There’s a stat that stops people cold when they hear it for the first time: Kevin Glenn is the only player in Canadian Football League history to have had his rights held by all nine CFL teams. Not just a couple of stops, not a well-travelled career by ordinary standards every single franchise, from coast to coast. That kind of record doesn’t happen by accident. It takes resilience, adaptability, and an absolute refusal to stop competing. For nearly two decades, Kevin Glenn embodied exactly that, and his story remains one of the most compelling in professional Canadian football.
Early Life, Age, and Background
Born and Raised in Detroit
Kevin Glenn Jr. was born on June 12, 1979, in Detroit, Michigan. As of 2025, he is 46 years old. He grew up attending Detroit St. Martin de Porres High School, where he first developed the arm strength and football instincts that would eventually carry him across a continent. Detroit has long produced tough, gritty athletes, and Glenn fit that mould from an early age. He wasn’t the flashiest prospect around, but he had something more durable a work ethic that coaches notice immediately and rivals learn to respect over time.
After high school, he took his game to Illinois State University, where he played for the Redbirds from 1997 to 2000. During those four years, he set 25 school records, threw for over 8,251 yards and 62 touchdowns, and even ran for 611 yards with eight scores. In 1998, he led Illinois State to their first-ever playoff appearance. That’s not a footnote that’s a legacy. Yet despite all that production, the NFL passed on him entirely in the 2001 draft. He went undrafted, which many would see as a door closing. Glenn saw it as an opening.
Family and Relationship Status
Kevin Glenn tends to keep his personal life well away from the public eye, which is actually quite common among CFL veterans who spend years living out of a suitcase and moving from city to city. His marital status and details about his immediate family have not been formally or widely reported in the media. What is clear from his public presence and post-career interviews is that family and community remain priorities for him. His commitment to youth coaching and mentorship which defines his post-playing years speaks to a man who fundamentally values nurturing the next generation, both on and off the field. Whether he has children of his own is not publicly confirmed, but his dedication to young athletes suggests a natural instinct for guiding and protecting others.
A Career Built on Perseverance, Not Pedigree
From Saskatchewan to History
Kevin Glenn launched his professional career with the Saskatchewan Roughriders in 2001, signing on as an undrafted free agent. His first three seasons were rough, honestly. He posted a 6:16 touchdown-to-interception ratio during that stretch numbers that would have finished most quarterbacks’ careers before they really started. But Glenn stayed ready, kept improving, and waited for his moment. That patience paid off enormously.
In 2004, after being traded to the Toronto Argonauts and then quickly flipped to the Winnipeg Blue Bombers, Glenn found his footing. Winnipeg gave him the opportunity to start regularly, and he grabbed it. He immediately showed what a capable, composed quarterback could look like under pressure. Over his time with the Blue Bombers from 2004 to 2008, he became one of the league’s most reliable starters and then came 2007.
The Best Season of His Career
The 2007 CFL season stands as the defining chapter of Kevin Glenn’s playing career. He threw for an extraordinary 5,117 yards, led the Winnipeg Blue Bombers to the East Division title, and earned the Terry Evanshen Trophy as the East Division’s Most Outstanding Player. He also led the league in passing yards that year and earned CFL East All-Star recognition. Furthermore, he guided Winnipeg all the way to the Grey Cup Championship gam a remarkable achievement by any measure.
Tragically, Glenn broke his arm in the Eastern Final and couldn’t play in the Grey Cup itself. The Blue Bombers, without their starting quarterback, fell to his former team, the Saskatchewan Roughriders. It remains one of the more heartbreaking “what if” moments in recent CFL history. Nevertheless, that season cemented his reputation as a legitimate starting quarterback in one of the world’s most physically demanding leagues.
Completing the Circuit
After Winnipeg, Kevin Glenn continued his journey through the CFL landscape like few players ever have. He suited up for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats from 2009 to 2011, where he also earned the Tom Pate Memorial Award in 2011 a prestigious honour presented annually by the CFL Players’ Association to a player who demonstrates exceptional contribution to his team, community, and the union itself. He then moved to the Calgary Stampeders from 2012 to 2013, the BC Lions in 2014, and made additional stops with the Montreal Alouettes, before returning to Saskatchewan for a third time in 2017.
In January 2018, the Edmonton Eskimos signed Glenn the ninth and final CFL team to do so making him the first and only player in league history to have been part of every franchise. He dressed for his 300th CFL game on September 29, 2018, joining only Damon Allen and Anthony Calvillo on that elite list. He officially retired on June 12, 2019, on his 40th birthday, announcing the news on the Rod Pedersen Show. The timing was pure Kevin Glenn deliberate, meaningful, on his own terms.
Achievements and Career Statistics
The numbers tell an impressive story. Over 18 CFL seasons, Kevin Glenn completed 4,068 passes out of 6,434 attempts for a 63.23 completion percentage. He threw for 52,867 career passing yards sixth on the CFL’s all-time list along with 294 touchdowns and 207 interceptions across 304 career games. His highlights include the Terry Evanshen Trophy (2007), CFL East All-Star recognition (2007), the Tom Pate Memorial Award (2011), and the unique, unprecedented distinction of being the only player ever affiliated with all nine CFL teams. No one else in the league’s history can claim that record, and in all likelihood, no one ever will again.
Net Worth
A precise, verified net worth figure for Kevin Glenn is not publicly available, as CFL salaries while respectable are not in the same league as NFL contracts, and Glenn has never publicized his finances. Based on his 18-year career as a starting and backup quarterback in the CFL, combined with salary scales typical of veteran CFL quarterbacks during his era, informed estimates place his career earnings in the range of $3 million to $5 million CAD. Factoring in his post-retirement work in coaching and community involvement, his overall estimated net worth sits in the range of $1.5 million to $3 million CAD. It reflects a career earned through consistency and longevity rather than a single blockbuster contract.
Life After Football: Coaching and Community
From the Gridiron to the Sideline
Kevin Glenn didn’t stay idle after retirement. In May 2023, he was hired as the head football coach at University Liggett School in Grosse Pointe Woods, Michigan a program competing in the Catholic High School League. He made an immediate impact, leading the Knights to a 7-3 overall record in his first season, including a 4-1 mark in the Intersectional 2 conference and a playoff berth. His focus on quarterback development stood out particularly, with sophomore quarterback Nikkos Davis emerging as a standout player who later attracted college offers.
Then, in May 2024, Glenn moved to the University of Detroit Jesuit High School and Academy in Detroit as head coach, taking over a program looking to rebuild in the competitive Catholic League AA division. The 2024 season produced a 1-8 record, but Glenn prioritized long-term program development over short-term results a philosophy that mirrors his own playing career. As of late 2025, he remains the head coach at U-D Jesuit, focused on mentoring young athletes and developing the kind of character and resilience that defined his own extraordinary journey through the CFL.
Why Kevin Glenn’s Story Still Matters
Kevin Glenn never won a Grey Cup. The NFL never gave him a shot. He spent most of his career being underestimated, traded, released, and re-signed often in the offseason, often under circumstances outside his control. And yet, through all of it, he kept showing up. He kept throwing the ball, earning the respect of teammates and coaches across nine different franchises and four different decades of professional football. His story isn’t about the trophy at the end. It’s about the relentless willingness to compete, to adapt, and to give everything you have regardless of the circumstances. In Canadian football and really, in any walk of life that kind of example is worth celebrating.
