• Sat. Sep 21st, 2024
   

GREAT NEWS: The 54-year-old rated-star pulls back the clock at Winnipeg Blue Bombers rookie camp.

GREAT NEWS: The 54-year-old rated-star pulls back the clock at Winnipeg Blue Bombers rookie camp.

GREAT NEWS: The 54-year-old rated-star pulls back the clock at Winnipeg Blue Bombers rookie camp.

 

 

Milt Stegall, a former Winnipeg Blue Bombers receiver, wanted to show he was still in fighting shape during his visit to rookie camp on Wednesday. (Ilrick Duhamel/Radio Canada)

Milt Stegall’s name is all over the Canadian Football League record book, but there’s one record he knows he’ll never own.

After lining up at his usual receiver position for the opening day of Winnipeg Blue Bombers rookie camp on Wednesday, the 54-year-old said that he has no desire to become the oldest active player in CFL history.

“No, I couldn’t play in a game, and I’m honest with myself,” Stegall said after a few reps at Princess Auto Stadium.

“I’m not that much of an egomaniac where I think I can play in a game, that would never happen.”

He may never surpass former teammate Bob Cameron, a punter who played until the ripe age of 48, but Stegall’s place in history is secure. He holds virtually every Bombers receiving record and is the CFL’s all-time leader in career touchdowns, with 147.

 

 

Despite his exploits, Stegall expressed anxiety about returning to the field 16 years after retirement.

“I woke up around three o’clock because I was nervous. “I’ve never been so nervous before a training camp in my life,” he admitted.

“Once I got out here, started moving around a little bit, you know, I got the butterflies out and it was a great time, it was an awesome time.

” Stegall, who is well-known for his fitness, said he loved battling with athletes half his age or younger during conditioning drills Wednesday.

He also said he enjoyed getting to “run around a little bit” for some plays, even though his body occasionally reminded him of his age.

 

 

“I can run forever, I can still do that, but the stopping-and-going stuff, that’s what made me retire,” he said.

Stegall said he didn’t want his post-retirement passion project to distract from the real purpose of rookie camp, so he had no problem with playing a limited role on Wednesday.

“I knew it would be no more than maybe five or six reps. I knew that because they have to evaluate these guys, they only have so much time.”

But even if he didn’t catch a pass — “I didn’t drop it, it was a bad throw,” he joked — Stegall was grateful for the reception he got from the Bombers organization and from the fans who showed up to cheer him on.

“They treat me so well when I come back,” said Stegall, who lives in Georgia but continues to be involved in the CFL as a TSN analyst.

“Once I cross that border and go back to Atlanta, no one’s screaming for Milt Stegall No. 85, so I gotta eat it up as much as I can.”

The veteran of 14 seasons in Blue and Gold also had plenty of fans on the field on Wednesday. One was former University of Manitoba Bisons receiver A.K. Gassama, who was chosen by his hometown team in the sixth round of the CFL draft last month.GREAT NEWS: The 54-year-old rated-star pulls back the clock at Winnipeg Blue Bombers rookie camp.

“He’s in great shape. It’s pretty phenomenal to see what he’s doing,” said Gassama, who remembers as a child watching Stegall perform his heroics at Canad Inns Stadium.

Stegall said he had good memories of his old Polo Park stomping grounds, particularly when he broke the CFL touchdown record, which he says will stay with him until the day he dies. “That’s where I made my name, that’s where I built my brand, so that means everything to me,” said the man. “That’s where Milt Stegall Drive is, so that’s the best part of Winnipeg there is.”

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