
Bob Ackles - President and CEO, BC Lions Football Club - Governor, CFL
Bob
Ackles has been an integral member of the BC Lions for more than 50
years. From his earliest days as the team’s waterboy, Bob’s star rose
quickly, and by 1966 he was named the club’s director of football
development. He was promoted again in 1971 to assistant general
manager. Four years later, he was promoted to general manager, holding
that title until 1986.
Under Bob’s leadership, the Lions captured the 1985 Grey Cup -- their
first CFL title in 21 seasons. This was to be a triumphant but
temporary end to Bob’s Lions career, as he accepted an offer to join
the Dallas Cowboys of the NFL after 34 years with the Leos. Bob spent
six seasons in Dallas; three as vice president of pro personnel, and
three as vice president of player personnel. He also played a key role
in guiding the Cowboys back to the playoffs in 1991. Bob left Dallas
following that season, but the team he helped assemble would go on to
win Super Bowls in 1993, 1994 and 1996.
Bob joined the Phoenix Cardinals in 1992 as director of college
scouting before receiving a promotion to assistant general manager in
1994. Bob’s next stop was Philadelphia in 1995, where he was named the
Eagles’ director of football administration. A year later, Bob would
reunite with former Dallas Cowboys head coach Jimmy Johnson in Miami as
the club’s director of football operations, a position he held for five
years.
In 2000, Bob was named vice president and general manager of the Las
Vegas Outlaws. This put Bob in the history books as the only man to
hold executive positions in the CFL, NFL and XFL. With the XFL only
lasting a single season, Bob found himself out of football for the
first time in decades. Bob seized the opportunity to further his
education and enrolled in UNLV’s Fine Arts program.
In 2002, Bob’s triumphant return to the Lions was capped off with his
induction into the Canadian Football Hall of Fame as a Builder. In an
effort to return the club to its proper place in the community and the
CFL, he recruited one of the league’s most successful coaches of all
time, Wally Buono, and named him head coach and general manager in
2003.
In 2004, Ackles was inducted into the BC Sports Hall of Fame. Accolades
for Ackles work continued in 2005 when Bob was honoured with the Jack
Diamond Award by the Jewish Community Centre as Sportsman of the Year.
Bob is also a Schenley Award of Excellence winner. In 2006, the Lions
captured their fifth championship - the first since Bob’s return to
Vancouver.
In September 2007, Bob’s highly anticipated memoir The Water Boy,
a candid, personal account of his life and his more than 50 years in
professional football, was launched and received rave reviews across
North America.
In addition to his work with the Lions, Bob also serves on the board of
directors for the Vancouver YMCA. Bob and his wife, Kay, live in
Vancouver, and have two sons. Steve and wife Sherri have three
children, Robert, Ashley and Kyle. Scott and wife Theresa have two
children, Kasey and Robyn.
