Montreal Gazette

Weather just part of the game in Canada

- BILL BEACON

Nasty weather and the CFL have a long history together.

Another chapter was written at the regular-season opener that began 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 and 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 interrupti­on lasting 84 minutes and the second 94 minutes.

Here’s a look at classic badweather games:

Fog Bowl: The longest game was the 1962 Grey Cup 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 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 Regina 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. Ice Bowl: 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 deep-freeze move in and turn the AstroTurf to ice. Thousands among the crowd of 68,318 walked to the park due to a transit strike. The Montreal Alouettes put staples on their shoes for traction and routed Edmonton 41-6.

Mud Bowl: A huge snowfall followed by heavy rain turned Toronto’s Varsity Stadium’s grass field to slick, sloppy mud for the 1950 Grey Cup game, won 13-0 by the Argonauts over Winnipeg. Wind Bowl: Coaches Ralph Sazio and Bud Grant agreed to modify a rule before the 1965 Grey Cup game at CNE Stadium in Toronto, declaring punts kicked against the wind dead as soon as the returner touched the ball due to 80 km/h winds. Sazio’s Tiger-Cats beat Grant’s Bombers 22-16, with all points scored by teams with the wind at their backs.

 ?? JOHN WOODS/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Edmonton players leave the field after lightning twice forced a stoppage on Thursday night in Winnipeg.
JOHN WOODS/THE CANADIAN PRESS Edmonton players leave the field after lightning twice forced a stoppage on Thursday night in Winnipeg.

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