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Hall of Fame Game canceled due to unsafe field conditions

Bad field conditions led to the NFL calling off Sunday’s planned Hall of Fame Game between the Colts and Packers.

The Hall of Fame Game marks the start of the NFL preseason schedule, and this year’s edition between the Green Bay Packers and Indianapolis Colts was scheduled to kick off at 8 p.m. ET from Canton, Ohio. However, poor field conditions led to the game being canceled.

The NFL and NFLPA released a joint statement regarding their decision to call off the game:

Due to safety concerns with the condition of the playing surface in Canton, tonight’s game between the Indianapolis Colts and Green Bay Packers has been cancelled.  We are very disappointed for our fans, but player safety is our primary concern, and as a result, we could not play an NFL game on this field tonight.​

Players first began expressing concern about the field during pregame warmups. According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, the field is as "hard as concrete," and a shoddy paint job congealed with the Field Turf, making the end zones and midfield logo almost tar-like.

This creates an obvious injury risk for the players, in addition to the usual caution teams apply to preseason games. Neither team was planning to play their starters much, if at all (the Packers already planned to sit quarterback Aaron Rodgers), and the bad field conditions made coaches even less eager to send their players out there. With nothing at stake, the decision to cancel this game was an easy one in the end.

With no actual game being played, the two teams instead held a fan-fest activity on the field to try to placate those in attendance and give ESPN something to fill the TV time. The next day, the Pro Football Hall of Fame also announced that it would offer full refunds for anyone who purchased tickets to the canceled game.

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