CFL 1995 Baltimore Stallions The 83rd Grey Cup Football Championship Ring, Custom Baltimore Stallions Champions Ring

$195.00

  • Ring Code: CFL1995
  • Availability: In Stock

Available Options

Tags: Football Champions Ring, custom champions ring, 1995 CFL champions ring, Baltimore Stallions champions ring, Replica Champions Ring

1995 Baltimore Stallions The 83rd Grey Cup Football Championship Ring, Custom Baltimore Stallions Champions Ring

Material: You can choose material to get this ring in copper, silver, or yellow gold

Size: Standard US size from size 8 to size 15 (some rare size need about some extra days to make)
high grade studded AAA CZ on top

All Stones are prong set by our skilled workers, not glued

Deep Sharp engraving and 3 D letters.

All Details Are Clear to See

Solid ring, very heavy

Weight: about 45 to 60 grams, around 220 to 260 grams with packing

Packing: Luxury Wooden Gift box

Custom service: Customize service is available for this ring, we can put your name and number on the ring to make your championship ring personalized, if you want this custom service, please put your name and number on the Column when you made the purchase

The 83rd Grey Cup aka The Wind Bowl was the 1995 Canadian Football League championship game played between the Baltimore Stallions and the Calgary Stampeders at Taylor Field in Regina, Saskatchewan. The Stallions won the game by a score of 37-20. It marked the only time that an American-based team won the Grey Cup.

The Baltimore Stallions (known officially as the "Baltimore Football Club" and later as the "Baltimore CFL Colts")in its inaugural season) were a Canadian Football League team based in Baltimore, Maryland, in the United States, which played the 1994 and 1995 seasons. They were the most successful American team in the CFL's generally ill-fated southern expansion effort into the United States, and by at least one account, the winningest expansion team in North American professional sports history at the time.[1] They had winning records in each season, won a division championship, and, in 1995, became the only American franchise ever to win the Grey Cup.

Only a month after the Stallions' Grey Cup triumph, the state's Maryland Stadium Authority and the City of Baltimore announced that they had reached an agreement with Art Modell, the long-time owner of the Cleveland Browns of the National Football League, (NFL) to move his franchise to Baltimore for the 1996 season. Knowing they could not begin to compete with an overwhelmingly more popular brand in their home country, the Stallions relocated to Montreal as the third and current incarnation of the Montreal Alouettes. They are thus one of three Grey Cup champions in the modern era to subsequently fold (the others being the Ottawa Rough Riders and the original Alouettes). The CFL considers the Stallions to be a separate franchise from the Alouettes.

Ask for Review

Review Button