The state of Florida braces for Hurricane Milton, Panthers still scheduled to play tonight

LEAFANFORLIFE23

Registered User
Jun 17, 2010
47,157
15,769
I've been wondering about this Panthers-Bruins, I'm kind of surprised It's still on, the safety of everybody involved is obviously more important then any hockey.

I don't know if It's worth the risk to play, just move it to Boston in a few days.

They moved games around every day during Covid and You're telling me they can't move one game to ensure the safety of everybody?

They can and they should
 

Jeune Poulet

Registered User
Oct 31, 2019
1,852
4,360
The hurricane's path isn't projected to pass over there but it's still extremely insensitive, reckless and stupid to not reschedule the game.

This qualifies as a state-wide crisis to say the least and will impact millions of people indirectly and demand time, energy and resources.
 

Romang67

BitterSwede
Jan 2, 2011
30,419
23,243
Evanston, IL
Why would the Panthers be impacted way down in Miami? That's like saying that Chicago is having a blizzard so St. Louis is cancelling their home game... (not to minimize at all the mess that Tampa & that area of FL is about to go through in any way - stay safe any FL HFers).
Not unheard of for Hurricanes to make sharp turns in that area.
 
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Svechhammer

THIS is hockey?
Jun 8, 2017
25,033
91,318
Like you were saying, that area is already water logged and a new storm surge has the potential to be really bad. Especially if it hits Tampa directly.
1 aspect that should keep it from getting to the NC level is the natural geography. In NC you had these natural peaks and valleys and the roads were usually in the valleys and the water would flow through the valleys destroying the roads. In Florida the water should be able to spread out more.
What happened in our mountains was bad because that area had already had a solid 3 or 4 days of consistent heavy rains before the storm came through and just dumped more than it could handle in normal times on it. Shouldn't really be comparable to what is going to happen on the west coast of Florida, because it was literally an unprecedented storm that might never happen again. Nothing in that region was built with a mindset that flooding could be an issue. Insurance companies don't even offer flood coverage for those areas, because the chances are so slim it would ever happen.

That said, a direct west to east landfall of this strong a storm heading right at Tampa is not something I can ever remember happening. Thankful that the storm appears to be dying down a bit, but I am worried the storm surge is going wreck an area that probably isn't well suited for a direct hit. I remember driving through the region after Andrew in the 90s, and really hope nothing like that that ever happens again.
 

Nemesis Prime

Registered User
Jun 29, 2010
7,358
6,278
London, ON
Just an easier way to track them. When they say Hurricane Andrew, Charlie, Wilma etc, most people know which storms they are, as opposed to Hurricane 10-2024 or whatever.

It’s calmed some, but they water in the gulf is warm and feeds these storms this time of year.
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StreetHawk

Registered User
Sep 30, 2017
28,417
10,934
Not unheard of for Hurricanes to make sharp turns in that area.
It’s the reality of living in that region of the US. There are hurricanes there, as there are earthquakes along the pacific coast, tornadoes in the Midwest, flooding in other areas etc.
hopefully people are firstly safe and evacuate as directed. And that they have purchased the proper insurance to protect their assets and that they can recover from it.
 

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