ESPYS honor California's first responders after devastating wildfire season

ByDanny Clemens WLS logo
Thursday, July 11, 2019
Deadliest wildfires in California's history
The Camp Fire has killed at least 85 people and left hundreds of people unaccounted for. Here's a look at other deadly wildfires in California history.

LOS ANGELES -- During the 2019 ESPYS, two NFL teams took time to honor the first responders who fought on the front lines against a series of devastating wildfires that hit California last year.

The Los Angeles Rams and the Kansas City Chiefs won the ESPY for Best Game for their November 28, 2018, matchup at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum just days after two devastating wildfires on opposite ends of the state were contained.

The Woolsey Fire in Southern California charred nearly 100,000 acres in the greater Los Angeles area, claiming three lives and destroying more than 1,600 structures. In Northern California, the Camp Fire was the state's deadliest and most destructive fire in recent history. It killed 85 people, burned more than 150,000 acres and destroyed nearly 19,000 structures.

"For our team, being in Los Angeles and playing here last fall in the midst of the fires -- it was really powerful seeing all the men and the women who were trying to save as many lives and as many homes as possible," Rams quarterback Jared Goff said while accepting the award.

"As football players, we like to think we work hard. But it definitely pales in comparison with what the real heroes are doing risking their lives in situations like that," he added, "not only here in LA last fall but all around the country every day."

Goff and Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahones yielded the rest of their time to a group of firefighters who had been invited to the show at the Microsoft Theater. The camera panned to several rows of first responders, who then received a standing ovation from the crowd before the telecast went to a commercial break.

PHOTOS: Camp Fire burns through Butte County, California

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In this aerial photograph, an evacuee encampment is seen at a Walmart parking lot in Chico, California on November 19, 2018.
Josh Edelson for the Washington Post