Doug Flutie made the very most of his two years in Argonauts’ double-blue and now the organization is responding in kind by making him an All-Time Argo.

The team will do it up right Monday night when the Argos host the Redblacks with an official ceremony, but on Tuesday, Flutie did a conference call with members of the media talking about his time in Toronto.

Back-to-back Grey Cups in 1996 and 1997 with Toronto were just two of the three Cups he won in an eight-year career in the CFL that began with two seasons in B.C. with the Lions before moving on for four more with the Stamps in Calgary and finished with those two in Toronto before heading back to the NFL to attend to some unfinished business.

Both years in Toronto he was named the league’s Most Outstanding Player, an honour he had previously received on four other occasions.

But for all the success he enjoyed, pretty much wherever he went in the CFL — or the NFL for that matter — nowhere did he have more fun playing football than in Toronto.

“I think some of my fondest memories of playing football are from that Toronto team,” Flutie said Tuesday. “We had a very talented team in Calgary and we won a Grey Cup out there and I have a close (relationship) with a lot of those guys. The Toronto guys, we seemed to have more fun and that’s just the way it was.

“Out of my career my Boston College days, I mean, I lived with those guys. In university you live with them 24/7, you are around each other in the dorms all the time, there is just a closeness there that will never happen in the pros,” Flutie said. “But at the pro level there is no doubt in my mind that (Argonauts) team is the closest team I ever played for and the most enjoyable experience.”

Among the many reasons it was so much fun, besides the obvious fact that the team won, were the presence of two individuals in particular.

The first was Michael “Pinball” Clemons, a man whose involvement with the team continues to this day and, regardless of his role, has always managed to bring out the best in those around him.

The other was head coach Don Matthews, a true legend in the CFL and a guy whose passing the league mourned very recently.

“One of the major things Don did for me was to instill confidence in me to take over the reigns and just be free and play,” Flutie said. “He had a knack for deflecting the attention off the players and letting the players relax and go have fun. He was such a joy to play for. He won with every team. The league will miss him and I miss him.”

Flutie remembers arriving in Toronto and basically being handed the keys to the offence. That freedom, that ability to try and do anything he wanted is a big part of the reason Flutie had the success he did in Toronto and certainly the amount of fun he had here.

“Don always had this running joke and he was kidding, but he brought the offensive coordinator John Jenkins and I into the office together one day,” Flutie said. “He had supreme confidence in me. He said ‘Doug this is your team and John stay out of the way and don’t screw it up.’”

Flutie never had that kind of freedom again moving back to the NFL because “I needed to answer a couple of more questions about going back to the NFL” but he took that confidence with him and it made him a better quarterback because of it.

“I went from calling my own stuff, changing plays whenever I felt like it, taking risks to having a radio in my helmet and being told what to do and trying to execute and please someone,” Flutie said. “The one thing that carried over (when he did head back south) was because of the success I had doing it the other way, I started voicing my own opinion more and trusting my own instincts when I first went back to the NFL and my success in the CFL really played into that.”

Flutie wasn’t in Toronto for a long time and there will be those that question the honour he is being given because of that, but few will argue that in a very short time, Flutie was a very big part of one of the most successful times in the history of the franchise.

WHAT IF FLUTIE HAD STAYED?

Other than perhaps Warren Moon, no man in the history of professional football can speak to the differences between playing quarterback in the CFL and manning the same position in the NFL moreso than Doug Flutie.

Flutie spent eight seasons in the CFL but bookended around those eight years were four before he headed north in the NFL and another nine after he left the CFL for good.

It’s not a coincidence that he was a better NFL quarterback after spending those eight years in the CFL than he was in the four that preceded them.

“It was night and day,” he said of the freedom he had in the CFL compared to the NFL.

“It was like my college days (at Boston College) and my two-minute offence where I called my own plays. I always called my own plays in two minute and that is the only time I had that feel or comfort that felt like the CFL to me.”

Flutie admitted he often wonders what might have been had he come to Canada and never gone back to the NFL.

“I played 21 years of professional football and I would have loved to have looked at the numbers if I could have played all 21 years in the CFL and seen what the total numbers would have been,” he said.

mganter@postmedia.com