Joe Montford

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Joe Montford
No. 53
Born: (1970-07-30) July 30, 1970 (age 53)
Edmonton Eskimos
Career highlights and awards
CFL All-Star19982002
CFL East All-Star19982002
Career stats

Joe Montford (born July 30, 1970) is a

Arena Football League (AFL) and, most famously, the Hamilton Tiger-Cats. He was inducted into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame
in 2011.

Career

From 1989 to 1993, Montford attended South Carolina State University, leading the school in tackles in 1993. In 2007 South Carolina State celebrated there "100 years in football", and selected Montford as one of the top 100 players of all-time.

Considered by many commentators as one of the greatest defensive players in the history of the Canadian Football League, Montford was a four-time CFL sack leader, three-time winner of the CFL's Most Outstanding Defensive Player Award, five-time East Division All-Star, and five-time CFL All-Star. In November, 2006, Montford was voted one of the CFL's Top 50 players (#40) of the league's modern era by Canadian sports network TSN.

Montford enjoyed his best seasons as a

Most Outstanding Player Danny McManus also on the team, took the 87th Grey Cup
32-21.

Montford signed a high-priced deal with Toronto for the 2002 CFL season, but he failed to bring his old self to Toronto and struggled on a mediocre Argonauts team. This led to the team trading Montford back to Hamilton for speedy receiver Tony Miles and non-import fullback Randy Bowles on March 13, 2003. Montford played 2003 and 2004 back with Hamilton, as the team slid down the East Division standings.

After the 2004 season, Montford was traded to Edmonton for offensive lineman

Montréal Alouettes quarterback Anthony Calvillo
out of the pocket on third-and-thirty-one and forced him to attempt a quick kick punt on the last play of overtime.

On Wednesday, April 27, 2006, Montford was released from the Eskimos.[1]

On Monday, July 3, 2006, Montford was re-signed by the Eskimos.[2]

Aside from Joe Montford's public career as a professional football player he also spend months working with children in a group home in the suburbs of Atlanta, Georgia in 2000. He left this job after the parent company of the group home which owned similar facilities throughout the United States filed for bankruptcy and the decision was made to close the facility. Joe Montford was known there for teaching the kids many of whom had little or no parental involvement growing up how to play football and other sports. He served as one of the few positive male role models many of the teenage boys there he worked with ever had. To this day one of the boys he worked with who is now a college senior keeps the autographed card Joe Montford gave him in his wallet and carries it with him as a reminder of where he came from.

Montford was inducted onto the Hamilton Tiger-Cats Wall Of Honour on August 23, 2018.[3]

References

  1. ^ https://www.tsn.ca/cfl/news_story.asp?ID=164074 [dead link]
  2. ^ https://www.tsn.ca/cfl/news_story.asp?ID=170412 [dead link]
  3. ^ "Montford Proud To Be Inducted To Ticats' Wall Of Honour". CFL.ca. 23 August 2018. Retrieved August 23, 2018.

External links