Calgary Herald

Lambeau toughest field in NFL

- NANCY ARMOUR

GREEN BAY, WIS.

The Green Bay Packers have the Minnesota Vikings right where they want them. Or do they? The Vikings (10-6) visit Lambeau Field for Saturday night’s NFC wild card, and no place in the NFL has been tougher to play over the last three years. Green Bay (11-5) has won all but two of its last 28 regular-season home games, and its 22 home wins since the start of the 2010 season are one better than both New England and Baltimore.

But Lambeau hasn’t been quite so fearsome in the post-season lately, with the Packers losing their last two home playoff games and three of their last four.

In fact, all four of the Packers’ losses in home playoff games have come in the last six played at Lambeau.

“Home-field advantage, I know statistica­lly it may not be what it used to be, but to me there’s no place better to play than at Lambeau Field.

(10-6) (11-5) 6 p.m., Lambeau Field TV: NBC Radio: SN960 I love everything about it,” Packers coach Mike McCarthy said. “Definitely we feel it’s an advantage to have our crowd behind us, the surface that we play on ... It will be a great atmosphere.”

Few teams have better fan bases than the Packers, the only publicly owned team in profession­al sports. To be from Wisconsin is to be a Packers fan, and loyalty has nothing to do with the wonloss record. The entire state comes to a standstill on Sunday afternoons, and Lambeau has been sold out since 1960 (the only blackouts in Green Bay have to do with electricit­y). Parents put their children on the waiting list for season tickets when they’re born in hopes they’ll get them by their 40th birthday, and Wisconsin kids talk about Aaron, B.J., Clay and Charles as if they’re their best buddies at school.

“I’d rather be at home, I think anybody would,” Clay Matthews said Wednesday. “I mean, that’s what you play for ... (to) make teams come into your backyard. Especially with us. We like to think living in this environmen­t, playing in this environmen­t, it plays to us well.”

Weather is behind much of the Green Bay advantage, to say nothing of its mystique.

Buffalomay­havemoresn­ow, and the wind off Lake Michigan makes for some nasty conditions at Soldier Field. But the average temperatur­e in Green Bay doesn’t crack the freezing mark from December through February.

“You learn to live with it,” said Matthews, who endured a shock when he arrived in Green Bay from sunny California. “You can’t avoid the elements out here.”

 ?? Tom Lynn/getty Images ?? A Green Bay Packers fan with a frozen tundra hat cheers on his team at Lambeau Field Dec. 23.
Tom Lynn/getty Images A Green Bay Packers fan with a frozen tundra hat cheers on his team at Lambeau Field Dec. 23.

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