Few football games have been played in as bizarre conditions as the “Blizzard Bowl,” the Chicago Cardinals-Philadelphia Eagles NFL Championship Game on December 19, 1948. Stunned by an early morning storm that dumped nearly a foot of snow on the Philadelphia area, neither team was certain the game would even be played.
Snow at Shibe Park obscured hash marks and yard lines and made first-down measurements nearly impossible. Officials used ropes to mark the sidelines. Fans with shovels aided with field maintenance and watched the game for free. Piles of snow three feet high encircled the field.
Eagles and Cardinals slogged through ankle-deep snow that added pounds to their uniforms. To avoid frostbite, players wrapped their hands in tape. The temperature hovered near 27 degrees, but near-20-mph winds made passing problematic at best.
"No football game was ever contested under greater handicaps," a reporter wrote.
And Eagles' Hall of Fame-bound running back Steve Van Buren—who scored the only touchdown in the team's first championship game victory—nearly slept through it all.
Eagles Star Steve Van Buren Figures Championship Game is Postponed
In the previous season’s NFL Championship Game, also against the Cardinals, Philadelphia lost in Chicago, 28-21, on an ice-covered field. Van Buren rushed for only 26 yards on 18 carries.
Eager to avoid a repeat, Eagles coach Earle "Greasy" Neale urged NFL commissioner Bert Bell to postpone the snow duel. But coach Jimmy Conzelman, whose Cardinals were favored, considered the conditions equal for both teams and insisted on playing.
“We must consider the many out-of-towners who made long trips to see the game,” Bell said ahead of a sold-out season finale. “There are 1,000 fans here from Chicago and many from Erie, Pittsburgh, New York and other cities. We will have to play.”
The awful weather crippled business for scalpers, who sold a 40-yard-line seat for as little as 50 cents. "As you walked along the street," the Philadelphia Inquirer reported, scalpers would "tap you on the shoulder with tears in their eyes, saying: 'Take 'em for nothing.'"
Nearly 9,000 of the 37,000-plus ticket holders stayed home. Some watched the first NFL Championship Game TV broadcast at home. Van Buren, who led the NFL in rushing in 1948 with 945 yards, nearly stayed home, too.
After seeing snow blanketing his suburban Philadelphia neighborhood early Sunday morning, Van Buren went back to sleep, figuring the game would be postponed. Then Neale called his 27-year-old star, inquiring about his whereabouts. “The game is still on,” he told Van Buren, “so you’d better get here.”
With the snow deeper in the Philly suburbs, trapping his car in the driveway, Van Buren had to use public transportation to get to the game. He caught a bus, trolley and subway. Then he walked six blocks to make it to the stadium in time to put on his No. 15 jersey for the 1:30 p.m. game.
Not that the event was running on schedule. "Supersonic Steve" and other players were summoned from the locker room to help workers remove a snow-laden tarp from the field, delaying the game for a half hour. The oddities did not cease for the next two-plus hours.