What a hockey game this will be!!
Posted: Fri Jun 03, 2005 5:56 pm
I will put this here because I don't want to be crucified for mentioning another school in any other forum. This is from today's Lantern down at OSU.
OSU will drop puck on NFL holy ground
By Jeff Svoboda
Published: Friday, June 3, 2005
The Buckeyes are headed to Lambeau Field, and while the playing surface won't be tundra, it will definitely be frozen.
Ohio State and Wisconsin have reached an agreement for the schools' men's hockey teams to play an outdoor game in Green Bay's Lambeau Field on Feb. 11, 2006.
"I was blown away when I heard that," senior captain Nate Guenin said. "It's the mecca of all athletic facilities, and the opportunity to play the first hockey game there is very special."
OSU will have to reconfigure its schedule to fit the game because it had previously scheduled a Central Collegiate Hockey Association series with Michigan State for that weekend. The series might have to move to the middle of the week because the Buckeyes will lose a weekend of regular-season play with the addition of a week to the CCHA playoffs.
The game would be the second college hockey game to be played outdoors. On Oct. 6, 2001, Michigan and Michigan State played in front of 74,554 fans in MSU's Spartan Stadium. In a game dubbed "The Cold War," the No. 1 Spartans and the No. 4 Wolverines played to a 3-3 tie.
The National Hockey League has also played one regular-season game outdoors. The Montreal Canadiens defeated the Edmonton Oilers 4-3 in a game played in Edmonton's Commonwealth Stadium on Nov. 22, 2003. 57,617 fans braved below zero temperatures to see the "Heritage Classic," a game memorable for Canadian goaltender Jose Theodore wearing a toque over his helmet because of the frigid temperatures.
Both games featured a regulation sheet of ice placed at midfield of the football stadiums.
The last time OSU and Wisconsin met on the rink was March 26, 2004 in the first round of the NCAA tournament in Albany, N.Y. Wisconsin ended the Buckeyes' season with a 1-0 overtime win.
Last year, OSU, ranked No. 9 in the country, was eliminated in the first round of the NCAA tournament with a 3-2 loss to Cornell in Minneapolis. Wisconsin carried a No. 13 ranking into the tournament and lost to Michigan in the first round.
"You want two of the top teams playing in a venue like that," Guenin said. "You get to test yourself on a grand stage. Any time you get to play one of the elite programs, you have to step it up."
Lambeau Field has been the home of the National Football League's Green Bay Packers since 1957. Green Bay's northern winters have led to numerous late-season games - including the "Ice Bowl," the 1967 NFL Championship game - being played in frigid temperatures, earning the stadium the moniker "The Frozen Tundra." It is one of the most historic and famous professional athletic facilities in the country.
Guenin said everyone he has talked to is excited for the game.
"Everybody we tell about the game, their eyes just light up and they almost can't believe it," he said.
OSU will drop puck on NFL holy ground
By Jeff Svoboda
Published: Friday, June 3, 2005
The Buckeyes are headed to Lambeau Field, and while the playing surface won't be tundra, it will definitely be frozen.
Ohio State and Wisconsin have reached an agreement for the schools' men's hockey teams to play an outdoor game in Green Bay's Lambeau Field on Feb. 11, 2006.
"I was blown away when I heard that," senior captain Nate Guenin said. "It's the mecca of all athletic facilities, and the opportunity to play the first hockey game there is very special."
OSU will have to reconfigure its schedule to fit the game because it had previously scheduled a Central Collegiate Hockey Association series with Michigan State for that weekend. The series might have to move to the middle of the week because the Buckeyes will lose a weekend of regular-season play with the addition of a week to the CCHA playoffs.
The game would be the second college hockey game to be played outdoors. On Oct. 6, 2001, Michigan and Michigan State played in front of 74,554 fans in MSU's Spartan Stadium. In a game dubbed "The Cold War," the No. 1 Spartans and the No. 4 Wolverines played to a 3-3 tie.
The National Hockey League has also played one regular-season game outdoors. The Montreal Canadiens defeated the Edmonton Oilers 4-3 in a game played in Edmonton's Commonwealth Stadium on Nov. 22, 2003. 57,617 fans braved below zero temperatures to see the "Heritage Classic," a game memorable for Canadian goaltender Jose Theodore wearing a toque over his helmet because of the frigid temperatures.
Both games featured a regulation sheet of ice placed at midfield of the football stadiums.
The last time OSU and Wisconsin met on the rink was March 26, 2004 in the first round of the NCAA tournament in Albany, N.Y. Wisconsin ended the Buckeyes' season with a 1-0 overtime win.
Last year, OSU, ranked No. 9 in the country, was eliminated in the first round of the NCAA tournament with a 3-2 loss to Cornell in Minneapolis. Wisconsin carried a No. 13 ranking into the tournament and lost to Michigan in the first round.
"You want two of the top teams playing in a venue like that," Guenin said. "You get to test yourself on a grand stage. Any time you get to play one of the elite programs, you have to step it up."
Lambeau Field has been the home of the National Football League's Green Bay Packers since 1957. Green Bay's northern winters have led to numerous late-season games - including the "Ice Bowl," the 1967 NFL Championship game - being played in frigid temperatures, earning the stadium the moniker "The Frozen Tundra." It is one of the most historic and famous professional athletic facilities in the country.
Guenin said everyone he has talked to is excited for the game.
"Everybody we tell about the game, their eyes just light up and they almost can't believe it," he said.