Toronto Star

WHEN IT RAINS IT POURS

Bombers and Eskimos have company in CFL’s rotten weather lore A couple sits in the rain during a lightning delay in Winnipeg on Thursday.

- BILL BEACON

Nasty weather and the Canadian Football League have a long history together. Another chapter was written at the regular season opener that began on Thursday night but didn’t end until 1:17 a.m. local time on Friday. The Edmonton Eskimos topped the Winnipeg Blue Bombers 33-30 on Sean Whyte’s last-minute field goal in a game that took five hours 40 minutes to play — the longest continuous game and second longest overall in league history. The game was interrupte­d twice in the second quarter by severe thundersto­rms, the first for 84 minutes and the second for 94 minutes. Here’s a look at classic badweather games:

FOG BOWL

The longest game ever was the 1962 Grey Cup game in Toronto, won 28-27 by Winnipeg over the Hamilton Tiger-Cats. Beginning in the second quarter, a thick fog moved onto Exhibition Stadium from Lake Ontario, reducing visibility to near zero. It got worse as the game went on and officials opted to suspend the game with 9:29 left in the fourth quarter. It was completed the following day.

LIGHTNING STRIKE

An Aug. 19, 2007 game in Regi- na between the Roughrider­s and Eskimos was interrupte­d for 58 minutes after a huge flash of lightning struck during a heavy downpour 1:40 into the fourth quarter. Referee Andre Proulx sent the players and officials to their dressing rooms. Not long after, the lights went out at Mosaic Stadium. The Roughrider­s trailed 32-27 when play stopped, but came back to win 39-32.

LABOUR DAY DELAY

Last Sept. 4, a game between Hamilton and the Toronto Argonauts was suspended for more than two hours at 6:45 of the second quarter due to severe thundersho­wers and lightning. The start of an Aug. 4, 2016 game in Winnipeg was delayed 2.5 hours for the same reason.

ICE BOWL

There were no interrupti­ons, but the 1977 Grey Cup game at the then-roofless Olympic Stadium in Montreal was all about weather. Groundskee­pers used salt to melt a heavy snowfall only to see a deepfreeze move in and turn the AstroTurf to ice. Thousands among the crowd of 68,318 walked to the park from downtown due to a transit strike. And the Montreal Alouettes put staples on their shoes for traction and routed the Edmonton Eskimos 41-6.

 ?? JOHN WOODS/THE CANADIAN PRESS ??
JOHN WOODS/THE CANADIAN PRESS

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