The first month of the 2026 Canadian Football League season has witnessed scoring at a record pace.
And while 14 out of 81 regular-season games represents just 17.3 per cent of the schedule, some of the early returns have been stunning on the offensive side of the ball.
For example, there have been just two instances this season of a team failing to score at least 23 points in a game and 17 instances of teams scoring 30 points or more.
A team has thrown for at least 300 yards in a game 16 times so far this season, and in seven cases they’ve thrown for more than 400 yards.
And of all the games played so far this season just one – Hamilton’s 23-18 win over Winnipeg on June 25 – failed to produce at least 55 points.
Three quarterbacks – Toronto’s Chad Kelly, Saskatchewan’s Trevor Harris and Montreal’s Davis Alexander – are on pace to shatter Doug Flutie’s 35-year-old record for passing yards per game over the course of a season at 367.7. And a fourth – BC’s Nathan Rourke – is just behind Flutie’s pace.
Overall, the league is averaging 7.26 yards per play, more than a half-yard above typical numbers from recent seasons, and 63.5 points per game, up more than 11 from a year ago.
All of this has arrived a year ahead of the league making significant changes to its field dimensions and some of its playing rules, which have been designed so that a greater percentage of scoring comes via touchdowns as opposed to field goals.
So, what’s accounting for this unanticipated jump in scoring across the league so far this season? Well, like most trends in sports, there are multiple factors in play, by far the biggest being the quality and experience of quarterbacks across the league.
Here is an overall snapshot of what’s causing the league’s offences to perform at such a high level so far this season:
The current quarterback class
You’d have to go back a little more than 20 years to find a starting quarterback class as good as the nine starters across the league right now. Quarterback quality across the league can be cyclical, and the CFL is at a point where the most-tenured quarterbacks – Harris, Bo Levi Mitchell and Zach Collaros – are all performing at a high level, while others are in their prime or early prime years. Collaros, Mitchell, Kelly and Rourke have won six Most Outstanding Player awards between them.
Quarterback availability
Through the first four weeks of the CFL season, not a single starting quarterback has been unavailable due to injury. That is a drastic contrast to recent years when backups have been pushed into duty early on and throughout many seasons, diminishing the level of overall offensive play. A year ago, for example, backups made eight starts during the first 14 games of the regular season.
Emergence of Canadian receivers as primary targets
After four weeks, six of the top eight receivers in the league are Canadian. Having Canadians in roles once dominated by Americans allows coaches to deploy Americans in positions once dominated by Canadians, like on the offensive line. There are good and bad offensive linemen of both nationalities but with each team dressing two or three American offensive linemen, they’re able to have better choice in their personnel and better depth when injuries occur. Meanwhile, the Canadian pass catchers who’ve moved into the elite class represent no drop-off in ability at receiver.
Penalty trends favouring offence
Offside penalties on offence are down, while offside penalties on defence are up. Holding on offence is down. Pass interference on defence is up as well. None of these are dramatic, but it adds up to making offences more productive.
Fewer quarterback sacks
CFL quarterbacks are staying upright at an historic pace, with just 46 sacks recorded through 14 games. That means quarterbacks are being taken down an average of slightly more than one-and-a-half times per game. Sacks are always a product of one of two things – or both – a lack of time to throw or receivers not being able to get open. So, when receivers are able to get open and quarterbacks have time to throw, sack numbers plummet and offensive production rises, as we’ve seen so far this season.
Fewer interceptions
CFL quarterbacks have thrown 16 interceptions in 14 games, with six of those belonging to Kelly, who also leads the league with nine touchdown passes. Having just 10 interceptions on the season from the league’s eight other teams is a dramatic shift from past seasons. Last season, the first 14 games of the regular season included 28 interceptions.
Success throwing deep against zone
CFL defences are playing an extremely high percentage of zone, most of which includes some version of Cover Four – meaning four defensive backs playing deep by slicing the field into quarters. This has been in large part a response to the narrowing of the hashmarks beginning in 2022, which allows offences to take better advantage of the full width of the field. That coverage should allow for higher completion percentages underneath but prevent deep throws down field. But that’s not happening. While the CFL has an historically high overall completion percentage of 70.9, almost one half (48.9 per cent) of passes downfield of 20 yards or more are being completed, including 25 touchdown throws against just nine interceptions.
The CFL’s new 35-second play clock
The league instituted a new 35-second play-clock that has improved game flow and forced teams to get to the line of scrimmage more quickly. The result has been an average of almost eight more plays per game compared to a year ago, a bump of roughly 5.3 per cent.
