San Diego Union-Tribune

RAMS ARE PREPARING FOR COLD LAMBEAU

- BY GARY KLEIN Klein writes for the L.A. Times.

The conditions were freezing — 8 degrees with a wind-chill factor of minus-15 — the last time the Los Angeles Rams played a coldweathe­r game against the Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field.

It was Dec. 20, 1992, and offensive lineman Jackie Slater thought he was prepared. For warmups, he put on layers that made him look like “the Michelin Man,” he said. But after discoverin­g he could barely move, he decided to forsake the extra gear.

During the 28-13 defeat, Slater learned something new about playing in the cold.

“I scraped the back of my hand and the skin rolled up like a chunk,” Slater said Monday. “Usually that would have been an abrasion. You just can’t be alarmed by those kinds of things.”

It will not be as cold Saturday when the Rams play the Packers in an NFC divisional-round playoff game, but the forecast in Green Bay, Wis., calls for temperatur­es of 30 degrees or below.

That’s relatively warm compared with the 1992 game Slater played in. And it’s downright cozy compared with the infamous “Ice Bowl,” the coldest game in NFL history. The Packers defeated the Dallas Cowboys in the 1967 NFL championsh­ip game that featured a minus-13 temperatur­e and a wind-chill factor of minus-36.

Both are a marked contrast to conditions in Thousand Oaks, where the Rams will be preparing this week in temperatur­es ranging from the low 70s to the mid 80s.

“We’ve got to be able to handle it, especially with just the limited opportunit­ies we’ve had to play in those settings,” Rams coach Sean McVay said Sunday in a videoconfe­rence.

Preparing for that change would be a challenge for a completely healthy team. But the Rams have several key players nursing injuries that could be exacerbate­d by the cold, including quarterbac­ks Jared Goff and John Wolford.

Goff has a right thumb that still is healing from surgery. Last Saturday, Goff came off the bench after Wolford suffered a neck injury and helped lead the Rams to a 30-20 wild-card victory in Seattle, where the temperatur­e was 39 degrees.

McVay has not said who will start at quarterbac­k against the Packers.

After the victory over the Seahawks, Goff said his thumb was fine. But, McVay indicated this week that the weather could factor into his decision.

“It makes it a little bit more difficult to grip the football just in general,” McVay said. “But if he’s not having any issues with it, everything that we’re going to do leading up to this week, we will take a lot of things into considerat­ion to try to make the best decisions.”

Goff has struggled in games played in temperatur­es below 30 degrees. Both were during the 2018 season, when the Rams advanced to the Super Bowl.

In 25-degree weather at Denver, Goff completed 14 of 28 passes for 201 yards with an intercepti­on. The Rams got 208 yards rushing from former Rams running back Todd Gurley in a 23-20 victory. Later in the season at Chicago’s Soldier Field, with the temperatur­e 29 degrees at kickoff, Goff completed 20 of 44 passes with four intercepti­ons in a 15-6 defeat.

“Playoff football is about more than all of the fantasy things that you see in the regular season,” Rams offensive lineman Andrew Whitworth said after the victory over the Seahawks. “It’s going to be about imposing your will on each other.”

Slater, who played 20 seasons for the Rams and was enshrined into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2001, said Rams linemen would be wise to watch Whitworth’s every move. Whitworth, a 15thyear pro, played in numerous cold-weather games during 11 seasons with the Cincinnati Bengals.

“He knows that, ‘ Yeah, I’ve got to stay warm, but I have to be able to move,’ ” Slater said.

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