Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Lambeau Field hosting its first hockey game. Following the success of the "Cold War", collegiate ice hockey game held in 2001 at Michigan State's Spartan Stadium, hockey teams from Wisconsin and Ohio State met in the Frozen Tundra Hockey Classic, an outdoor game played on a temporary rink inside the stadium on February 11, 2006. The Badgers ...
The game was the second outdoor game involving US college teams, the first being "The Cold War". The matchup pitted the men's ice hockey programs from the visiting Ohio State University Buckeyes and the host University of Wisconsin–Madison Badgers. [1] At the time, Ohio State represented the now-defunct CCHA while Wisconsin was a member of ...
For the 2003 Heritage Classic, the NHL received over 900,000 requests from all over the world for a chance to buy one of the 57,167 tickets available. CBC's Hockey Night in Canada telecast of the game drew 2.7 million viewers, a record for a regular season game for the half-century old television program. [19]
The day after the letter, Genrich called off a meeting that could have restarted negotiations for a new Lambeau Field lease, a separate point of contention between the team and the city.
Green Bay Packers wide receiver Jordy Nelson does the Lambeau Leap on Jan. 5, 2014, near Stephen Pfeil, left, of Madison and Sean Sanchez of Denver, after Nelson scored a second-quarter touchdown ...
Green Bay Packers, city battle over current Lambeau Field lease and over coming to agreement on long-term extension.
The Packers lead the series 46-24-4, but lost three of the last four, including a 20-17 loss at Lambeau Field in 2018 that resulted in head coach Mike McCarthy getting fired after the game. Oct ...
The playing field at the stadium sits at an elevation of 640 feet (195 m) above sea level. Lambeau Field is the N.F.L. stadium continually operated the longest. In 2007, the Packers completed their 51st season at Lambeau, breaking the all-time N.F.L. record set by the Chicago Bears at Wrigley Field (1921–70).