The Daily Courier

NORTH STAR

Packers’ QB Aaron Rodgers getting rare chance to host playoff game on the frozen tundra of Lambeau Field

- By DAVE CAMPBELL

As Aaron Rodgers spoke with reporters in the wake of Green Bay’s lopsided loss at

San Francisco in the NFC championsh­ip game last year, the superstar quarterbac­k expressed an optimistic outlook for the Packers that came with one caveat.

“We’ve got to get one of these at home,” Rodgers said.

The achievemen­t has been unlocked for the first time in his 13 seasons as the starter, with the top-seeded Packers set to host Tampa Bay on Sunday afternoon. They’ve played in three NFC title games on the road under Rodgers.

Despite the relatively mild forecast — a high of 28 F (-2.2 C) with a chance of light snow — and the recent assertion by Buccaneers coach Bruce Arians that the weather won’t affect the results “at all,” no NFC opponent would ever prefer a January game at Lambeau Field to the alternativ­es.

Even with virus protocols limiting ticket sales to a scant 6,500, there’s still energy for the Packers to be gleaned from the hardy fans that will be spread out on the shiny metal benches around the oval-shaped stadium.

“It felt like 50,000 when we ran out of the tunnel, it really did,” Rodgers said after Green Bay beat the Los Angeles Rams in the divisional round.

“It was such a special moment. Forgot how much you truly, truly miss having a crowd there.”

This goal of playing on home turf for a spot in the big game has frequently eluded the storied franchise, actually, long before Rodgers took the reins.

Only three times in the 55-year Super Bowl era have the Packers staged a semifinal at Lambeau Field.

THE ICE BOWL

DEC. 31, 1967: Packers 21, Cowboys 17

The Packers took home the first two

Super Bowl trophies, but their win over Dallas to simply get in the second one still stands as one of the most remarkable performanc­es in league history.

Lambeau Field’s familiar label — the “frozen tundra” — can essentiall­y be traced back to this game, which became forever known as the “Ice Bowl” after it began with a kickoff temperatur­e of 15 degrees below zero (-26 C) and a wind chill factor in modern calculatio­ns of minus-48. The air was so cold that referee Norm Shachter’s whistle froze to his lips and tore off a chunk of flesh when he pried it off, prompting a subsequent switch by the NFL to plastic.

Coach Vince Lombardi uncharacte­ristically skipped a tying field goal try and ordered an all-or-nothing play, when quarterbac­k Bart Starr plunged across the goal line with 13 seconds left for the lead behind a block from guard Jerry Kramer.

“I didn’t figure all those people up there in the stands could take the cold for an overtime game,” Lombardi said. “You can’t say I’m always without compassion.”

WHITE ALL-IN

JAN. 12, 1997: Packers 30, Panthers 13

After losing in the playoffs to Dallas three straight years, the Packers were done a favour when Carolina — in its second season of existence — defeated the Cowboys in the divisional round. The balance of NFC power had begun to shift that year to Green Bay, which looked every bit the part of the top seed with Brett Favre guiding the offence and Reggie White dominating on defence.

The Packers were such a popular pick to win it all that coach Mike Holmgren even enacted a ban in training camp of the words

“Super Bowl” from their vocabulari­es.

With a temperatur­e of 3 F (-16 C), Favre let running back Dorsey Levens do most of the work with 205 total yards that helped overcome two early turnovers. The Packers went on to beat New England for their first title since the Ice Bowl squad.

“When I made the decision to come here four years ago, people laughed,” White said. “They asked if I thought we had a chance to win the Super Bowl. I said yes, because we had a quarterbac­k who could get us there and a coach who could get us there.”

FAVRE’S FAREWELL

JAN. 20, 2008: Giants 23, Packers 20, OT

Over the next nine seasons after the consecutiv­e Super Bowl appearance­s in Favre’s prime, from 1998-2006, the Packers went just 2-5 in the playoffs and didn’t get past the second round as he annually and openly mulled retirement.

Favre had one of his best years in 2007, as the Packers went 13-3 in the regular season and cruised to the NFC championsh­ip game against a wild card team in the New York Giants that was finally beginning to find its footing behind quarterbac­k Eli Manning.

Home field was not an advantage for Green Bay that day, with a temperatur­e that dropped to minus-4 degrees when

Favre — looking every bit his age of 38 — telegraphe­d a pass for Donald Driver on the second play of overtime. Corey Webster intercepte­d it to set up the winning field goal, and the Giants went on to beat unbeaten New England in the Super Bowl.

“This game, even when it was going back and forth, you just had a sense that it’s going to fall into place for us,” said Favre, who was traded to the New York Jets the next season after initially telling the Packers he was finished.

“That wasn’t the case.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Seats sit mostly empty at Lambeau Field during the national anthem before an NFL game between the Green Bay Packers and the Tennessee Titans on Dec. 27 in Green Bay, Wis.
The Associated Press Seats sit mostly empty at Lambeau Field during the national anthem before an NFL game between the Green Bay Packers and the Tennessee Titans on Dec. 27 in Green Bay, Wis.

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