
On a football field, Mother Nature can be a force as heartless as any linebacker.
New Year’s Eve outlines a 26th anniversary of a barbarous “Fog Bowl,” a weird continue function that dejected a hopes of a Philadelphia Eagles and would go down as one of a many weird games in NFL history.
After a balmy and transparent initial half of a initial playoff diversion between a Eagles and a Chicago Bears on Dec. 31, 1988, a unenlightened haze drifted over Soldier Field, obscuring a perspective for everybody from a commentators in a press box to a really players on a field.
“When we consider about a final disease when Moses told a people a Death Angel was going to come in, it was like that,” Bears linebacker Mike Singletary told Comcast Sports Net
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WGN meteorologist Tom Skilling told CSN a haze that blanketed Soldier Field — that is perched on Lake Michigan — was “a finish misconception of a continue elsewhere in a city that day.”
“There hasn’t been another diversion that was influenced by windy conditions utterly like this one, we think, in a prolonged story of a NFL,” CBS announcer Verne Lundquist told ESPN in 2008.
Announcers couldn’t see a margin of play, fans couldn’t see a players, and players couldn’t see any other. Some of a Eagles coaches called for a diversion to be suspended, even yet a NFL had never called a diversion due to fog.
The diversion continued, and in a end, a Eagles — who had never beaten a Bears during Soldier Field,
Though Eagles fans might see it differently, Singletary told NFL.com:
Check out some video of a event:
Article source: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/12/31/fog-bowl-bears-eagles_n_6401636.html?utm_hp_ref=chicago&ir=Chicago