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This group is led by businessman Bob Young, who serves as the chairman and is HSG's largest single shareholder, and also includes Hamilton-based steel company Stelco, CEO Scott Mitchell, and Woodbine Entertainment CEO Jim Lawson. The Hamilton Tiger-Cats and Forge FC are tenants of Tim Hortons Field and play their home games at the stadium. [26 ...
T.C. and Stripes are the mascots for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats. The Tiger-Cats also have employed an official hype man, named Pigskin Pete, since the 1920s. Pigskin Pete leads the Tiger-Cats fans in the traditional Oskee Wee Wee chant while wearing a custom number 6 Tiger-Cats jersey and a bowler hat. Pigskin Pete has been portrayed by creator ...
Ralph Sazio, Player, coach, GM and president of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats. He won four Eastern finals and three Grey Cups as coach from 1963 to 1967. [40] Vince Scott (1925–1992), played for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats, and was later a Hamilton city councillor. [41] Jim Young (1943– ), former pro American football and Canadian football player. [42]
Hamilton was linked to a professional soccer team as early as June 2013, when reports first emerged of a professional soccer league launching in Canada. [1] Hamilton Tiger-Cats owner Bob Young was part of a group of investors, predominantly from the Canadian Football League, working with the Canadian Soccer Association and president Victor Montagliani.
Robert Young (born 1953/1954) is a businessman who is best known for founding Red Hat Inc., the open source software company. He owns the franchises for Forge FC of the Canadian Premier League as well as the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League for which he is self-styled caretaker of the team.
File:Hamilton Tiger-Cats logo.svg This page was last edited on 28 January 2023, at 20:52 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
The stadium was the home of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the CFL from 1950 until it closed on October 27, 2012. [1] The club's previous home was the Hamilton Amateur Athletic Association Grounds . The stadium was replaced by Tim Hortons Field , with a fixed capacity of 24,000, on the same property.
The Hamilton Football Club was founded on November 3, 1869, in a room above George Lee's Fruit Store, where the club adopted the colours of black and yellow. [ 2 ] [ 1 ] The first game in franchise history took place on December 18, 1869, against the 13th Battalion (now Royal Hamilton Light Infantry) where the final score was not recorded.