MONTREAL -- The expansion of Percival Molson Stadium looks to be a success, but now the Montreal Alouettes must solve another problem -- finding a permanent place to practice.
The defending Grey Cup champions are the only CFL club that does not have its own practice field. They waste up to an hour a day busing across town from their underground base at Olympic Stadium to whatever field they can find, most often at Concordia University.
Teams have their players only 4.5 hours per day for meetings and practice under the collective bargaining agreement with the players association.
Some wonder how they've reached the championship game the past two seasons while living like nomads in their own city.
"We bus every day and we miss out on about 50 minutes of practice time every single day," slotback Ben Cahoon said this week. "That's ridiculous, frankly."
On Thursday night, the Alouettes played their first official game at Molson Stadium since it was expanded by 5,000 seats to a capacity of 25,012, a $29 million project they say was necessary to make a profit.
It was a second major overhaul of the 95-year-old facility, which was a crumbling ruin with trees growing through the grandstands when they first used it for a playoff game in 1997 because the Big O had been booked for a U2 concert. Now it has become an attractive downtown venue.
But the stadium is owned by McGill University, and the Alouettes still keep their main locker and meeting rooms in the cramped, windowless basement of Olympic Stadium.
Until 2008, the Alouettes had use of an adjacent outdoor field, but that patch of land was handed over to the Montreal Impact when it built a large, privately financed soccer complex next to the Big O that includes the 13,000-seat Saputo Stadium.
The badly deteriorated practice field is not being used by either club this season as it goes through a remake.
Alouettes president Larry Smith said solving the practice puzzle has become a priority and that a solution may be in sight, but likely not until next season.
"We all recognize that we need to have a practice field," said Smith. "It was kind of a surprise when the field we thought we had was given away to the Impact, but the Impact have been very good to us and the city of Montreal as well, and I think we'll find a solution."
"We hope we have it decided by the end of the season, so we'll have something implemented by next year."
It will likely involve renting the field from the Impact, if the soccer team goes ahead with plans to give the pitch an artificial surface. The soccer team may be looking for renters to "monetarize" the facility, Smith said.
The Alouettes had talked to at least two local communities about building an all-in-one facility they could move into, but that appears to have fallen through.
The likely option now is to expand and renovate their space at Olympic Stadium, where they have trouble squeezing all the big bodies into some of the tiny meeting rooms.
It is a far cry from the luxurious training centre hockey's Montreal Canadiens have in suburban Brossard, Que., which includes two ice rinks and an indoor soccer field, but Smith lamented that "we're not on that scale."
Meanwhile, the Alouettes are expected to deal with another priority any day now by signing general manager Jim Popp to a long-term contract.
Popp has been the team's only general manager since it was reborn in 1996 after a 10-year hiatus. His ability to stack the club with talent has led to two Grey Cups and seven appearances in the championship game.
His teams have never missed the playoffs and have had only one losing season -- 8-10 in 2007 while in a rebuilding phase during one of Popp's two stints as head coach.
Popp's contract is to expire at the end of this season. Uncertainty over his future caused him to put his house up for sale and move his family -- he is married with six Canadian-born children -- back to his native North Carolina in the off-season.
http://www.tsn.ca/cfl/story/?id=328310



