CFL Head of Global Scouting Greg Quick scouring world for talent

When Greg Quick took on the job of Global Director of Scouting for the Canadian Football League midway through last year, little did he realize the herculean scope of the job.

He was literally given a world of football players to identify and evaluate.

Since that day, he has now scouted almost 400 players from 34 countries all over the world. Not just seen all these players, but scouted them. Microscopically. He and his crew have been identifying players who would be a good fit for the CFL.

“I think we have one million seconds of video on players and 2,000 pages of documentation. We probably have the most extensive video library in the world of football players.We have film of the German Football League, Japanese college and X League and much more.”

So in the midst of the coronavirus pandemic which has seen all sports shut down virtually to a standstill, Quick continues to work.

The 63-year-old native of Plainsville, Ohio, seems ideally suited for the role of finding the best players from throughout the globe to play in the CFL.

Quick has over 39 years of experience in finding, recruiting and coaching top player talent for the CFL and NCAA. Over the past nine years, he has served as a defensive coordinator or linebackers coach for three CFL teams. He has also previously worked at several NCAA Division I, II and III universities in various roles, including athletic director, head coach, defensive coordinator, offensive coordinator and linebackers coach.

In other words, this latest role would seem to be the perfect fit.

However, the coronavirus, as it has for virtually the entire world, has thrown a huge wrench into the works.

For Quick though, it just means more time to study film and pore over stats to try to ID players both for the upcoming season and beyond.

Together with a team including Lawrence Hopper and Johnpaul Perri along with Dan Rambo of FBXchange and CFL CFO and Head of Football Operations, Greg Dick along with Ryan Janzen, Associate Vice-President, Football Operations, Quick has literally scoured the globe, looking for the best players outside of North America for the nine CFL teams.

“It’s tough to find the words to describe the work these people have done. They have jumped in everywhere to help at every destination no matter what the task.”

Either in person or on film he and the crew have assessed the talents of players all the way from Angola, Cameroon, Ghana, Nigeria Sierre Leone and South Africa in Africa to Australia,  from the Bahamas, Jamaica, Panama, Japan, Brazil and China, to European nations such as Austria, Belgium, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Great Britain, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Russia, Spain, Sweden and the Ukraine.

“We have travelled around the world one and a half times and reviewed almost 400 players, hundreds more than in the combines. We are truly experiencing the ‘globality’ of the game throughout the world today.”

Rambo, who has been tracking players the world over for the past decade through FBXchange, has built up a vast library and is well versed in the job of finding talent hidden away in the most obscure places. He is extremely impressed with the work Quick and his crew have accomplished in such a short span of time.

“Greg has done a fantastic job. He has progressed so quickly. As a former coach, he already knew how to evaluate a player for his own needs but now he is meeting the needs of nine teams. And he is so easy to work with.”

Quick’s CFL combine journey took him to Finland first and then Sweden, all on the same early January weekend. The crew then headed to France the following weekend and seven days after that had their busiest weekend with combines in Italy, Great Britain and Germany in late January.

Greg Quick being interviewed by Italy’s Manfredi Leone during CFL Global Combine in Italy

The frequent flyer points continued to pile up a week later as Quick and company flew to Japan for two combines on one weekend, one in Tokyo and the other in Osaka . The next stop after the successful Japanese combine was a return to Europe to oversee the combine in Denmark. As the word spread about the globetrotting CFL crew, a request came in to hold a combine in Brazil, so that destination was hastily added to the tour. The final combine was set for Mexico City but the tour was halted before the final event could be held due to the coronavirus pandemic, then shutting down all football worldwide.

Throughout this grueling trek, and trek it definitely was, Quick was doing more than simply assessing players. He was building valuable relationships. Thanks to his extensive coaching background, he stepped in to help coach players so they could achieve their best results. According to Felipe Pereira, the Brazilian federation’s Chief International Relations Officer, who organized the combine in Brazil,  Quick, or GQ as he was called, was an inspiration:

He understood the cultural differences and adapted as fast as he could to be able to deliver his message to all the players participating in the combine. He always gave a very positive message at the end of the drills, and one of these messages was that he felt the heart and passion in the Brazilian players, which is something you can’t teach, and it’s better at times to have that passion over skills, because skills you can learn, the passion, not always.”

Greg Dick was impressed with GQ right during the interview process, which also involved all the CFL general managers:

“Greg was the only non-scout we interviewed for the job and it was his coaching background and ability to build relationships that really struck us. He was our unanimous choice. And he lived up to our expectations. We thought he could do the job well and he was even better than we thought.”

Quick himself plays down his own efforts, preferring to continually point to the work of the people around him:

“I have had an amazing group of people to work with from Lawrence and Johnpaul to Greg, Dan and everyone else. We have been working in concert and it has been so energizing.We can’t forget that anytime you have a chance to leave a footprint on Earth like this, you have to take it. This has been an unmatched opportunity and nothing feels more rewarding. To be able to find these young men and give them a chance they otherwise may never have had is truly remarkable.”

To say he believes in the work he is doing and the future of CFL 2.0 is an understatement:

“This initiative has brought the football world together in a way no one would have thought possible. The support we have had worldwide has been stunning and the level of professionalism as good as anything I have ever seen. We would not have been able to get the amazing quality of players without the help of our global gridiron football partners. This ‘global invasion’ will strengthen the CFL and advance the tradition of the league. This is no longer just CFL 2.0 now. It has gone beyond that. “

 

Roger Kelly is an editor and a writer for AFI. A former PR Director the B.C. Lions of the Canadian Football League for 7 years, he now lives in Sweden writing about and scouting American Football throughout the world.