On Now
Coming Up
  • Tue., May. 21, 2013 11:30AM - 1:00PM CDT Organized Team Activities (OTAs) The Packers announced details on the remainder of their offseason schedule, including the fact that five of the team’s offseason practices will be open to the public, weather permitting.

    The open practices will be three organized team activities (OTAs) and two mandatory minicamp workouts. The open OTA practices are slated for three Tuesdays — May 21, May 28 and June 11 — and will begin at 11:30 a.m. CT. The two mandatory minicamp practices are scheduled for June 4 and 5 with a start time TBA.

    Due to ongoing preparations on Ray Nitschke Field for training camp, the OTA and minicamp workouts will be held on Clarke Hinkle Field this year. Viewing of the open practices will be standing-room only along the Oneida Street side of Hinkle Field.

  • Tue., May. 28, 2013 11:30AM - 1:00PM CDT Organized Team Activities (OTAs) The Packers announced details on the remainder of their offseason schedule, including the fact that five of the team’s offseason practices will be open to the public, weather permitting.

    The open practices will be three organized team activities (OTAs) and two mandatory minicamp workouts. The open OTA practices are slated for three Tuesdays — May 21, May 28 and June 11 — and will begin at 11:30 a.m. CT. The two mandatory minicamp practices are scheduled for June 4 and 5 with a start time TBA.

    Due to ongoing preparations on Ray Nitschke Field for training camp, the OTA and minicamp workouts will be held on Clarke Hinkle Field this year. Viewing of the open practices will be standing-room only along the Oneida Street side of Hinkle Field.

  • Sat., Jun. 01, 2013 8:30AM - 3:30PM CDT Junior Power Pack Clinic The 16th Annual Junior Power Pack Clinic will take place June 1, 2013 inside the Don Hutson Center, the Packers indoor practice facility. Reserved exclusively for members of the Junior Power Pack kids fan club (ages 5-14), this event features the chance to run skills and drills with other Packer backers and a few up-and-coming Packers players.
  • Sat., Jun. 08, 2013 3:00PM - 5:00PM CDT Jerry Parins Cruise for Cancer The Green Bay Packers are gearing up for the 10th annual Jerry Parins Cruise for Cancer event, set for Saturday, June 8. The event once again features a motorcycle ride, but non-riding fans who want to support the cause are welcome to attend the post-ride party at Lambeau Field’s North Loft, the rooftop deck below the TundraVision in the north end zone.
     
    On the day of the ride, registration begins at 9 a.m. and will continue through 10:30 a.m. at Vandervest Harley-Davidson in Green Bay. The post-ride party begins at 3 p.m. at Lambeau Field in the North Loft, which can be accessed through the Bellin Health Gate. The party will include food and drink for purchase, a silent and live auction and fun while bringing awareness to cancer. Attendees will also have the opportunity to get autographs from Packers players in exchange for a $10 donation to the event.
  • Tue., Jun. 11, 2013 11:30AM - 1:00PM CDT Organized Team Activities (OTAs) The Packers announced details on the remainder of their offseason schedule, including the fact that five of the team’s offseason practices will be open to the public, weather permitting.

    The open practices will be three organized team activities (OTAs) and two mandatory minicamp workouts. The open OTA practices are slated for three Tuesdays — May 21, May 28 and June 11 — and will begin at 11:30 a.m. CT. The two mandatory minicamp practices are scheduled for June 4 and 5 with a start time TBA.

    Due to ongoing preparations on Ray Nitschke Field for training camp, the OTA and minicamp workouts will be held on Clarke Hinkle Field this year. Viewing of the open practices will be standing-room only along the Oneida Street side of Hinkle Field.

  • Wed., Jul. 24, 2013 11:00AM - 1:00PM CDT Packers Shareholders Meeting

    The Green Bay Packers 2013 Annual Meeting of Shareholders will be held Wednesday, July 24, at 11 a.m., at Lambeau Field. The meeting will take place rain or shine.

News

Mike Spofford

Mike Spofford has worked as a sportswriter in Wisconsin since 1995 and has been a packers.com staff writer since 2006. He has covered the Packers' last two Super Bowl appearances, XXXII and XLV.

Print
RSS

The 10 coldest games in Packers history

Posted May 13, 2011

Cold weather. The frozen tundra.

They’re as much a part of Packers history as Super Bowls and bleacher seats, so here’s a list of the 10 coldest games in franchise history. Well, more accurately, they’re the 10 coldest dating back to Vince Lombardi’s first season as head coach in 1959, the year the team began officially recording game temperatures.

For this list, double-digits need not apply. Too balmy. Seven of the 10 were played at Lambeau Field. More of them might have been road games had division rivals Minnesota and Detroit not been playing in domes for so long.

These 10 are ranked objectively, in descending order of kickoff temperature. In the event of a tie, the most recent game is described first.

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.