Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Elements a factor as season wears on

- Sam Farmer

For NFL quarterbac­ks at this time of year, it’s all about the “W.” Not the wins but the wind. When the calendar flips and the leaves turn, so does the weather in many NFL cities, making games colder and wetter but also windier. And the latter can be the most cruel for someone who makes a living by trying to throw a leather ball from Point A to B.

Several games Sunday could be affected by those swirling gusts, among them the Jets at Bears, Buccaneers at Bengals and Eagles against Jaguars in London.

“As a quarterbac­k, I didn’t care if it was raining, snowing, sleeting, lightning, nothing — what mattered was wind,” said former NFL quarterbac­k Carson Palmer, who spent his first seven seasons in Cincinnati before moving on to friendlier meteorolog­ical conditions in Oakland, Calif., and the Cardinals’ climate-controlled dome in Glendale, Ariz.

“It’s just like a golfer. If it’s wet, you have a way to keep your hands and clubs dry. But as soon as the wind comes in, you can either throw in the wind or you can’t. And the only way to throw in the wind is learn it. So there was a huge learning adjustment.”

By Palmer’s thinking, the AFC North is the worst when it comes to those conditions. Whether it’s Cincinnati, Pittsburgh, Baltimore or Cleveland, the wind is unpredicta­ble and unforgivin­g. There’s a special emphasis put on quarterbac­ks there throwing with touch, knowing when to put air under the ball and let the wind take it or powering passes through the wind.

“When you have a crosswind, a big left-to-right wind, you have to learn to throw those speed outs, those quick 10-yard outs that you have to put zip on,” he said. “If you’re a little bit behind in the NFL, that’s a pick-six. In college it’s an incomplete pass. But if the wind catches that ball and you don’t put it where it needs to be, it doesn’t matter how strong your arm is, it’s a pick-six in the NFL. These guys are that good.”

The Bengals have no practice bubble — they’re the northernmo­st NFL team without one — so Palmer had to learn quickly how to deal with the elements.

“I found out it was a great advantage for me because I had big hands and could hold onto the ball and I could spin it in the rain,” Palmer said.

“The only time I ever felt at a Mostly cloudy with a 35 percent chance of a shower at Soldier Field. Around 53 degrees at kickoff, dropping to 49 degrees by 4 p.m. WNW winds (crosswind) at

15 mph, gusting to 30-37 mph.

disadvanta­ge was an early game against Kerry Collins when he was in Tennessee. We had a tornado come through, one of those games where you’re driving home and it takes three hours because trees have been knocked over and power lines have fallen.”

That game was Sept. 14, 2008, when winds in Cincinnati were gusting up to 70 mph. The stadium was a centrifuge of blowing beer cups, hot-dog wrappers and plastic bags. Collins, who came off the bench to replace an injured Vince Young, didn’t throw much in that game — 14 of 21 for 128 yards — but was uncanny with his accuracy. The Titans won 24-7.

“Kerry was just picking us apart,” Palmer recalled. “I went up to him after the game and was like, ‘Kerry, how did you do that?’ It just seemed like every time he dropped back, he was getting completion­s.

 ?? CHICAGO TRIBUNE/2013 ?? Fans and players alike will have to prepare for the elements in late-season games at places like Soldier Field.
CHICAGO TRIBUNE/2013 Fans and players alike will have to prepare for the elements in late-season games at places like Soldier Field.
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