Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - September 6, 2025, Winnipeg, Manitoba
A6
● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
NEWS I FRONT AND CENTRE
I
T was the verbal shot heard
’round the world. Or at least,
across a pair of Prairie provinces.
Canadian Football League fans in
Manitoba and Saskatchewan are well
familiar with the origin of the Banjo
Bowl, the annual tilt that pits the host
Winnipeg Blue Bombers against their
principal rival, the Saskatchewan
Roughriders.
Followers of both teams can tell
you that the match evolved out of a
comment uttered by former Bomb-
ers placekicker Troy Westwood in
September 2003, when he sarcastically
referred to Saskatchewaners (Sas-
katchewanites? Saskatchewians?) as
“banjo-picking inbreds.”
Then, how he doubled down on
that jibe a few weeks later when, at a
scheduled news conference, he told
members of the media that he had
misspoken, as “the vast majority of the
people in Saskatchewan have no idea
how to play the banjo.” (For the record,
Westwood’s mom was born in the Land
of the Living Skies, and his aunts and
grandmother were living there when
he was spouting off.)
In the wake of Westwood’s infamous
remarks, the Banjo Bowl has become
arguably the pre-eminent matchup of
the CFL regular season, resulting in
20 consecutive sellouts. Today’s affair
will be no different. Close to 33,000
fans — the majority of them decked
out in blue and gold, but a healthy
number clad in green and white — will
again congregate at Princess Auto Sta-
dium to enjoy the three-down action.
Earlier this week, we huddled
together with people who have a
personal connection to the big game.
Here’s what they had to say ahead of
the 3 p.m. opening kickoff.
● ● ●
Lawyer and businessman David
Asper was the chairman of the Win-
nipeg Blue Bombers in 2003 when, in
his words, “Troy began shooting his
mouth off.”
At the time, Asper was actively
researching college football south of
the border; he had a particular interest
in how many longtime NCAA rivals
face each other annually in prominent
games such as the Little Brown Jug,
which has seen Minnesota battle Mich-
igan every year since 1892.
“You have to remember, the Bomb-
ers weren’t exactly selling out in the
early 2000s, not the way they are
today,” Asper says.
“So we were already trying to come
up with ideas of how to create a special
event of some sort — a way to get peo-
ple in the stands — when Troy served
it up to us on a silver platter.”
Asper recalls how some of his
associates reacted when he floated
the concept of a “Banjo Bowl” that
would take place every September, the
week after the Bombers and Riders
squared off in the Labour Day Classic.
Jerry Maslowsky, the club’s marketing
person, “nearly fainted,” Asper says
with a chuckle. Others argued people
in Saskatchewan would be insulted by
the terminology.
“I said it would be even better if
some people didn’t take it as part of a
fun rivalry,” Asper continues.
“Anyways, after we announced our
intentions, I personally paid for a poll
to be done in Saskatchewan, and it
turned out that their fans overwhelm-
ingly got the joke, and thought it was
fun, not negative,” he says, mentioning
he keeps the inaugural trophy — an
actual banjo — in his suite at Princess
Auto Stadium.
“It bloomed right away and became
the marquee game in the Bombers
season.”
● ● ●
Bob Irving was the radio voice of
the Blue Bombers from 1975 to 2021,
handling play-by-play duties for the
club as part of his job at 680 CJOB.
Irving says he didn’t spend much
time thinking about Westwood’s banjo
crack 22 years ago.
“Those of us in the media knew that
Troy liked to poke the bear a bit. We
all kind of laughed and smiled when
he said what he said, and thought it
would disappear within a week or two.
The fact it got turned into a marketing
slogan and became what it’s become
never would have occurred to me, back
then.”
With close to 800 CFL games, includ-
ing 17 Banjo Bowls, on his resumé,
Irving admits it’s sometimes hard to
remember moments from specific
games. Still, there was one play during
the 2017 Banjo Bowl, which the Bomb-
ers won 48-28, that stands out.
“The week before that game, there
had been some suggestion that (quar-
terback Matt) Nichols could no longer
throw the ball deep,” Irving recounts.
“Well, that afternoon he threw three
touchdown passes, one of which was a
long toss. I can still see him marching
down the field, swinging his arms by
his side as his receiver was running
into the end zone, sort of making a
mockery of any notion that he didn’t
have the strength to do it. That was
kind of humorous in my eye.”
Interestingly, Irving, who was born
in Regina, doesn’t believe he ever
referenced the Banjo Bowl by its given
name during his on-air days.
“People can trivialize it all they
want — and that’s what we’ve all done,
I suppose — but I understand the way
some Saskatchewan fans feel about it,”
he says.
“Danny Barrett was the Riders’
coach when they came here for the
first one in ’04 and I can remember
him not liking the name whatsoever.
He refused to even accept the possibili-
ty it was called that.”
● ● ●
What’s the difference between a ban-
jo and a crow? One is loud, obnoxious
and noisy, and the other is a bird.
If you’re thinking about scooping up
a banjo to bring along to Princess Auto
Stadium, you should probably act fast.
According to Johnny Perrin, manager
at music store Long & McQuade, the
stringed instrument is a hot commod-
ity in the city when the Banjo Bowl
rolls around.
“Looking through banjo sales for the
last 15 years or so, we definitely sell a
few more in August and early Septem-
ber compared to the rest of the year,”
says Perrin, noting Long & McQuade’s
online store offers 132 different banjos,
ranging in price from $249.99 to $8,699.
“It’s a good thing we stock banjos
this time of year for fans getting into
the spirit of the game.”
● ● ●
Murray McCormick is a retired
sports writer for the Regina Lead-
er-Post. He covered the Roughriders
from 2008 to 2023, and has fond memo-
ries of the 15 Banjo Bowls he reported
on during that period.
“What I liked about the Banjo Bowl
is that I flew to Winnipeg on Thurs-
day night, and after spending most of
Friday writing a story or two, I headed
out Friday night with the Winnipeg
sports writers for a drink or two,” Mc-
Cormick says, when reached at home
in Regina.
“Usually, I rolled back into the hotel
pretty late, so I was never a big fan of
the 3 p.m. kickoff. Even so, I did make
a point of getting to the park early, to
soak up the fun. It was always such a
great place to be.”
McCormick says there were occa-
sions when the Roughriders brass
suggested he and his fellow reporters
refrain from calling the game the
Banjo Bowl in print. Their preference
was “Labour Day Rematch.”
“My answer was, ‘I’ll call it what-
ever I want.’ My wife would probably
disagree, but I was never insulted by
the banjo thing. To me it was all in jest
and not a big deal, at all.”
Speaking of big deals, what McCor-
mick remembers most about the Banjo
Bowl has nothing to do with what took
place on the field.
“At one of the last games I covered
they were serving that Walby Burger
(named after Bombers’ legendary
offensive linesman Chris Walby), with
something crazy, like six patties.” The
five-pound behemoth, priced at $45,
also arrived with six chicken tenders,
six wieners and six strips of bacon,
topped with fries, cheese, pickles,
lettuce, onions and tomatoes.
“I asked a guy who ordered one
where the heck he was going to put
it. To this day, I have no idea how he
could have eaten it all.”
● ● ●
Derek Taylor has the unique expe-
rience of calling the Banjo Bowl from
both sides of the fence. He served
as the Roughriders’ play-by-play
announcer from 2019 to 2021, before
sliding into Irving’s chair three years
ago, following Irving’s retirement.
“Being the voice of the Riders and
being in Mosaic (Stadium) week after
week, you were left thinking, ‘Wow,
this crowd is unbelievable,’” Taylor
says.
“But when I started going to Winni-
peg for the Banjo Bowl, it was just a
different level of noise, altogether. It
can get so loud that you start to worry
about your hearing, because you have
to turn your speaker up so high to con-
nect with your partner. It’s a complete
wall of noise.”
Taylor was working for TSN in 2018,
when he witnessed a Banjo Bowl mo-
ment he won’t soon forget. The Bomb-
ers were having a tough day at the
office. In the first half, quarterback
Nichols threw three interceptions,
including a 97-yard pick-six to current
Bombers star Willie Jefferson who, at
the time, was lining up for the Riders.
“I was walking around the concourse
at half time when a public service an-
nouncement came on the Jumbotron,”
he says.
“Matt Nichols was the player doing
the PSA and what I remember specif-
ically is thousands of fans suddenly
booing the screen. ‘Oh my,’ I thought,
‘this game is not going well for the
Bombers.’” (He was correct; Saskatch-
ewan won, 32-27.)
● ● ●
The Banjo Bowl has been contested
20 times since 2004. The 2020 game
was cancelled because of COVID-19.
The Blue Bombers sport an impres-
sive Banjo Bowl record of 13 wins and
seven losses. Over the course of 20
games, they have outscored the Riders
586 to 428.
Total attendance to date is 631,773,
which works out to an average of
31,589 fans per game.
● ● ●
Maybe 10 years ago, Westwood was
invited to participate in a parade being
staged in a town in rural Saskatche-
wan.
Westwood agreed to attend without
asking what was expected of him. He
figured that out soon enough, after he
was led to a float occupied by six oth-
ers, each of whom was cradling a banjo
on their lap.
“They played the whole time we
were driving along and there I was,
waving to the crowd like I was the
queen or something,” Westwood says
with a chuckle.
Westwood, a native of Dauphin, par-
ticipated in four Banjo Bowls as a play-
er. He has also been at the stadium as a
fan a few times. He calls the game-day
atmosphere “electric and awesome.”
“To me, it’s a two-week celebration
of the whole CFL experience, espe-
cially on the Prairies. First you have
the week leading up to the Labour Day
game, followed by the week leading
up to the Banjo Bowl. The two mesh
so perfectly, it almost feels like it’s
always been this way.”
Westwood laughs when asked if he
ever regrets not patenting his banjo
barb. Or not seeking residuals — how-
zabout a banjo buck for every ticket
sold? — when he officially retired in
2010.
“I like to tell people I get royalties
from the name, and that’s why we’re
independently wealthy, but unfortu-
nately that’s not the case,” he says,
laughing.
“My wife has gotten in my ear about
it a couple of times, so maybe we
should present the idea to (Bombers’
president and CEO Wade Miller) and
see what he says.”
In case you’re wondering, Westwood,
who was a founding member of the
band Eagle & Hawk and also recorded
as a solo performer, has reached for a
banjo himself, from time to time.
“I have some familiarity, but not too
much. Though I did grow up watching
Hee Haw, and I am aware that Steve
Martin is pretty nifty on it. In all
reality, it’s a neat little instrument and
there are some classic songs that we
all love that are associated with it.
“It was just a fun-loving statement
I made a long, long time ago. Could I
have guessed how it would turn out in
the end? Not a chance.”
david.sanderson@freepress.mb.ca
DAVID SANDERSON
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 2025
Mischief-making
Blue Bomber’s offhand
insult in 2003 gave rise
to one of the Canadian
Football League’s
goofiest, most-colourful
and enduring rivalries
Prairie
pickin,’
gridiron
grinnin’
RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS
David Asper keeps the inaugural banjo trophy in his suite at Princess Auto Stadium.
KEN GIGLIOTTI / FREE PRESS FILES
Former Bombers placekicker Troy Westwood
inspired the Banjo Bowl after referring to
Saskatchewaners as ‘banjo-picking inbreds.’
JOHN WOODS / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES
Winnipeg Blue Bombers’ Jermarcus Hardrick holds the Banjo Bowl trophy as he celebrates with fans after defeating the Saskatchewan Roughriders in CFL action in Winnipeg in 2023.
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