Dallas history at LP field

MWH1967

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Cowboys at LP Field history
Dallas is making only their third regular season trip to LP Field, but the first two were two of our most unsettling games.

Game 1 was the famous Christmas night game of 2000. Despite it being one of the coldest games in our history (perhaps the coldest with a game time temp of 20 degrees F), there was a huge crowd on hand to watch the Titans demolish the Cowboys 31-0, guaranteeing home field advantage throughout the playoffs (for all the good that did).

It actually was a close game for a half (just 7-0 Titans), but an early 3rd quarter TD run by Eddie, a Henry Ford fumble return for a TD, and a Bulluck pick six blew the game wide open. Some have called it the "red jersey game" despite no red jerseys being worn. Also, this has been the only Titans shutout at home in their history.


Game 2 was Oct 1, 2006. It was significant for two reasons. First, it was Vince Young's first start of his career. Even though he played terrible in a 45-14 loss, he improved quite a bit over the course of the season and the Titans missed the playoffs by just one game.

The other notable event was the Haynesworth stomp. He stepped on Cowboy's center Andre Gurode's head, which required 30 stitches. Big Al was kicked out of the game, and he received the harshest suspension in NFL history for an in-game action, which was 5 games. This was also one of Goodell's first actions as commish of the NFL.


sheesh..time for a different outcome. For real.:(
 

theSHOW

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Nashville is such a small town and fun to party at. You can be in central downtown Nville and look downhill into the stadium. I hope our players get fired up for this one. The 2014 season needs this win bad.
 

Super_Kazuya

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I'll never forget the first game, Anthony Wright turned in as miserable a performance as you will ever see. Wright did not have great size for the position and one had to think at the time it would have been his swansong. But I always thought he had a decent arm and sure enough to his credit he was able to kick around the league for a bit.
 

theSHOW

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I'll never forget the first game, Anthony Wright turned in as miserable a performance as you will ever see. Wright did not have great size for the position and one had to think at the time it would have been his swansong. But I always thought he had a decent arm and sure enough to his credit he was able to kick around the league for a bit.

who?
 

AsthmaField

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Despite it being one of the coldest games in our history (perhaps the coldest with a game time temp of 20 degrees F)

Thanks for the read man...

But have you ever heard of the "Ice Bowl" against Green Bay at Lambeau Field? At kickoff it was -15 F with a wind chill of -48 F. The turf heating system at Lambeau malfunctioned and it had been covered with a tarp (which had caused moisture to build up under it). When they removed the tarp before the game, the moisture "flash" froze creating a layer of ice. The field itself quickly froze also so eveyone's cleats wouldn't penetrate making a mess with everyone sliding around. Players would try to kick the ground to create a divot in which they could place their foot at the start of a play to get traction. The Refs couldn't use their metal whistles because they would immediately stick to their lips, pulling the skin off when they removed it.

It was really REALLY cold.
 

d_dub88

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Besides the Gurode incident the only thing I really remember about the 2006 game is the Cowboy crowd and Jerry tossing out chotskies to the fans.
 

theSHOW

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Thanks for the read man...

But have you ever heard of the "Ice Bowl" against Green Bay at Lambeau Field? At kickoff it was -15 F with a wind chill of -48 F. The turf heating system at Lambeau malfunctioned and it had been covered with a tarp (which had caused moisture to build up under it). When they removed the tarp before the game, the moisture "flash" froze creating a layer of ice. The field itself quickly froze also so eveyone's cleats wouldn't penetrate making a mess with everyone sliding around. Players would try to kick the ground to create a divot in which they could place their foot at the start of a play to get traction. The Refs couldn't use their metal whistles because they would immediately stick to their lips, pulling the skin off when they removed it.

It was really REALLY cold.


Might as well turn this topic to the Famous 1967 NFL Championship game held on New Years Eve. Like the man said tempuratures, wind and playing on an entire field that was a solid sheet of ice made this game a NFL classic. The wind chill was minus 48 degrees. Imagine your bones aching. Two time defending champion Green Bay vs a warm weather Dallas team, who was looking for their 1st championship. Every breath taken by anybody in the stadium looked like an exhale of a smoker. By the end of the game polar bears had moved in from the Artic.
https://encrypted-tbn3.***NOT-ALLOWED***/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSjNg4OxXoHlFNOfUa1jKbgkz-cRQP0k8XEHIsBHOYbI7f7AiCh
 

AsthmaField

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Might as well turn this topic to the Famous 1967 NFL Championship game held on New Years Eve. Like the man said tempuratures, wind and playing on an entire field that was a solid sheet of ice made this game a NFL classic. The wind chill was minus 48 degrees. Imagine your bones aching. Two time defending champion Green Bay vs a warm weather Dallas team, who was looking for their 1st championship. Every breath taken by anybody in the stadium looked like an exhale of a smoker. By the end of the game polar bears had moved in from the Artic.
https://encrypted-tbn3.***NOT-ALLOWED***/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSjNg4OxXoHlFNOfUa1jKbgkz-cRQP0k8XEHIsBHOYbI7f7AiCh

Would like it twice if the software would let me.

I was too young to watch or remember that game, but my Dad told me all about it. Do you remember hearing that the band players all had bloody lips because their instruments stuck to their mouth? It was like licking a flagpole in -48 F.
 

xwalker

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CowboysZone ULTIMATE Fan
I'll never forget the first game, Anthony Wright turned in as miserable a performance as you will ever see. Wright did not have great size for the position and one had to think at the time it would have been his swansong. But I always thought he had a decent arm and sure enough to his credit he was able to kick around the league for a bit.

Career 1999-2007

6-1, 211

TD-INT 20-25
Passing Yards 3,590
QB Rating 66.3
 

theSHOW

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Would like it twice if the software would let me.

I was too young to watch or remember that game, but my Dad told me all about it. Do you remember hearing that the band players all had bloody lips because their instruments stuck to their mouth? It was like licking a flagpole in -48 F.

Didn't know about the band. But I do watch this classic every yearhttps://encrypted-tbn0.***NOT-ALLOWED***/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcRimPiSaxfo-o9Dy5E7kSaamX0sFWYSV7XAvME1F9FYi9UiBL5Lhttps://encrypted-tbn1.***NOT-ALLOWED***/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSbYxjs0UN6RRgiaOf3yi6ks4aOvXofGCd8ooNqtnOyhjbxdeGjEw
 

DandyDon1722

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Might as well turn this topic to the Famous 1967 NFL Championship game held on New Years Eve. Like the man said tempuratures, wind and playing on an entire field that was a solid sheet of ice made this game a NFL classic. The wind chill was minus 48 degrees. Imagine your bones aching. Two time defending champion Green Bay vs a warm weather Dallas team, who was looking for their 1st championship. Every breath taken by anybody in the stadium looked like an exhale of a smoker. By the end of the game polar bears had moved in from the Artic.
https://encrypted-tbn3.***NOT-ALLOWED***/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSjNg4OxXoHlFNOfUa1jKbgkz-cRQP0k8XEHIsBHOYbI7f7AiCh

I'm currently writing something for the NFL and that game is included - did you know on the opening kickoff the whistle stuck to the umpires lip and tore his skin. A big glob of blood froze there like a fang the whole game.

Norm Schactet (the referee that day) told his crew to put their whistles away and they just yelled at the players to stop at the end of plays.

It's the only game in NFL history where there were no official whistles blown in the game.
 

theSHOW

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I'm currently writing something for the NFL and that game is included - did you know on the opening kickoff the whistle stuck to the umpires lip and tore his skin. A big glob of blood froze there like a fang the whole game.

Norm Schactet (the referee that day) told his crew to put their whistles away and they just yelled at the players to stop at the end of plays.

It's the only game in NFL history where there were no official whistles blown in the game.

Norm "Schachter" ....ussually it is the head coaches yelling at the ref
 

MWH1967

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Thanks for the read man...

But have you ever heard of the "Ice Bowl" against Green Bay at Lambeau Field? At kickoff it was -15 F with a wind chill of -48 F. The turf heating system at Lambeau malfunctioned and it had been covered with a tarp (which had caused moisture to build up under it). When they removed the tarp before the game, the moisture "flash" froze creating a layer of ice. The field itself quickly froze also so eveyone's cleats wouldn't penetrate making a mess with everyone sliding around. Players would try to kick the ground to create a divot in which they could place their foot at the start of a play to get traction. The Refs couldn't use their metal whistles because they would immediately stick to their lips, pulling the skin off when they removed it.

It was really REALLY cold.
yeah, i was born that year. I should have said recent history. I don't have "Full Blown" CRS but as the years pass and the files in the long term memory are cleaned out, i lose some really cool stuff...lol:grin:
 

Nomad

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I remember that 2000 game, that was depressing. It was at night and the last game of the season, I felt like the only person watching it.

It's weird thinking that is 14 years ago.
 

DWhite Fan

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AnthonyWright2001.gif


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anthonywright.jpg
 

MWH1967

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as a side note...here are the top ten packer coldest games ever. Well, you guys mad e me look em up. I need to learn to let things go...:laugh:

In any case, the top game still resides where it should.

10. Nov. 28, 1976, vs. Chicago, 6 degrees
One of three contests quarterback Carlos Brown started for the Packers late in the ’76 season, this was the coldest game of Bart Starr’s tenure as head coach until the final one seven years later.

Green Bay’s John Brockington managed just 15 rushing yards on 13 carries while Chicago’s Walter Payton compiled 110 yards on 27 tries. The Packers tied it at 10 on Brown’s 11-yard TD pass to Ken Payne in the third quarter, but when Brown was intercepted for the second time early in the fourth quarter, his 5-for-17 day was done and he was replaced by Randy Johnson, who was sacked and lost a fumble on his only drive into Bears territory.

All in all, a forgettable 16-10 defeat.

9. Dec. 7, 2008, vs. Houston, 3 degrees
The Packers’ playoff hopes were on life support at 5-7, but the theory was a late-season surge could begin with a Texas team coming north to play in single-degree temps.

That theory didn’t pan out. Unfazed by the cold and a balky knee, Houston quarterback Matt Schaub threw for 414 yards, third most in Lambeau Field history, and drove the Texans 75 yards over the final 1:49 to a game-winning field goal as time expired in a 24-21 decision.

8. Jan. 12, 1997, vs. Carolina, 3 degrees
This NFC Championship was the first title game in Green Bay since the “Ice Bowl,” and the weather was fitting, with the wind chill minus-17 at kickoff and minus-23 later in the game.

The field, ruined the previous week by a rain-and-mud-filled playoff victory over San Francisco, was replaced in less than a week by sod trucked in from Maryland on more than two dozen semis.

The Packers fell behind 7-0 early but dominated the rest of the way, putting up 479 yards of offense. Running back Dorsey Levens accounted for 205 of them (88 rushing, 117 receiving), and his acrobatic, 29-yard touchdown catch near the front pylon of the south end zone preceded the Packers’ 10 points in the final minute of the first half. The 30-13 triumph sent the Packers to their first Super Bowl in 29 years.

7. Dec. 18, 1983, at Chicago, 3 degrees
In what turned out to be Starr’s last game as head coach, the Packers missed a chance to tie for the NFC Central title and possibly make the playoffs when the Bears drove 58 yards for a 22-yard, game-winning field goal by Bob Thomas with 10 seconds left.

Green Bay quarterback Lynn Dickey connected on just 10 of 30 passes and had four interceptions at Soldier Field that day, but the 10 completions covered 262 yards and his 5-yard TD pass to tight end Paul Coffman with 3:18 left had given the Packers a 21-20 lead.

Thomas had missed a 38-yard field goal early in the third quarter, but he made good when given a shot at redemption. Had he not, Starr might have coached a 10th season, and beyond, in green and gold.

6. Dec. 22, 2008, at Chicago, 2 degrees
The Packers were trying to spoil the Bears’ playoff chances in what became a very entertaining Monday night game at Soldier Field.

With the wind chill at minus-13, the Packers pulled out all the stops, with rookie QB Matt Flynn executing a fake punt to help set up a touchdown. The Bears tied the game at 17 on Matt Forte’s 3-yard TD run with 3:11 left, and then Chicago’s Alex Brown blocked Mason Crosby ’s 38-yard field goal try with 18 seconds left in regulation to send the game to overtime.

The Bears won the toss and scored right away, with Robbie Gould’s 38-yard kick the game-winner, marking the second time in a frustrating 6-10 season that the Packers lost in overtime without ever getting the ball.

5. Dec. 22, 1990, vs. Detroit, 2 degrees
The first of Blair Kiel’s two career starts at quarterback for the Packers nearly produced a victory. Kiel threw for 239 yards and ran for a 3-yard score, and rookie running back Darrell Thompson ran a kickoff back 76 yards for a touchdown as Green Bay took a 17-10 lead after three quarters.

But a fumble by tight end Ed West was scooped up and returned 22 yards for a touchdown by cornerback Ray Crockett, running back Barry Sanders capped a 133-yard day with a 6-yard TD run, and Crockett intercepted Kiel at the goal line with 1:39 left as Detroit triumphed, 24-17, one of five straight losses to end the season for the Packers.

4. Dec. 26, 1993, vs. L.A. Raiders, 0 degrees
The Packers clinched a playoff berth for the first time in over a decade and began a Lambeau tradition that’s still going strong, all on a frigid, post-Christmas afternoon.

In a 28-0 drubbing of a southern California squad that wanted nothing to do with the minus-22 wind chill, defensive end Reggie White recovered a Raiders fumble and lateraled the ball to safety LeRoy Butler, who took it the final 25 yards for the score.

Butler subsequently jumped into the stands in the south end zone, the first occurrence of what is now known as the “Lambeau Leap.”

3. Dec. 10, 1972, at Minnesota, 0 degrees
In the driver’s seat for the NFC Central title and their first playoff berth since the Lombardi era, the Packers clinched both in the minus-18 wind chill at Metropolitan Stadium in Bloomington, Minn.

Trailing 7-0 at the half, Green Bay took control with a 17-point third quarter as quarterback Scott Hunter and running back MacArthur Lane both scored on short runs. Lane and Brockington combined for 213 rushing yards while the defense held the Vikings to just 144 total yards and forced turnovers on all four Minnesota possessions in the second half. That included three interceptions of Fran Tarkenton, two by Willie Buchanon, in the 23-7 victory.

2. Jan. 20, 2008, vs. N.Y. Giants, minus-1
What ranks as the third-coldest contest in NFL Championship game history ended up sending the Giants on to their upset of the unbeaten Patriots in Super Bowl XLII.

The way the ball was bouncing in the minus-23 wind chill, though, it seemed the Packers were the team of destiny. A rare New York defensive breakdown resulted in a 90-yard TD pass to Donald Driver in the second quarter. R.W. McQuarters intercepted Brett Favre in the red zone, only to have the ball stripped and recovered by Mark Tauscher , setting up the game-tying field goal early in the fourth.

Then Giants kicker Lawrence Tynes missed on two potential game-winning field goal attempts late in the fourth quarter, sending the game to overtime, and the Packers won the toss. But Favre’s final pass as a Packer was picked off by Corey Webster, and Tynes finally delivered, 23-20.

1. Dec. 31, 1967, vs. Dallas, minus-13
The play, “35 wedge,” wasn’t drawn up as a quarterback sneak, but Starr ran it that way, plunging over the goal line with 13 seconds left in minus-46 wind chill for a 21-17 victory that sent the Packers to Super Bowl II.

People often forget that the game probably shouldn’t have been as dramatic as it was. Starr hit Boyd Dowler for two touchdown passes in the first half for a 14-0 lead, but the Cowboys were able to rally thanks to a fumble return for a score and a halfback option pass for a 50-yard TD.

Then it was up to Starr again late in the fourth quarter. Twelve plays, 68 yards, and immortality.
 
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