Founded | 1949 |
---|---|
Based in | Edmonton, Alberta, Canada |
Home field | Commonwealth Stadium |
Head coach | Mark Kilam |
General manager | Ed Hervey |
Owner(s) | Larry Thompson[1][2] |
League | Canadian Football League |
Division | West |
Colours | Green, gold, white[3][4] |
Nickname(s) |
|
Mascot(s) | Punter and Spike |
Grey Cup wins | 14 (1954,1955,1956,1975,1978,1979,1980,1981,1982,1987,1993,2003,2005,2015)
|
Website | goelks.com |
Current uniform | |
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TheEdmonton Elks are a professionalCanadian football team based inEdmonton, Alberta. The club competes in theCanadian Football League (CFL) as a member of the league'sWest Division and plays their home games atCommonwealth Stadium. The Elks were founded in 1949 as theEdmonton Eskimos and have won theGrey Cup championship fourteen times (including athree-peat between 1954 and 1956 and an unmatched five consecutive wins between 1978 and 1982), most recently in2015 and the most of any CFL club based in Western Canada. The team hasa rivalry with theCalgary Stampeders. The team discontinued using theEskimos name in 2020, with the new nameElks formally announced on June 1, 2021.[5][6]
The Edmonton Elks were a "community owned" team (owned by local shareholders) since their inception in 1949 to midway through the2024 season.[1]
Edmonton Elks Football Team, Inc., was governed by a ten-member board of directors.[7] The board consisted of a chairman, treasurer, secretary, and seven directors. The club's president and CEO was Chris Presson until he was fired on November 22, 2021.[8][9]
As of 2024, Larry Thompson, longtime Elks fan and shareholder, bought the team outright, becoming the first private owner in club history.[1]
TheEdmonton Rugby Foot-ball Club, unaffiliated with the current team, was an earlyCanadian football-rugby union team based inEdmonton. The team played its first organized games with the formation of theAlberta Rugby Football League in 1895. In 1908 the nameEsquimaux was adopted.[10] In 1910 the club was officially named theEdmonton Eskimos and was briefly called theEdmonton Elks during1922. (The city was represented by theEdmonton Civics in1914 and theEdmonton Canucks in1919.) After appearing in and losing the9th Grey Cup and10th Grey Cup games (being the first western teams to play for the Cup) the team folded in1925, but returned for two seasons beginning1928, and then folded again. It was succeeded by theEdmonton Boosters, who played for three more seasons, and theEdmonton Hi-Grads in1936 (a team of high school graduate all stars.) Elite-level football returned to Edmonton in1938 with a team once again called theEskimos, this time in theWestern Interprovincial Football Union (WIFU). This team ceased operating after only two seasons because of theSecond World War.
The current incarnation of the team began in the 1949 WIFU season as the Edmonton Eskimos under head coachAnnis Stukus, for whom the CFL's annual coach of the year award is named. The team played home games atClarke Stadium and quickly saw success under quarterbackJackie Parker and running backJohnny Bright, winning the Grey Cup three years in a row from 1954 to 1956. The team did not win the Grey Cup again until 1975, the longest drought in team history. The team moved to Commonwealth Stadium in 1978.
The team won five consecutive Grey Cups (1978–82), led by superstar quarterbacksWarren Moon andTom Wilkinson and head coachHugh Campbell. After a brief absence, Campbell returned to the team in 1986 and worked for Edmonton in an administrative capacity until his retirement in 2006. This five-year dynasty, followed by the dominance of the city's NHL team theEdmonton Oilers, led the city to be nicknamed the "City of Champions" in the 1980s. Edmonton made it to nine Grey Cups in a ten-year span from 1973 to 1982.
In the 1980s and 90s the team's marquee player wasGizmo Williams who still holds many CFL records in punt and kickoff returns and was a key part in Grey Cup victories in 1987 and 1993 under head coachRon Lancaster. During this period the team was also known for its stellar defensive line, with futureCanadian Football Hall of Famers likeDanny Kepley andDanny Bass winning Defensive Player of the Year Awards andWillie Pless winning the trophy a record five times.
After winning the Grey Cup in both 2003 and 2005, under quarterbackRicky Ray, who is Edmonton's all-time leader in passing yards, the team missed the playoffs the following year, for the first time in 34 years, a North American professional sport record. This led to a ten-year Grey Cup drought. After a gap of ten years, Edmonton won the Grey Cup again in 2015, under the leadership of quarterbackMike Reilly, their most recent championship.
In 2020 pressure mounted from team sponsors such asBelairdirect,Boston Pizza,[11] and Sports Interaction, a First Nations–owned betting company, for the team to change their name.[12] The termEskimo is an offensive term historically placed onInuit people.[13][14][15][16] The team officially dropped all use of the word "Eskimo" from the team on July 21, 2020.[17] In response, the team temporarily rebranded as the "Edmonton Football Team" or, secondarily, the "EE Football Team", confirming their plan was to rebrand with a nickname starting with "E" to continue the use of at least some of their branding, most notably the interlocked double-E logo. This move was supported by multiple Indigenous groups, including theInuit Tapiriit Kanatami, a group representing over 60,000 Inuit across Canada.[18][19] On June 1, 2021, the team formally announced that the new Edmonton team name would be the Edmonton Elks, a name used by the Edmonton football club of 1922.[5]
Franchise great Warren Moon, who led Edmonton to a record five straight Grey Cups between 1978 and 1982 stated, "The name Eskimos, to me, just means pride and it means winning with that organization". However, he stated that he was ultimately supportive of the move because some people might be offended by the name.[20] Saying, "If this is something that is insensitive to another group of people, that is something I can understand being a minority myself."[21] This came around the same time as theWashington Redskins of theNational Football League rebranded as the Washington Commanders, and theCleveland Indians ofMajor League Baseball rebranded as the Cleveland Guardians.
The team colours, green and gold, have remained essentially the same over the years with only minor modifications to the uniform or logo until 2021, when the EE logo was designated as a secondary logo, and introduced a new logo of a stylized image of an elk and the Elks helmet logo was changed to antlers.[22] After keeping the elk-antler helmet for the 2021 season, the team reintroduced the EE logo to their helmets (albeit with it not being enclosed in an oval) in the 2022 offseason, acknowledging fan favourability towards the logo.[23][24]
In 2021, the Elks worked with artist Izaiah Masuskapoe, an Indigenous student at West Edmonton’s St. Thomas More Catholic Junior High School, to create a special logo to celebrate the Indigenous people in Edmonton, which later spread to all of Canada in 2024 as the CFL commemorated theNational Day of Truth and Reconciliation with logos of their own. This followed a similar effort by theBC Lions months before.[25][26]
Following new private ownership, the EE logo returned as the primary logo in 2025 and the Elk logo was retained as the secondary logo.[27]
With 14 Grey Cup wins, the franchise has won the Grey Cup more than any other team except theToronto Argonauts, who have 18 wins. This includes more championships than any other team since the CFL was formed in the 1950s. Edmonton holds the record for most consecutive Grey Cup appearances (6 from 1977 to 1982), and consecutive wins (5 from 1978 to 1982). The team is the only one to have won three or more consecutive Grey Cups twice (1954–1956 and 1978–1982).
The Edmonton franchise holds the following CFL records:
The team has the distinction of setting two opposite North American professional sports records: from a success standpoint, Edmonton made the playoffs for 34 consecutive years from 1972 to 2005. At the other end, the Elks hold the dubious record of longest losing streak, home, and longest winless streak, home, set when they passed 21 on July 29, 2023. These streaks ended at 22, with the first home win under the Elks name coming August 27, 2023.[28] This record was previously held by the1953 St. Louis Browns.[29]
The Elks have also led the CFL in yearly attendance many times. As of August 2016, Edmonton had the highest average attendance in the league 27 times since moving to Commonwealth Stadium in 1978.[30]
Team alumni have figured prominently in Alberta political life: past players include two former provincial premiers (Peter Lougheed andDonald Getty), a former mayor of Edmonton (Bill Smith),[31] and alieutenant-governor (Norman Kwong).[32] Athletes of significance in other professional sports that played for the Elks include professional wrestler andWWE championRoman Reigns, who played under his birthname Joe Anoa'i in 2008.[33]
The Edmonton Elks have a policy of honouring the players who have best represented the team on the field. The player's name, number and seasons played with the Edmonton Elks are displayed on the edge of the concrete separating the field level from the lower bowl ofCommonwealth Stadium. The Elks keep most of the numbers in circulation rather than retire them from use. However, the team has had the numbers ofWarren Moon (1),Don Warrington (21), andRollie Miles (98) removed from circulation and are no longer issued.[34]
Numbers so honoured as of 2023[update]:
Front Office
Head Coach
Offensive coaches
| Defensive coaches
Special teams coach
Strength and Conditioning
|
Most Outstanding Canadian Award
Most Outstanding Defensive Player Award
Most Outstanding Offensive Lineman Award
Most Outstanding Lineman Award[a]
a Defunct
Punter (ananthropomorphic football) and Spike (an elk) are the mascots for the Edmonton Elks. They were introduced in 2004 and 2021, respectively.[35] Nanook, a polar bear, was introduced in 1997, but was retired and replaced with Spike in 2021, coinciding with the rebranding.
The Edmonton Rugby Football Club was reorganized as the Esquimaux — the forerunner to the Edmonton Eskimos — at a meeting in the Windsor Hotel on Jasper Avenue and 101st Street."
"The team had been nicknamed "Esquimaux" by a Calgary sportswriter as early as 1897
The word Eskimo is an offensive term that has been used historically to describe the Inuit throughout their homeland