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Pulling the plug on the “deliberate blackout” rumors

he stadium lights at Candlestick Park go out in the second quarter as the 49ers play the Steelers during their Monday Night NFL football game in San Francisco

REFILE - ADDING INFORMATION The stadium lights at Candlestick Park go out in the second quarter as the San Francisco 49ers play the Pittsburgh Steelers during their Monday Night NFL football game in San Francisco, California December 19, 2011. The San Francisco 49ers and Pittsburgh Steelers Monday night game was interrupted when the power went out at the 49ers home stadium Candlestick Park, after an earlier outage at the stadium, a team official said. The second outage lasted about 20 minutes before power was restored, he said. Play was stopped, but the game resumed when the lights came back on. REUTERS/Robert Galbraith (UNITED STATES - Tags: SPORT FOOTBALL)

REUTERS

As pointed out earlier in the day, cynics and rumor mongers (we employ neither here) have been speculating that the Monday night blackout at Candlestick Park was influenced by a desire to delay the game long enough to let Ben Roethlisberger’s painkilling injection wear off and/or to demonstrate that Candlestick Park isn’t fit to host a prime-time Monday night game, making the coming move of the team to Santa Clara more palatable to folks who object to it.

49ers spokesman Bob Lange has dismissed those rumors on behalf of the team.

While it’s fun to speculate about possible cloak-and-dagger scenarios, in this case the evidence is pretty clear that a transformer exploded, and the notion that anyone would deliberately blow up a transformer in order to advance some other agenda is even more far-fetched than anything we’d be inclined to believe. Such an effort would require the kind of multi-person conspiracy that could, if anyone blabs, get folks prosecuted.

Moreover, while some in league circles believe that, regardless of the cause, the incident builds support for the team’s move from San Francisco to Santa Clara, keep in mind that the new stadium is essentially a done deal, with $850 million in financing recently procured. While a degree of discontent surely exists among fans who prefer to continue to come to Candlestick Park, blowing up a transformer entails far greater risks than, say, a well-crafted P.R. campaign.

So, alas, there’s really nothing juicy about this one.