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Tight end Travis Kelce #87 of the Kansas City Chiefs looks on during pre-game activities before the AFC Championship Game against the Tennessee Titans at Arrowhead Stadium on January 19, 2020 in Kansas City, Missouri.

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The Kansas City Chiefs are ready to tackle the cold!

As the reigning Super Bowl champs continue their quest to clinch a consecutive NFL championship title, the Chiefs will face off against the Miami Dolphins in what’s predicted to be thecoldest game in Kansas City history.

The wild card playoff game will be held at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City on Jan. 13 at 7:00 p.m. CT — and according to theNational Weather Service, a winter weather advisory has been issued in Kansas City through Jan. 16. Plus, warnings of wind chill reaching “as low as 35 below zero.”

Frigid temps, however, are a familiar opponent to the Kansas City team — unlike the Florida-based Dolphins, whohave lost 10 straight gameswhen it was 40° F or lower at kickoff. (Coincidentally, theFins' coldest game ever playedwas against the Chiefs in 2008, when they kicked off in 10° F at Arrowhead.)

Allen Wright, Equipment Director of the Kansas City Chiefs, tells PEOPLE exclusively that his team’s had its “fair share of cold weather games” over the course of his 41 years with the franchise. “Once you get down into single digits … there’s really not much difference. It’s just plain cold,” he says.

As for whether he thinks the Chiefs have an advantage over the Dolphins because of the cold, Wright says it’s a question he gets asked “all the time.” From his experience, he finds “it doesn’t really matter” for Miami players since they “may have went to college and played in a cold weather climate.”

Record-breaking temperatures or not, Wright tells PEOPLE the Chiefs are prepared. The longtime equipment director says he “tries to give everybody as many options as possible” because “everybody is so subjective when it comes to the cold.”

And while Swifties will be eagerly waiting to see ifTaylor Swiftmakes an appearance at the game to cheer on her boyfriendTravis Kelce, football fans can be assured that the superstar tight end will be ready to go either way. Wright says Travis is “a good Cleveland kid, so he’s used to the cold!”

Read on for how the Kansas City Chiefs are preparing for the freezing-temperature game against the Miami Dolphins, according to Allen Wright.

Andy Reid took a “common sense approach” to practice

Kansas City Chiefs football helmet.David Eulitt/Getty

Snow covers a Kansas City Chiefs football helmet following the game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Denver Broncos at Arrowhead Stadium on December 15, 2019 in Kansas City, Missouri.

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Due to geography alone, many fans assume the Chiefs have an advantage over the Dolphins because they practice in the cold on the day-to-day. However, Wright tells PEOPLE that’s not necessarily the case.

Wright says others, meanwhile, believe there’s “no way to really prepare” for record-cold temperatures and opt to “stay warm and have good practices all week … and then deal with the cold weather on the day of the game.”

Ultimately, Wright says it “just depends on the head coach at that time.” As for Chiefs head coachAndy Reid, Wright says he’s “right in the middle” of the two practice strategies and “takes a real common sense approach to it.”

“If you can go out there and get your work done without it being a huge distraction, then we go out,” Wright explains. “We went outside this week and it was — with windchill — low 20s.”

Players will wear “Extreme Cold” tops and long underwear

Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire via Getty

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) and wide receiver Marquez Valdes-Scantling (11) pretend to play basketball in the snow before an AFC divisional playoff game between the Jacksonville Jaguars and Kansas City Chiefs on January 21, 2023 at GEHA Field at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, MO.

Practices aside — when it comes to game day, it’s go time. Therefore, players are dressed appropriately to preserve their body warmth, but without hindering their athletic performances.

In addition to the thick tops, the players wear Extreme Cold bottoms — which Wright says the coaches wear, too. “Basic long underwear” is also worn on freezing-cold days.

Some players will wear wetsuits

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes in December 2019.Nick Tre. Smith/Icon Sportswire via Getty

Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) looks toward Kansas City Chiefs Wide Receiver Demarcus Robinson (11) while scrambling in snowy conditions during the game between the Denver Broncos and the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday December 15, 2019 at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, MO.

Nick Tre. Smith/Icon Sportswire via Getty

While the wetsuits are “made for the water,” Wright says some players on the Chiefs “use them in cold conditions.” They come in long-sleeve and short-sleeve versions and different millimeters of thickness.

Wright says he offers every player on the Chiefs the option to wear the wetsuits, but says approximately “50% of the guys wear them.” He says the Chiefs vs Dolphins game “will be the ultimate test on how many guys do wear them,” predicting “the majority of them will.”

Coaches and players will wear gloves, sock liners and balaclavas

Kansas City Chiefs fans line the stadium during a cold, snowy day in December 2019.Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire via Getty

Kansas City Chiefs fans line the stadium during a cold, snowy day in the second quarter of an AFC West game between the Denver Broncos and Kansas City Chiefs on December 15, 2019 at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, MO.

Wright says the most important thing players must do is “keep your core warm,” crediting the wetsuits for managing the cold during the short time the players are out on the field playing the game.

When players come to the sidelines, Wright says they have “big mittens” and “a bunch of hand warmers inside them” at the ready that “keep their hands extremely warm” when they’re not moving on the field.

But when players are in the game, Wright supplies them with glove liners and gloves. Plus, he provides them with sock liners and “real good thermal socks” too. He says the hand and foot warmers are also available to the coaches, too.

And just because the players wear helmets on their heads, doesn’t mean they’re keeping them warm! That’s why Wright says he gives the players (and coaches!) stocking hats and balaclava face masks to protect their heads.

“They make them for everybody in the NFL,” he notes. “So all of ours have arrowheads on them and the Dolphins will have their logo on them — so they’re kind of custom, but they’re just a normal balaclava.”

Heated benches will be used on the sidelines

Interior view of Arrowhead Stadium and it’s snowy field in December 2019.Nick Tre. Smith/Icon Sportswire via Getty

Interior view of Arrowhead Stadium and it’s snowy field prior to the game between the Denver Broncos and the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday December 15, 2019 in Kansas City, MO.

Both Jason and Travis Kelce have opened up about the heated benches on the sidelines of games, which Travis described as “hot as f—” when discussing them during an episode of theirNew Heightspodcast.

Meanwhile, Jason said that the benches could “burn your hamstrings sometimes if you’re sitting on them.” Some players, like Travis, prefer the cold and “don’t like to be too hot.”

As for Travis' game-day attire, Wright describes him as someone who sticks with the basics.

“So he’s a guy that doesn’t really change much on what he wears,” says Wright of the tight end. “He’s one that believes on staying warm on the sideline and then going out there for the 5, 6, 8 minutes, whatever an offensive drive is, then come back over and get warm when he comes off the field.”

In addition to the bench warmers, Wright says they use around eight bullet heaters on the Kansas City sideline. “Then, we have two infrared heaters, as well.”

Wright says the abundance of heaters is beneficial to the team because “when you have that many, it keeps that whole area warmer than what it is out on the field.”

The team has extra personnel just to manage the outerwear

Dustin Bradford/Getty

Patrick Mahomes #15 of the Kansas City Chiefs looks on as he wears a heavy jacket in the bench area during a game against the Denver Broncos at Empower Field at Mile High on October 25, 2020 in Denver, Colorado.

Wright says that winter coats and capes are offered to the players to wear on the sidelines “so they can get them over their pads” when taking them on and off. While puffy coats have been a staple in the league for years, Brady first drew attention to NFL outerwear when hebecame a meme for his giant jacketin 2017.

While quarterback Patrick Mahomes' usual coat isn’t quite as massive, rest assured that outerwear will be readily available for the entire team.

“I put extra guys on the sideline just to manage everybody’s coats,” he says. This is because players “will try to leave them on until the last minute and then run out on the field and they drop them right where they’re at and it’s kind of a organized mess!”

Some players will use heating cream on their skin

This next warming method isn’t as popular as the others mentioned, but Wright says some players and “a few coaches” wear Warm Skin. This is a barrier cream that acts as a skin guard, protecting it from the cold weather.

Wright explains that the product “gives you a little bit of a warm feeling” when you put the cream on your skin, though notes “it doesn’t last very long. He adds, “I think is one reason why people don’t really use it.”

While he says some of the Chiefs “will use it” during the Jan. 13 playoff game, he says the cream “is just one of those things that is not used like it used to be 20 years ago.” At the time, he said “that’s all you really had to provide” players as protection in comparison to “all these options that you have now.”

Players get creative with their DIY remedies (like cayenne pepper in their shoes!)

Snow is cleared in Arrowhead Stadium in January 2019.AP Photo/Ed Zurga

Jan. 12, 2019, file photo, Kyle Haraugh, of NFL Films, clears snow from a camera location at Arrowhead Stadium before an NFL divisional football playoff game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Indianapolis Colts, in Kansas City, Mo.

AP Photo/Ed Zurga

Wright couldn’t help but share a few “home remedies” he’s heard from players over his 40-plus years working with the Kansas City team. “We’ve had players that have put cayenne pepper in their shoes!” he says of a method used to combat the cold.

“I’ve seen some weird things over the years,” Wright continues. “Everybody just deals with it different and deals with it how they know how.”

source: people.com