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Injunction to reinstate SFU football denied. Special adviser appointed

An injunction application brought by five players of the now-defunct Simon Fraser University football team has been denied in B.C. Supreme Court, but supporters say the fight to keep the program alive is not over.

The players were seeking to have the team revived after university president Joy Johnson suddenly announced in a statement five weeks ago the end of the 57-year-old program.

The decision received tremendous backlash and was widely criticized as non-transparent and unfair to players. A "Save SFU Football" pledge day raised over $700,000 to help keep the team going. 

On Thursday,  SFU appointed Bob Copeland, senior vice president of McLaren Global Sport Solutions, to serve as a special adviser to explore future football options. 

SFU Football Alumni Society president Mark Bailey said the court decision doesn't exclude the team from playing a nine-game exhibition schedule proposed to Johnson last month, arguing it's the best way for the university to support Copeland's investigation.

"You wouldn't send a principal into a classroom to assess a class with no class in session," said Bailey. 

"I believe it's in SFU's best interest that they have the program live as opposed to being dormant because otherwise, all they're doing is fact-checking and looking through data ... You need to see the processes that are transpiring to fully grasp and understand what the program is as of right now."

Speaking to CBC for the first time since cancelling the program, Johnson said she's "optimistic about finding a way forward together."

"I want to emphasize that I do think [eliminating football] was the right decision," she said.

"We have heard from our alumni, football alumni and the broader community ... and I'm excited about that

Read more on cbc.ca