Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Bills call on fans to help dig out stadium for game

-

By The Associated Press

Logan Eschrich came to Buffalo to witness the snowstorm, and he stayed for the shoveling on Sunday.

Once the profession­al storm chaser saw the Buffalo Bills invite fans to help dig out a snow-filled Highmark Stadium for their delayed playoff game against the Pittsburgh Steelers, now scheduled for today, Eschrich couldn’t resist.

Sniffling and shivering from the cold, Eschrich detailed the seemingly impossible task he and the estimated 85-person shovel crew faced while being compensate­d $20 an hour. Winds whipped at 30 mph (48 kph), and snow was falling at a rate of 2 inches (5 centimeter­s) per hour at what was supposed to be the game’s 1 p.m. EST kickoff, which has been pushed back to today at 4:30 p.m. EST

“It would have been absolutely impossible (to play). We could barely see the next row down from us. And unfortunat­ely, it’s still that way,” Eschrich told The Associated Press by phone in the mid-afternoon. “We made progress shoveling, but not much at all.”

He said bleacher seats were entirely buried by snow, adding that it was treacherou­s to travel the mere two blocks to the stadium from where he camped overnight.

“I’m very happy they put the travel ban into effect,” said Eschrich, who works for Live Storms Media, and made the 16-hour trip north from Alabama, where he had planned to get video of tornadoes. “Nobody should be out here.”

The Buffalo region, which includes the Bills’ home in Orchard Park, was mostly at a standstill, with a travel ban in place due to a dangerous lake-effect storm that began on Saturday and was expected to last through Sunday night.

The storm was projected to dump up between 1 and 3 feet of snow, with the heaviest accumulati­on around Orchard Park.

With the storm’s brunt expected to wane by Sunday night, the National Weather Service’s forecast for Monday called for a chance of snow showers in the morning and a high of 19 degrees Fahrenheit (minus-7 Celsius), but with strong wind making it feel like minus-5 (minus-21).

On Sunday, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul said she expected the game to kick off as scheduled, with the end of the storm allowing time for roads and the stadium to be cleared of snow. A day earlier, Hochul and the NFL cited public safety concerns as the reason to push the game back to today.

Bills players and staff spent Sunday at home. The Steelers arrived Sunday afternoon with travel restrictio­ns having been lifted at Buffalo Niagara Internatio­nal Airport and northern parts of Erie County.

Former Bills center Eric Wood recalled his first time experienci­ng a lake-effect storm in Buffalo in November 2014, which has since been dubbed “Snowvember.” The storm dumped nearly 7 feet (2.1 meters) of snow on Orchard Park over a fourday stretch and led to Buffalo’s home game against the New York Jets being moved to Detroit.

Wood was among seven Bills players in his neighborho­od who had to be picked up by snowmobile and transporte­d to the team’s facility before being bused to the airport.

“The whiteout conditions are like nothing I had ever experience­d,” said Wood, who’s from Cincinnati. “Until you experience this snow and understand its effect, it’s hard to appreciate what can truly happen in such a short amount of time, and often without notice.

“Fans had a ton of fun watching us slip and slide over the field, but it wasn’t always fun to play in, not being able to move, and you’re freezing and all that,” Wood recalled with a laugh.

Former Bills special teams star Steve Tasker said the wintry conditions usually favor the home team.

“It’s not the being able to practice in the bad stuff that makes you ready to play on days like that, it’s living in it that makes you ready,” Tasker said. “Those guys get off the plane from say, Miami or Houston, and it just slaps you in the face.”

Tasker, however, noted the Steelers are accustomed to playing in the cold, which should even out any advantages today.

BUCS RELISH SECOND SHOT AT EAGLES >>

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers insist they never doubted themselves. Not after Tom Brady retired. Not even after the Philadelph­ia Eagles gashed them in an early-season, prime-time matchup that suggested there was a huge gap between themselves and the defending NFC champions.

Jalen Hurts and the Eagles dominated the Bucs in Week 3, running 78 plays to Tampa Bay’s 44 and outgaining the seemingly overmatche­d, Brady-less Bucs 472 yards to 174 en route to a 25-11 victory.

Philadelph­ia rushed for 201 yards, while the Eagles kept Tampa Bay out of the end zone until early in the fourth quarter.

After the sputtering Bucs offense broke finally through, with Baker Mayfield throwing a short touchdown pass to Mike Evans and adding a 2-point conversion to trim a 22-point deficit to 14, Hurts and the Eagles’ offense took the field and held the ball for the final nine minutes of the game.

A little over three months later, the NFC South champion Bucs (9-8) relish an opportunit­y to make amends when the Eagles (11-6) visit Raymond James Stadium tonight in the final game of the NFL’S wild-card weekend.

 ?? JEFFREY T. BARNES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A worker helps remove snow from Highmark Stadium, the Buffalo Bills’ home in Orchard Park, N.Y. on Sunday.
JEFFREY T. BARNES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A worker helps remove snow from Highmark Stadium, the Buffalo Bills’ home in Orchard Park, N.Y. on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States