
Fans are accustomed to weathering some extreme cold to see their beloved Packers play in Lambeau Field.
The conditions were freezing — 8 degrees with a wind-chill factor of 15 below — the last time the Los Angeles Rams played a cold-weather game against the Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field.
It was December 20, 1992, and offensive lineman Jackie Slater thought he was prepared. For warmups, he put on layers that made him look like "the Michelin Man," he said. But after discovering he could barely move, he decided to forsake the extra gear.
During the 28-13 defeat, Slater learned something new about playing in the cold.
"I scraped the back of my hand and the skin rolled up like a chunk," Slater said Monday during a phone interview. "Usually that would have been an abrasion. You just can't be alarmed by those kinds of things."
It will not be as cold Saturday when the Rams play the Packers in an NFC divisional-round playoff game, but the forecast in Green Bay calls for temperatures of 30 degrees or below.
That's relatively warm compared to the 1992 game Slater played in. And it's downright cozy compared to the infamous "Ice Bowl," the coldest game in NFL history. The Packers defeated the Dallas Cowboys in the 1967 NFL championship game that featured a minus-13 temperature and a wind-chill factor of minus-36.
Both are a marked contrast to conditions in Thousand Oaks, California, where the Rams will be preparing this week in temperatures ranging from the low 70s to the mid-80s.
"We've got to be able to handle it, especially with just the limited opportunities we've had to play in those settings," Rams coach Sean McVay said Sunday in a videoconference.
Preparing for that change would be a challenge for a completely healthy team. But the Rams have several key players nursing injuries that could be exacerbated by the cold, including quarterbacks Jared Goff and John Wolford.
Goff has a right thumb that still is healing from surgery. Last Saturday, Goff came off the bench after Wolford suffered a neck injury and helped lead the Rams to a 30-20 wild-card victory in Seattle, where the temperature was 39 degrees.
McVay has not said who will start at quarterback against the Packers.
After the victory over the Seahawks, Goff said his thumb was fine. But, McVay indicated this week that the weather could factor into his decision.
"It makes it a little bit more difficult to grip the football just in general," McVay said. "But if he's not having any issues with it, everything that we're going to do leading up to this week, we will take a lot of things into consideration to try to make the best decisions."
Two Rams stars were forced out of last weekend's game: Defensive lineman Aaron Donald suffered a rib injury, and wide receiver Cooper Kupp left in the fourth quarter because of bursitis in his right knee. McVay on Sunday declined to specify the severity of Donald's injury, but he's expected to play. The Rams will attempt to manage Kupp's issue so he can play too, McVay said.
Goff has struggled in games played in temperatures below 30 degrees. Both were during the 2018 season, when the Rams advanced to the Super Bowl.
In 25-degree weather at Denver, Goff completed 14 of 28 passes for 201 yards with an interception. The Rams got 208 yards rushing from former Rams running back Todd Gurley in a 23-20 victory. Later in the season at Chicago's Soldier Field, with the temperature 29 degrees at kickoff, Goff completed 20 of 44 passes with four interceptions in a 15-6 defeat.
Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers, in his 16th season, is accustomed to playing in the cold. Rodgers has passed for 48 touchdowns with five interceptions. The Packers have given up 21 sacks, tied for second fewest in the NFL. His favorite target is receiver Davante Adams, who has 115 catches, 18 for touchdowns.
Donald had 13 1/2 sacks this season and two last Saturday before he was injured in the third quarter while pressuring quarterback Russell Wilson. The Rams had 53 sacks during the season — second in the league — and added five more against the Seahawks.
Both teams could turn to their rushing attacks if passing is adversely affected by the defenses or weather.
Cam Akers rushed for 131 yards and a touchdown Saturday against the Seahawks. The Packers averaged 132.4 yards rushing this season, which ranked eighth.
"Playoff football is about more than all of the fantasy things that you see in the regular season," Rams offensive lineman Andrew Whitworth said after the victory over the Seahawks. "It's going to be about imposing your will on each other."
Slater, who played 20 seasons for the Rams and was enshrined into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2001, said Rams linemen would be wise to watch Whitworth's every move. Whitworth, a 15th-year pro, played in numerous cold-weather games during 11 seasons with the Cincinnati Bengals.
"He knows that, 'Yeah, I've got to stay warm, but I have to be able to move,' " Slater said.
Frozen tundra: The 5 coldest games in Green Bay Packers history
The coldest games in Green Bay Packers history

With the temperature forecast to be around 3 degrees below zero (which will feel like the negative 20s) at kickoff time Sunday at Soldier Field, the divisional face-off between the Green Bay Packers and the Chicago Bears could wind up being one of the coldest games in NFL history.
It's familiar territory for the Packers, who have played in half of the 10 coldest games ever, according to the NFL. In fact, Green Bay hosted four of those games at Lambeau Field.
No. 5: Dec. 22, 1990, vs. Detroit Lions

Green Bay Packers quarterback Blair Kiel walks from the field after his final pass was intercepted by the Detroit Lions on Dec. 22, 1990. The Lions won 24-17.
Loss: Packers 17, Detroit Lions 24
Tenth coldest game in NFL history, fifth coldest in Packers history.
Date: Dec. 22, 1990
Temperature: 2 degrees
Stadium: Lambeau Field
Attendance: 46,700
Coach: Lindy Infante
Starting QB: Blair Kiel
Regular season record: 6-10-0, .375, 4th in NFC Central
Game notes: It was the only game started by Blair Kiel in a pretty miserable season. The rest of the season either Don Majkowski (4-4) or Anthony Dilweg (2-5) started at QB.
Kiel completed 20 of 36 pass attempts for 239 yards, a 1-yard rushing touchdown and an interception which cost them the game. Green Bay lost three fumbles; Detroit had two.
In his second season in the NFL, Barry Sanders rushed for 133 yards and a touchdown. The Packers only managed 80 yards rushing from six different players.
No. 4: Dec. 26, 1993, vs. LA Raiders

Reggie White (92) sacks Los Angeles Raiders quarterback Jeff Hostetler (15) on Sunday, Dec. 26, 1993, in Green Bay. White was credited with 2.5 sacks in the game and Hostetler left in the third quarter with a concussion.
Win: Packers 28, L.A. Raiders 0
Eighth coldest game in NFL history, fourth coldest in Packers history.
Date: Dec. 26, 1993
Temperature: 0 degrees
Stadium: Lambeau Field
Attendance: 54,482
Coach: Mike Holmgren
Starting QB: Brett Favre
Regular season record: 9-7-0, .563, 3rd in NFC Central
Game notes: This game was the scene of the first Lambeau Leap. Defensive back LeRoy Butler forced a fumble from quarterback Vince Evans, which was recovered by Reggie White at the 35 yard line. White returned the ball 10 yards before lateralling it to Butler, who ran the remaining 20 yards. He then jumped into the south bleachers to celebrate with fans. The unique celebration is continued to this day.
With the win over the Raiders, the Packers clinched a playoff spot for the first time in a non-strike season since 1972. The Raiders franchise was located in Los Angeles in 1982-94.

Green Bay Packers coach Mike Holmgren holds his hand up to the crowd as he walks off the field following the Packers' 28-0 victory over the Los Angeles Raiders in Green Bay on Sunday, Dec. 26, 1993.
No. 3: Dec. 10, 1972, at Minnesota Vikings

The Packers' John Brockington (42) confronts Chicago Bears linebacker Dick Butkus (51) in Chicago on Nov. 12, 1972. Photos were not available from the Packers' Dec. 10, 1972, game at the Minnesota Vikings.
Win: Packers 23, Minnesota Vikings 7
Seventh coldest game in NFL history, third coldest in Packers history.
Date: Dec. 10, 1972
Temperature: 0 degrees (wind chill: -18 degrees)
Stadium: Metropolitan Stadium
Attendance: 49,784
Coach: Dan Devine
Starting QB: Scott Hunter
Regular season record: 10-4-0, .714, 1st in NFC Central
No. 2: Jan. 20, 2008, vs. NY Giants

Brett Favre after his pass was intercepted by New York Giants' Corey Webster and returned to the Green Bay 43-yard line to set up an overtime win for the Giants on Jan. 20, 2008, at Lambeau Field. It was Favre's last game as a Green Bay Packer.
Loss: Packers 20, N.Y. Giants 23 OT (NFC Championship)

Brett Favre rushes off the field after losing to the Giants 23-20 in frigid conditions at Lambeau Field. The Green Bay Packers hosted the New York Giants in the NFC Championship game Sunday Jan. 20, 2008.
Fifth coldest game in NFL history, second coldest in Packers history.
Date: Jan. 20, 2008
Temperature: -1 degree (wind chill: -24 degrees)
Stadium: Lambeau Field
Attendance: 72,740
Coach: Mike McCarthy
Starting QB: Brett Favre
Regular season record: 13-3-0, .813, 1st in NFC North
Game notes: Brett Favre threw an interception in overtime to set up the Giants' game-winning field goal. The game was Favre's last in a Packers uniform.
No. 1: Dec. 31, 1967, vs. Dallas Cowboys, the "Ice Bowl"

Green Bay Packers quarterback Bart Starr calls signals in bitter cold as he led the Packers to a 21-14 win over the Dallas Cowboys to capture a third consecutive National Football League title, Dec. 31, 1967, in Green Bay.
Win: Packers 21, Dallas Cowboys 17 (NFL Championship)
Coldest ever game in NFL history.
Date: Dec. 31, 1967
Temperature: -13 degrees (wind chill: -48 degrees)
Stadium: Lambeau Field
Attendance: 50,861
Coach: Vince Lombardi
Starting QB: Bart Starr
Regular season record: 9-4-1, .692, 1st in NFC Central
Game notes: The legendary "Ice Bowl" is the coldest ever outdoor game in NFL history. The stadium's turf heating system failed due to the cold (although some say Lombardi turned it off). Performances by a marching band were canceled after the team noticed blood on a few of the musicians' faces. Game officials could not use whistles, because they froze. Packers fans in the front row repeatedly unplugged the Cowboys' heated benches. Several fans passed out from delayed reactions to alcohol upon warming up. One elderly man died of exposure.
Quarterback Bart Starr tossed two touchdown passes and scored the winning touchdown himself in a surprise play with seconds left in the game.
After that game, Lombardi's team went on to play in the AFL-NFL World Championship (Super Bowl II) on Jan. 14 in Miami. The Packers beat the Oakland Raiders 33-14. The temperature at the stadium was 68 degrees.