The promoted Seasiders, who do not have under-soil heating, currently have their pitch covered over and are using hot-air blowers to combat the cold weather.
The temperature is expected to drop to minus five degrees centigrade on Thursday night, but manager Ian Holloway insists Pool are doing everything they can to counter its impact.
"We are going to try to do everything we can," said Holloway.
"We have got something out there that looks like something from a fairground. I waited near it for 10 minutes to get a hot dog!
"It's the generator trying to blow hot air on it.
"We hope the game will be on, we want it to be. It would be very embarrassing if we can't get it on.
"We have tried. I expect the chairman is probably saying 'How much?' but I can't ask for anything more."
Blackpool have been forced to abandon their usual training ground due to the cold snap, but Holloway this week spurned the chance to take the squad abroad to a warm-weather camp.
He said: "I actually had a choice of spending three or four days abroad and letting them train on some decent surfaces.
"The chairman agreed to do it and the club secretary had it all set up.
"I didn't think it would be the right preparation but it just shows how far we have come.
"We have stayed in the cold and trained on an artificial pitch."
Holloway has dismissed recent reports in the press that he was planning to train on the beach, although has not ruled the idea out completely.
The manager added: "We know it is an option if the grass it totally frozen.
"It is what they used to do years ago and it did them no harm whatsoever.
"Sir Stanley Matthews used to go down there every morning before training and do his own fitness routine.
"What a magnificent example of a human being that man was, so what is wrong with our lads going on the beach?"
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