Trivia question: I spent my Friday afternoon during the snowstorm looking up the forecasts for Philadelphia, Indianapolis, Green Bay, and Cincinnati. Any idea why?

The better question: Is there any way to switch the Green Bay and Cincinnati playoff games from Sunday to Saturday? Temperatures at Lambeau Field on Sunday are expected to be around 2 degrees, with a wind chill of negative 20 (writing out negative for emphasis) behind 14 mph winds. Depending on how you look at it, conditions at Paul Brown Stadium in Cincinnati are projected to be even more extreme: 40 degrees that will somehow feel like -2 and a 90 percent chance of rain, according to weather.com.

Playing those games on Saturday would bump up the conditions in Green Bay to 26/-7 in terms of actual and perceived degrees (but also increase the wind speed to 20 mph) and add two more milestones of mercury to Cincy's game time temperatures while a whole lot more to the "feels like" readings, up to 26 degrees on Jan. 4. from the absurd -2 on Jan. 5.

Philly would probably prefer to stick with their original time slot, given their sunny, 31 degree (only 9 mph winds) forecast on Saturday, but Sunday's prediction of 44 degrees (feels like 37) and a 70 percent chance of rain gives them the flexibility to switch to Sunday. Indianapolis' game isn't as maneuverable. Fans and players will play on Saturday in a very manageable 35 degree, partly cloudy day with decently strong winds (22 mph) and avoid Sunday's ugly forecast of 24 degrees (or -16 degrees if you're not a thermometer) and 16 mph wind gusts.

With the weather in mind -- as well as the local broadcasting rights of Green Bay fans (currently under threat if the game doesn't get sold out, which it hasn't yet) -- here's how the schedule should look:

Saturday, Jan. 4

1:00: San Francisco at Green Bay

4:35: Kansas City at Indianapolis

8:10: San Diego at Cincinnati

Sunday, Jan. 5

2:30: New Orleans at Philadelphia

Alternative plan: play the Green Bay game in San Francisco, the Cincinatti game in San Diego, the Philly game in New Orleans, and make the newly crowned home teams play against a spread devised by Vegas.