The Canadian Football League’s off-season conversation officially gets serious on Monday.

When the league’s winter meetings convene in Calgary, it won’t just be coffee, handshakes and polite small talk. Presidents, general managers, head coaches, league executives, the Players’ Association, and commissioner Stewart Johnston will be locked in discussions that could shape how the CFL looks, feels, and operates well beyond 2026.

At the centre of the week is a full agenda that covers nearly every aspect of the game — rules, roster building, playoffs, scheduling, player compensation, and even Olympic considerations. Rules will, as usual, take up a large share of oxygen.

The league will review how recently approved rule changes are being applied, including the cascading tactical adjustments required to implement the structural changes announced last September — particularly the last three-minute rules. There’s also another round of proposed tweaks on the table, ranging from short-yardage plays and quarterback sneaks to pre-snap penalties and overtime formats.

Those conversations matter. Small adjustments can have a big impact, especially in a league where timing, field position and clock management are everything. The CFL has never been shy about tinkering, but the challenge remains finding the balance between innovation and preserving what makes the game uniquely Canadian.

Replay will also be under the microscope, with a review of the replay centre’s mandate. In an era where fans expect instant clarity — and frustration mounts quickly when calls linger — how replay is used and communicated remains a hot-button issue.

Roster construction and player rights are another major theme.

Negotiation lists will be discussed, including whether an American player draft could serve as an alternative to acquiring and managing U.S. player rights. That would represent a significant philosophical shift for a league that has long relied on its current system, and it’s the kind of topic that could spark spirited debate among front offices.

There’s also a forward-looking lens on the agenda, with Olympic guidelines tied to the 2028 Los Angeles games. Player eligibility, participation limits for camps and potential scheduling implications are all part of the discussion — a reminder that the CFL continues to think about its place in a global football ecosystem, not just its nine-team bubble.

Scheduling, playoffs and free agency won’t be ignored either.

The 2028 CFL schedule is already on the radar, as are potential adjustments to the Grey Cup playoff format in future seasons. Free agency and the communication window are also up for review, with possible tweaks to both the format and the timeline — an area where teams, agents, and players all have strong opinions.

Off the field, the league is looking at ways to grow revenue and modernize its presentation. Additional on-uniform branding opportunities and new league-wide commercial inventory are part of the conversation, as is end-of-season player recognition and possible changes to the CFL awards and All-CFL formats.

There’s also a practical side to the meetings that doesn’t always grab headlines but matters as much: contingency planning for inclement weather, stadium operations, fan experience, communication guidelines and, notably, player compensation transparency.

Taken together, it’s a wide-ranging agenda — and intentionally so.