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Flynn, Fracas inducted into Canadian Football Hall of Fame
Credit: Jim Mullin, CFL.ca
OTTAWA (CIS) – Chris Flynn, a record-setting quarterback,
and the late Gino Fracas, a legendary coach and administrator, have
become the first individuals to be inducted into the Canadian
Football Hall of Fame for their accomplishments in the Canadian
university game.
CFHOF website: www.cfhof.ca
CFHOF media release: http://www.cfhof.ca/index.php/article/announce2011_302
They were announced on Friday as part of the Hall’s 2011
induction class, along with former CFL players Ken Lehmann, Danny
McManus, Joe Montford and Terry Vaughn, as well as CFL coaching
legend Don Matthews.
The week-long induction festivities will be hosted by the Calgary
Stampeders, Sept. 14-18, 2011.
Flynn, who starred at Saint Mary’s University from 1987 to
1990 and is the only three-time winner of the Hec Crighton Trophy
as CIS player of the year, will join the Hall in the players
category.
Fracas, who passed away in 2009 at the age of 79, will be inducted
posthumously as a builder. Following his playing career at the
University of Western Ontario and with the Edmonton Eskimos of the
CFL, he was a CIS head coach for over two decades at the University
of Alberta and at the University of Windsor, where he founded the
Lancers football program.
After decades of inducting only professional players and builders,
the Hall is going back to honouring individuals from the amateur
ranks. Based on recommendations from its amateur sub-committee, one
amateur player and one builder could be inducted annually.
“The Hall of Fame represents the football community of
Canada, and we are returning to our original mandate,” said
Mark DeNobile, executive director of the Canadian Football Hall of
Fame and Museum. “Our message to the fans of football is that
we have listened to our stakeholders and going forward will do our
best to fulfill that mandate.”
“It is an honour for CIS to be part of the Canadian Football
Hall of Fame recognition,” said CIS chief executive officer,
Marg McGregor. “It offers outstanding visibility to the
deserving inductees, and it is great to see the Hall recognize the
important role of university football in Canada.”
Flynn becomes the first amateur player to be inducted since Gordon
Perry in 1970.
A native of Buckingham, Que., Flynn moved to Halifax in 1987 to
begin his university career at Saint Mary’s and instantly
became one of the most dominant players in the country. After
helping the Huskies claim their first conference banner in 13 years
in his rookie campaign, he guided them to three more Atlantic
conference titles and a pair of appearances in the Vanier Cup
national final over the next three seasons.
Flynn owns the top two single-season performances in CIS history
for passing touchdowns (30 in 1989, 27 in 1990) and two decades
after his final university game, still holds the CIS career mark of
87 TD passes, despite playing only four seasons. He remains the
only player in history to receive three Hec Crighton Trophies as
the most outstanding player in Canadian university
football.
“Chris is one of the best athletes to ever come out of Saint
Mary’s and arguably the best football player to ever come out
of the CIS,” said Steve Sarty, Saint Mary’s director of
athletics and recreation. “His accomplishments are unmatched;
winning three consecutive Hec Crighton Trophies and the excitement
he brought to Saint Mary’s is legendary.”
Fracas earned the nod into the Hall for his coaching
accomplishments, although he also had a spectacular playing career.
At Western Ontario, he was a three-time all-star and two-time Yates
Cup champion between 1951 and 1954. As a CFL player in Edmonton, he
captured back-to-back Grey Cups in 1955 and 1956.
After retiring from the CFL, he took over the head coaching
position at the University of Alberta in 1963. Fracas led the
Golden Bears to three league championships over the next four years
including a berth in the inaugural Canadian College Bowl final (now
the Vanier Cup) in 1965, where his Bears dropped a 14-7 decision to
the Toronto Varsity Blues. He then returned to his hometown of
Windsor, Ont., and in 1968 became the first head coach in Lancers
history, a position he held until 1986. A two-time OUAA West coach
of the year (1976, 1977), he guided the Lancers to the Central
Canada Intercollegiate championship in 1969 and a share of the
Yates Cup title in 1975.
Every year since 1988, CIS has presented the Gino Fracas Award to
an outstanding volunteer coach, in honour of the former player,
coach, administrator and University of Windsor professor.
“We are thrilled that Gino’s legacy will carry on
through his induction into the Hall of Fame,” said Windsor
director of athletics, Gord Grace. “He was an icon at the
University of Windsor and his contributions to the sport of
football were truly outstanding.”
“On behalf of the Fracas family, we are extremely pleased to
see Gino inducted into the Hall of Fame,” said son Mark
Fracas. “I think his colleagues and friends would agree with
me when I say that our father was an exceptional coach and
innovator. His induction to the Hall was always a dream of his and
now that dream has come true”.
-CIS-



















