Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Bibbles Bawel and The Tripper


By Tom Hawthorn
Post Mortem (WashingtonPost.com)
May 26, 2009


At his death May 17 aged 83, David G. Humphrey was praised for his brilliance as a defence lawyer, his thoroughness as a prosecutor, and his fair-mindedness as a judge.

As a justice of the Superior Court of Ontario, he carried the honorific Honourable before his name.

On the bench, it was said he more than once referred to himself by the nickname Merciful Dave.

It is a quality he may have exercised while keeping in mind his own behavior on the wintry afternoon of Nov. 30, 1957.

On that day, a man who dedicated his life to the law succumbed to a scofflaw's temptation. The incident earned for him another nickname, as well as a spot in the lore of Canadian sport.

Born in 1925 in Passaic, N.J., he moved north with his family as a teenager. He joined the U.S. Navy during the Second World War, returning to Toronto afterwards to complete law studies at Osgoode Hall.

He was a well-known lawyer in Toronto when he decided to attend the Grey Cup game, emblematic of Canadian football supremacy. Lacking a ticket, he called on his familiarity with the local constabulary to sneak inside Varsity Stadium.

The championship game, which pits a team from the East versus one from the West, is known as The Grand National Drunk, a description as much jocular as factual. In 1957, the game was for the first time broadcast on television from coast to coast. The stadium was sold out for the showdown between the Winnipeg Blue Bombers and the Hamilton Tiger-Cats.

Humphrey stood on the sidelines, sipping cheer, in the form of rye whiskey, from a brown paper bag. He would later say he had been unnerved by a chance encounter with a fellow fan, who turned out to be the foreman of a jury who had sent one of his clients to the hangman but a year earlier. Humphrey refused to shake the man's extended hand.

The lawyer nursed his grudge as well as his drink as he stood along the Winnipeg sideline.

A roar from the crowd caught his attention. Hamilton's Ray (Bibbles) Bawel (pronounced bobble) had intercepted a pass and was racing towards the end zone. He had evaded all tacklers. Ahead of him lurked only grass.

It was at this point the lawyer stuck out a foot.

Now, he did not have a bet on the game, nor an affinity for either team. It just seemed like a funny thing to do at the time, he would later recount.

Bawel fell to the ground. In the ensuing uproar, Humphrey slipped away in the crowd.
Winnipeg was assessed a penalty, though none of the players was responsible for the trip. The ball was moved halfway to the goalline. Bawel and Hamilton went on to win the Grey Cup by 32-7.

The next morning, the Toronto Telegram newspaper offered a cash reward for the culprit.

Humphrey felt sick. His mentor was the newspaper's lawyer.

A quiet confession and some urgent whispering led to his identity remaining a secret for 20 years.

Feeling bad about costing Bawel a touchdown, Humphrey later presented him with a gold watch on which he had engraved "Grey Cup 1957 -- The Tripper."

As it turned out, the Grey Cup was Bibbles Bawel's final game as a professional. He had earlier spent three seasons with the Philadelphia Eagles before serving in the U.S. Army. After leaving football, he returned to his native Indiana.

The Tripper was responsible for at least one other incidence of odd, perhaps even boorish, behavior in public. He once interrupted applause for the Greek soprano Maria Callas by booing her performance at Massey Hall in Toronto. On that occasion, he was identified by name in the newspaper.

3 comments:

Dennis K.Orlandini said...

I am happy to report that Edward Raymond 'Bibbles' Bawel is still with us. A website that lists the 1,000 oldest living Pro Football players and coaches (NFL, AFL, AAFC induividuals, are listed, but not Canadian Football) lists Bawel today (11/11/11) as the 429th oldest living player or head coach.
He will turn 81 in ten days (born 11/21/1930).
After playing for Evansville University in Indiana and graduating in 1952, he was drafted as a Defensive Back by the Philadelphia Eagles. After his '52 rookie year he was drafted again, but this time by the U.S. Army towards the end of the Korean War. After missing the 1953 & 1954 seasons in the military and despite the long career interuption, Bawel came back to have his best NFL year in 1955. His 9 Interceptions was good enough to finish 2nd in the league in that category and he had the longest INterception return for a touchdown in the league for that same season. His final NFL year was with the 1956 Eagles.He reported to the Eagles Summer training camp in 1957 and there the detAILS GET FUZZY. EITHER HE FAILED TO MAKE THE TEAM OR WAS INVOLVED IN A CONTRACT DISPUTE, WHICH LED TO THE EAGLES RELEASING HIM. That led to his signing with Hamilton of the CFL,which in turn led to his fateful meeting with "The Tripper".
As the article points out, that Grey Cup game was Bawel's final pro game. He retired at age 27. He was offered a contract by Hamilton in 1958, but Bawel decided to pursue non-football interests. Maybe he found the practice of Canadian fans, like The Tripper, actually becoming participants in games, instead of being mere spectators, a little too foreign to his tastes and expectations.
- Dennis Orlandini

Unknown said...

I know this is 6 years later, but thought I'd add a comment for you. Bawel had been undrafted but Jim Trimble got the Philadelphia Eagles to give him a tryout, leading to his years in the NFL. He later followed Trimble when Trimble became coach of the Ti-Cats.

The tripping incident stands out in my mind. It was the first Grey Cup I watched (first one ever on TV). I was in Grade 4, and decided to write a short piece on the incident. It was my very first shot at cursive writing, although the letters were still not connected. But it was legible and my teacher, Miss Squires, while not a football fan, expressed interest. That encouragement was key to my progress in the educational system. And I owe it all to Bibbles Bawel!

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