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Falling Ice At Cowboys Stadium Injures 6: Dallas Weather Causing Super Bowl Problems (VIDEO)

AP/The Huffington Post    
First Posted: 02/04/11 04:31 PM ET Updated: 05/25/11 07:30 PM ET

ARLINGTON, Texas — Runways too snowy to receive airliners packed with football fans. Sidewalks too icy for cowboy boots. Temperatures too cold to distinguish Dallas from Pittsburgh or Green Bay.

Just two days before the Super Bowl, a fresh blast of snow and ice canceled hundreds of flights, transformed highways into ribbons of white and caused dangerous sheets of ice to fall from Cowboys Stadium, sending at least six people to the hospital. It was enough to turn the biggest week in American sports into a Super Mess.

WATCH:

The six people hurt Friday were private contractors who had been hired by the NFL to prepare the stadium for the game. One man was hit in the head, another in the shoulder. None of the injuries was considered life-threatening.

Most stadium entrances were closed as a precaution. Officials raised the temperature inside the arena in an attempt to melt remaining ice.

The Dallas-Fort Worth area received as much as 5 inches of snow overnight – nearly twice its annual average – and by Friday morning downtown Dallas hotels were selling ski hats and scarves alongside cowboy hats. A winter storm warning was issued for suburban Arlington, home of the $1.3 billion stadium where the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Green Bay Packers are to play Sunday.

"It looks like, `Oh, no, I'm back in Canada,'" said Sammy Sandu, a 32-year-old property developer from Kelowna, British Columbia. "It's just pouring down snow. Are we still at home, or have we left? We didn't drink that much last night, did we?"

Forecasters expected game day to be mostly sunny, with highs in the 40s, which would probably not be warm enough to melt all the snow and ice.

Sandu made it to Dallas with his father Thursday, but other members of their party weren't so lucky. His brother still hoped to arrive from Miami in time for the game, but a friend abandoned the trip after a flight from Vancouver was canceled.

Like much of the region, airlines were struggling to recover from a massive blizzard earlier in the week that brought up to 2 feet of snow and bitter cold temperatures to as much as half the nation.

More than 300 arriving flights were canceled at Dallas-Fort Worth Airport, a hub for American Airlines. The city's smaller airport, Love Field, was closed before dawn because of snow on the runways, but it reopened by noon. Love is home to Southwest Airlines.

Andy Williams, a 51-year-old attorney from Grafton, Wis., said he was frustrated to find his American flight from Milwaukee delayed for about five hours. He was already planning ahead for the worst-case scenario.

"If this flight gets canceled, I'll start driving down tonight," he said. "Clearly it's not my first choice but, at least you're in control of your own destiny at that point."

But the chilly temperatures were not expected to faze the teams competing in the real event, nor their hardy fans, who are used to cooler climes. The temperature in Dallas on Friday stood at 20 – the same as Pittsburgh. Green Bay was slightly colder at 17.

"We deal with it very well back home," Steelers fan Alex Sax said on his way the NFL Experience fan festival in Dallas. "Here, they don't know how to deal with it. There's no plows. No salt trucks. When we drove from airport, we were the only car on the road."

Asked if the weather could affect future Super Bowl bids, NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said the conditions this year have been exceptional.

"We've had a winter to remember. Some would say to forget," Goodell said. "It's going to be a great weekend for us, and the weather's getting better."

The Super Bowl is scheduled to be played in Indianapolis next year and in the open-air New Meadowlands stadium in New Jersey in 2014.

Some Packers fans at Mitchell Airport in Milwaukee found themselves delayed but not completely downhearted.

James Jennings, 78, was scheduled to fly out of Milwaukee with his 44-year-old son. They were taking a charter flight as part of a package for which they paid a total of $25,000.

Jennings, a criminal lawyer from Norridge, Ill., said he had absolutely no doubt that the flight would leave as scheduled.

"At $12,500 a ticket, are you kidding me? They'd get Evel Knievel to fly that thing."

Elsewhere Friday, the bitter cold seeped into the South, where icy roads were blamed for several traffic deaths in Louisiana and Mississippi. The system extended its grip as far east as North Carolina, where freezing rain was possible.

The frigid weather also disrupted natural gas service in New Mexico and caused water pipes to burst in Arizona. Snow- and slush-covered roads made driving hazardous across Texas and neighboring states.

Greyhound spokeswoman Bonnie Bastian says the weather snarled travel through Texas, Oklahoma and parts of Arkansas and Tennessee.

By late Friday morning, 23-year-old Katrina Smith had been waiting in the Kansas City terminal for more than 30 hours. She was supposed to be in the city just 15 minutes to transfer buses as she headed from Denver to Tulsa, Okla.

"Everyone here is going to go crazy," she said.

Back in Dallas, organizers of at least one celebrity-filled Super Bowl event planned to host their Saturday celebrations inside.

DirecTV planned to host a "Celebrity Beach Bowl" in a heated tent, with a lineup of stars and athletes including Josh Duhamel, Alex Rodriguez, Chace Crawford and Hayden Panettierre.

"We're full speed ahead," said Jon Gieselman, the company's senior vice president of advertising and public relation. "The show will go on. We were prepared for something like this."

___

Associated Press writers Danny Robbins, Linda Stewart Ball, Jamie Stengle and Paul Newberry in Dallas; Dinesh Ramde in Milwaukee; and videographer Rich Matthews in Arlington, Texas, contributed to this report.

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ARLINGTON, Texas — Runways too snowy to receive airliners packed with football fans. Sidewalks too icy for cowboy boots. Temperatures too cold to distinguish Dallas from Pittsburgh or Green Bay.
ARLINGTON, Texas — Runways too snowy to receive airliners packed with football fans. Sidewalks too icy for cowboy boots. Temperatures too cold to distinguish Dallas from Pittsburgh or Green Bay.
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fred Sanders
Please unban me. Unjustified.
06:12 PM on 02/06/2011
"........home of the $1.3 billion stadium."

OK, maybe I have not been keeping up, but really? Are the goalposts gold plated?
And to think the Packers are a non-profit, community owned team.
01:30 PM on 02/06/2011
Because genius this is Dallas not Pittsburg, snow only falls a few inches and usually is gone within 2 days. Dallasians know how to deal with it, stay off the roads for a day or two. No need for ploughs when the snow is only 4 or 5 inches.

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"We deal with it very well back home," Steelers fan Alex Sax said on his way the NFL Experience fan festival in Dallas. "Here, they don't know how to deal with it. There's no plows. No salt trucks. When we drove from airport, we were the only car on the road."
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Puller58
Man of Mystery
09:07 PM on 02/05/2011
About the same effect as Jerry Jones' ownership of the Cowboys has on the fans.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DSOTM
Legalize it, now!
10:39 AM on 02/05/2011
They definitely need to get the roof cleared of all snow and ice before people start walking into the stadium.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thebearschick
10:20 AM on 02/05/2011
Fly me to Dallas--quick! This might be my best chance at becoming a multi-millionaire. Jerry Jones has some deeeeep pockets
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NatTurner1
Clinton 2016
12:02 PM on 02/05/2011
I think you would have better luck trying to get Halle Berry pregnant again.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jim Anderson
You're going to burn up my bullshit detector.
09:40 AM on 02/05/2011
Just sue, baby!
09:22 AM on 02/05/2011
A few years ago the NFL decided to boycott San Diego until we gave the Chargers a new stadium. Enjoy that ice and snow.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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liblizard
Really missing Bill Loney
09:06 AM on 02/05/2011
Jerry Jones should have his players on ice patrol, circling the stadium. They're not busy this weekend, anyway...
11:31 PM on 02/05/2011
LOL, I am cheering for the Steelers but just looking for a good game. If the packers win, I will at least take comfort they did it in Cowboy country.
09:05 AM on 02/05/2011
To the Green Bay fan who says his area deals with snow and ice all the time, good for you. Then explain the multi-car mess on Lakeshore Drive in Chicago this past week and how all the networks could report on was how Chicago closed its schools for the 1st time in years. Yeah, keep braggin' about Yankee ingenuity and toughness.
11:24 AM on 02/05/2011
Chicago received 2 ft of snow and drifts 5 feet high which made travel impossible. They dealt with this problem very well considering the challenges they had to overcome. It is remarkable they did not have more problems. The issue with the ice falling off Cowboy stadium is that this risk should have been identified prior to hurting innocent people. The area should have been taped off until the risk was mitigated. Does not take much common sense to figure out ice (which has a low coefficent of friction) will easily slide off a sloped roof that has a smooth surface. This should have been obvious.
12:46 PM on 02/05/2011
You are speaking but you do not know what you are talking about. It's true. If we had the snow TX got kids would have still been in school and LSD would not have looked the way it did but when there are 70mph winds coming off the lake and carrying with it drops of ice and on top of that 20.5 inches of snow and dropping temps than that's what happens. I wouldn't start ripping Yankee ingenuity or toughness just yet. My company has a crew in TX that is laughing at the state of TX. They are on the set up for the NFL tailgate party and couldn't believe they called work 2 days in a row. People are freaking out there.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tygartman
Hoping for Change in 2012
08:32 AM on 02/05/2011
How come extreme high temperatures are evidence of global warming....extreme precipitation is evidence of global warming....extreme drought is evidence of global warming? But when we have unprecedented COLD weather, we hear nothing?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Winthorpe
Need a fourth for squash
08:33 AM on 02/05/2011
It's called climate change, dude. Look it up.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tygartman
Hoping for Change in 2012
08:40 AM on 02/05/2011
The climate has been changing for time immemorial...nice try. I don't play the semantics game. The theory ( and it is a theory) has way too many holes in it to be taken seriously.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
theobserver4
progress is a process not an end result
09:50 AM on 02/05/2011
You should be hearing lots about it as the weather patterns shift due to rising global temperatures, but it seems you just haven't been listening to anybody but Fox and their town criers bulletin to whine about the theories.

The mistake made was referring to the entirety of the phenomenon as global warming as mouth breathers can only see what is immediately in front of them so every time it's cold or snows they laugh and call scientists aholes.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tygartman
Hoping for Change in 2012
09:56 AM on 02/05/2011
Climate has been shifting for time immemorial. It has always done so, and it will always do so. If climate change is bad, and yet the climate has always been changing, then what we are proposing is for mankind to STABILIZE the climate. How are we going to do that? How do we decrease the overall temperatur­es when the earth is heating, and how do we increase the overall temperatur­es when the earth is cooling? We are incapable of doing anything that will have an immediate effect on the earth's temperatur­e. This, my friend, is an exercise in futility. You follow everything your leftie friends tell you to follow like a lemming, and ask no questions on your own. One more thing....if I only listen to conservative viewpoints, why am I on this website? Why do I watch MSNBC and CNN? You know nothing about me, yet presume to have all this knowledge....much like your knowledge of man-made global warming....I refuse to call it AGCC.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tygartman
Hoping for Change in 2012
10:21 AM on 02/05/2011
Being an athiest, i'm not sure what your first paragraph was rambling was about. Maybe you thought I was some religious zealout (another incorrect assumption on your part). If water vapor is taken into account, man's effect on Greenhouse gases is 0.28% . So the answer is no.
08:30 AM on 02/05/2011
Any moment now, a televangelist will declare that God's wrath caused the bad weather and bad luck surrounding the new stadium. In this case, I might halfway agree. That stadium is a testimony to one man's (or a few mens') ego(s).
07:58 AM on 02/05/2011
Remember: Snow in Texas is evidence of global warming.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Winthorpe
Need a fourth for squash
08:35 AM on 02/05/2011
Your comment is evidence that you don't have the intellectual capacity to comprehend a scientific journal article about climate change.
08:52 AM on 02/05/2011
haha...I can read the astrology charts, just as I can the global 'warming' journals

Fact is, the UAH just reported that the 30 year anomoly is now - zero.

30 years, no temp change. And 30 years is 'climate, not weather'
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kapalabhati
Lokah Samasta Sukhino Bhavantu
07:54 AM on 02/05/2011
Don't mess with Texas?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:52 AM on 02/05/2011
Making the most money out of the stadium was the most important design factor. The safety of it, other than in ideal weather conditions, was a very minor issue. JJ loves money.
06:53 AM on 02/05/2011
Has anyone else had enough of the roman numerals? Yea, I know - they still have them on some clocks, and books in the prolog, etc., but let's face it, this is getting too much. Custom for only the sake of custom is sometimes not worth it.

Then again, the only way the NFL will make a change is if there is some money in it for the owners. So how about the Bank of America Super Bowl? Would that do it?
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kapalabhati
Lokah Samasta Sukhino Bhavantu
07:55 AM on 02/05/2011
I don't know, I loved Super Bowl XL. Extra Large, baby.