventh overall.
The ensuing controversy over having a 5-11 team playing in the Grey Cup played a large part in eventually persuading the league to implement a cross-over rule permitting a fourth place team in one division to qualify for the playoffs in place of a third place team in the other division with a weaker record. Nevertheless the current rule makes no provision to allow a fifth place team to make the playoffs even if its record is better than that of the second place team in the other division, although as of 2015 that particular circumstance has not recurred since 1981.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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