Severe Storms Rip Through North Texas, Damaging Planes and Halting Friday Night Football

Lead Severe thunderstorms with hurricane-force gusts struck the Dallas-Fort Worth area Friday evening, toppling small aircraft at Denton Enterprise Airport and delaying high school football games across North Texas.

Nut Graf Felled hangar doors and overturned planes underscored the storms’ ferocity, while lightning, torrential rain and 75 mph gusts forced outdoor events indoors and disrupted power for thousands, illustrating the region’s vulnerability to early-season severe weather.

Weather Impact Strong cells rolled in just before 7 p.m., producing:

  • Wind gusts up to 75 mph at Denton Enterprise Airport.
  • Several small aircraft upended or damaged under collapsed hangar roofs.
  • Flash flood warnings issued for Bosque, Coryell and McLennan counties.
  • No reported injuries at the airport or surrounding communities.

High School Football Delays Friday Night Lights gave way to Friday Night Frights as:

  • Lightning and wind forced a weather delay in Denton and Anna.
  • Spectators in Prosper and Aubrey huddled under stadium overhangs amid torrential rain.
  • Games resumed once lightning cleared, but kickoff times shifted by over an hour.

Looking Ahead A cold front will usher in cooler, drier air Saturday with highs in the upper 70s across North Texas, though isolated storms remain possible. Central and South Texas should brace for lingering showers and localized flooding through the weekend under a stalled frontal boundary and moisture from Hurricane Lorena’s remnants.