01-10-2019, 09:26 AM
Ken Anderson’s moustache. Dave Lapham’s biceps. Ken Riley’s sideburns. The smoke steaming off Eddie Edwards’ ears when he catches on fire on the heated bench. The Riverfront Stadium scoreboard, locked at Bengals 27, Chargers 7. All frozen together in a historic tableau known as “The Freezer Bowl.” Bengals founder Paul Brown floats through the minus-59 wind chill to the locker room to congratulate the first Bengals team to ever go to the Super Bowl. “I remember how elated he was,” says their coach that day, Forrest Gregg, recalling it all on the 20th anniversary. “He had a big smile and said, ‘We’re going to the Super Bowl.’” It is the second coldest game in NFL history. Gregg, Vince Lombardi’s Hall-of-Fame right tackle, plays in the coldest game ever 14 years before in the iconic Ice Bowl in Green Bay when he digs in with the rest of the Packers offensive line with 13 seconds left on Bart Starr’s fourth-down-do-or-die QB sneak that gives them the title. But the cold front for the Freezer Bowl moves in during Lombardi’s first NFL championship game in 1960 on an icy mud patch in Philadelphia, ending with the Packers on the Eagles 10 down, 17-13. Gregg remembers Lombardi never again practicing indoors on the way to five NFL titles.
“If there’s one thing I learned from Lombardi,” Gregg says all those years later, “it was if you’re going to play outdoors, you have to practice outdoors. I think that helped us more than anything because we got more reps, more plays in that week outside.” Gregg passes the torch of toughness to his Bengals in the bitterly cold weather embedding Cincinnati the week of the game with ominous game day weather forecasts. Cornerback Louis Breeden remembers it being so cold in practice that it hurt. “Forrest didn’t keep us out there very long,” Breeden says. “But I remember thinking, ‘what are we doing out here?’” While Lombardi would only let offensive linemen wear gloves, Gregg lets his receivers wear what he calls the new “golf gloves.” Except tight end M.L. Harris. “M.L. had these big leather gloves,” Gregg says. “I mean regular gloves, just like you would wear around driving your car or something. I asked him, ‘Can you catch in those things?’ and I saw that he could so I let him wear them. If you’ve got the equipment, use it. I’m not interested in seeing how tough of a man you are.” Naturally, Harris gloves the first touchdown of the day on eight-yard pass from quarterback Ken Anderson for a 10-0 lead midway through the first quarter and Bengaldom begins to feel the thaw.
https://www.bengals.com/news/this-day-in-bengals-history-bengals-thaw-freezer-bowl-for-first-super-bowl-trip
“If there’s one thing I learned from Lombardi,” Gregg says all those years later, “it was if you’re going to play outdoors, you have to practice outdoors. I think that helped us more than anything because we got more reps, more plays in that week outside.” Gregg passes the torch of toughness to his Bengals in the bitterly cold weather embedding Cincinnati the week of the game with ominous game day weather forecasts. Cornerback Louis Breeden remembers it being so cold in practice that it hurt. “Forrest didn’t keep us out there very long,” Breeden says. “But I remember thinking, ‘what are we doing out here?’” While Lombardi would only let offensive linemen wear gloves, Gregg lets his receivers wear what he calls the new “golf gloves.” Except tight end M.L. Harris. “M.L. had these big leather gloves,” Gregg says. “I mean regular gloves, just like you would wear around driving your car or something. I asked him, ‘Can you catch in those things?’ and I saw that he could so I let him wear them. If you’ve got the equipment, use it. I’m not interested in seeing how tough of a man you are.” Naturally, Harris gloves the first touchdown of the day on eight-yard pass from quarterback Ken Anderson for a 10-0 lead midway through the first quarter and Bengaldom begins to feel the thaw.
https://www.bengals.com/news/this-day-in-bengals-history-bengals-thaw-freezer-bowl-for-first-super-bowl-trip