CFL

From QB to cop: Ex-CFLer Brandon Bridge hopes to change perception of police

Brandon Bridge, who is Black, hopes to help change how police are perceived, especially by minorities. The QB, who spent five years playing in the CFL, is currently attending the Ontario Police College with the goal of becoming an officer with the Peel Regional Police.

Canadian, who is Black, attending police college with goal of joining Peel force

Brandon Bridge participates in a pre-game warmup as a member of the Saskatchewan Roughriders in 2016. The 28-year-old is pursuing a career in police work. (Brent Just/Getty Images)

As a Canadian quarterback, Brandon Bridge helped change a CFL rule.

The 28-year-old lobbied for a rule change governing the ratio of Canadians and Americans playing in a game. The idea was to make it easier for teams to start a Canadian quarterback.

Now Bridge, who is Black, hopes to help change how police are perceived, especially by minorities. The quarterback, who spent five years playing in the CFL with Montreal, Saskatchewan, Toronto and B.C., is currently attending the Ontario Police College with the goal of becoming an officer with the Peel Regional Police.

"The badge is tarnished and I'm going to make a change," said Bridge, who was born in Toronto and raised in Mississauga, Ont.

"I'm going to protect the Black brothers and sisters, and every other colour. When you show up to a call as a cop, a lot of people are scared [and] feel like they're in danger. I want to change that stereotype."

Police across North America have come under scrutiny following several killings by officers. The deaths of George Floyd in Minneapolis, Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Ky., and Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta at the hands of police ignited protests throughout the United States.

In Canada, relatives of a 62-year-old man who died in a police-involved shooting in Mississauga are asking for a public inquiry, while the shooting deaths of two Indigenous persons in New Brunswick have led to accusations of racism within the RCMP.

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Bridge says there are good police officers.

"I want to change mindsets and for people to trust, not just Black cops, but officers in general," he said. "There are a lot of good [police]. I have a lot of respect for the men and women who do the service.

"I feel policing, it's a job where you can't have any bad apples. People are calling a police officer because [they] are literally their last hope. But if that last hope is still negative, then who else can [they] turn to? The [police] are supposed to turn up to help a situation and not cause more harm."

Bridge says he understands the calls to defund the police and instead spend the money on mental health services and social service programs.

"I don't see why you want to keep investing into something that's giving you negative outcomes," he said. "I don't blame them for that."

'It starts by one'

As he did in the CFL, Bridge believes one person can make an impact on policing. He wrote about his decision to leave football for the police force and his experience with racism on Monday.

"It starts by one," he said. "A lot of the movement starts off with one mindset and then it just grows. I'm not the first one but I definitely want to take it further than what is now."

Police forces need diversity to "give kids hope," said Bridge.

"If you're seeing the same particular race or colour in a certain job, you kind of [see] what's happening."

Growing up, Bridge doesn't remember facing any racism that "stuck in [his] mind." He first encountered discrimination while attending the University of South Alabama, but being a football player "you were treated as royalty."

Bridge dressed for 69 CFL games, six as a starter. He completed 225 of 344 passes for 2,679 yards, 14 touchdowns and 10 interceptions. He also had 71 carries for 325 yards and four scores.

He split last season between Montreal and B.C., but became frustrated with football when it appeared teams preferred signing American QBs to their Canadian counterparts.

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Bridge became interested in policing while talking to officers at charity events.

"I would hear what they had to do, their daily lives," he said. "I didn't want to sit at a desk. I didn't want to be a football coach."

On the field, a quarterback needs to be calm and show leadership. Bridge believes the same is true for a police officer.

"You can't have a weak mind," he said. "You have to be mentally strong.

"You have to be a leader. If you see a quarterback on a game-winning drive, everyone's calm and collected. You've got have that swagger. You've got to have that leadership confidence as a cop and as a quarterback."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jim has written about sports in Canada for more than 40 years for The Canadian Press, CBC Sports, CFL.ca and Swimming Canada. He has covered eight Olympic Games and three Paralympics. He was there the night the Edmonton Oilers won their first Stanley Cup and has covered 12 Grey Cups.

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