Rose Bowl (game)

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Rose Bowl
Sponsor Citi
Location Pasadena, CA
Stadium Rose Bowl
Website www.TournamentOfRoses.com
Bowl Championship Series
This article is about the annual Rose Bowl game. For the Rose Bowl stadium, please see Rose Bowl (stadium).

The Rose Bowl is an annual college football game, usually played on January 1 (New Year's Day) at the stadium of the same name in Pasadena, California. When New Year's Day falls on a Sunday the game is then played on the following Monday. In 2002 and 2006, the Rose Bowl was the site of the Bowl Championship Series National Championship.

Contents

[edit] Background

The game is sometimes nicknamed The Granddaddy of Them All, the Rose Bowl is the oldest bowl game and part of the annual Tournament of Roses event. The game was first played in 1902, pitting Michigan against Stanford, but after Michigan's 49-0 win over Stanford, Tournament of Roses officials did not stage another game until 1916, when instead of a football game, chariot races were held. The Tournament also includes the Tournament of Roses Parade featuring floats covered with flowers and plants. Before the Rose Bowl stadium was built in 1923, games were played in Pasadena's Tournament Park, which is approximately three miles southeast of the current stadium. For many years the game has been televised by NBC in a 1 PM PST time slot, the only New Year's bowl airing at that time. Since 1988, it has been the bowl has been broadcasted on ABC.

[edit] History

In the game's early years (except during World War I), it always featured a team — not necessarily the conference champion — from the Pacific Coast Conference (ancestor to today's Pacific 10), as well as a team invited from further east. Beginning with the 1947 game, the game's participants were established as the champions of what is now the Big Ten and Pac-10 Conferences. Since 1998, however, with the creation of the Bowl Championship Series system, team selection for the Rose Bowl is now tied into the other three BCS Bowls, although in any given year the Rose Bowl still attempts, if possible, to maintain the traditional Pac-10-Big Ten format. The 2002 game of Nebraska (Big 12) and Miami (who were members of the Big East at that time) was the first since 1946 not featuring either the traditional pairing. Starting with the 2007 BCS, the stadium hosting the traditional bowl game will also host the new stand-alone BCS National Championship Game one week later, meaning that the next time the self-named stadium will host the title game will be on January 8, 2010. While FOX got the rights to the other three games in negotiations with the BCS, ABC retained the rights to the Rose Bowl Game for themselves.

Former Rose Bowl game logo.

Following the attack on Pearl Harbor, the 1942 game was moved to Duke University's Wallace Wade Stadium in Durham, North Carolina due to World War II security threats, as officials were wary of allowing such a large crowd to congregate anywhere on the West Coast and risking another Japanese attack.

The impact of the BCS on the Rose Bowl matchups has resulted in the initial participation by several teams, even in years when the BCS National Championship Game is not contested there. The 2003 Rose Bowl game featured the first appearance by Oklahoma. The 2005 bowl featured Michigan against Texas, which was selected — amid some controversy — over California, a Pac-10 school, from the final at-large bid. Despite the controversy, this was a milestone for Texas and Michigan as it marked the first meeting between the two teams. It was also the first appearance — and victory — by Texas in the Rose Bowl. The 2006 game, which was played for the national championship, featured offensive powerhouses Texas (in its second straight Rose Bowl appearance and second appearance overall, holding a 19-game winning streak) and Southern California (attempting to become only the second school to claim three straight national championships and further its 34-game winning streak in its 30th Rose Bowl appearance, the most by any school). Texas won 41-38 on a touchdown in the closing seconds. Several sports analysts soon after the game were naming it among the most exciting championship bowl games, though it is unclear if this distinction will hold over time or is merely a case of proximity. In terms of number of TV viewers, it was the highest-rated college football game since the 1987 Fiesta Bowl between Penn State and Miami.

[edit] Sponsors

For years the game bucked tradition by going without a sponsor, but in 1998, the game became known as The Rose Bowl Game presented by AT&T and in 2002 as The Rose Bowl Game presented by PlayStation 2. Since 2003, when the agreement with Sony expired, the game has been presented by citi. The Rose Bowl still spurns the sponsorship tradition to a degree, as the sponsor's name is listed less prominently than in other bowl games. In other bowls, the sponsor's name is listed first and as part of the game's name, rather than merely as the presenter of the game.

[edit] Results

Date Played Winner Loser
January 1, 1902 Michigan 49 Stanford 0
January 1, 1916 Washington State 14 Brown 0
January 1, 1917 Oregon 14 Pennsylvania 0
January 1, 1918 Mare Island Marines 19 Fort Lewis 7
January 1, 1919 Great Lakes NTS 17 Mare Island Marines 0
January 1, 1920 Harvard 7 Oregon 6
January 1, 1921 California 28 Ohio State 0
January 2, 1922 California 0 Washington & Jefferson 0
January 1, 1923 Southern California 14 Penn State 3
January 1, 1924 Navy 14 Washington 14
January 1, 1925 Notre Dame 27 Stanford 10
January 1, 1926 Alabama 20 Washington 19
January 1, 1927 Alabama 7 Stanford 7
January 2, 1928 Stanford 7 Pittsburgh 6
January 1, 1929 Georgia Tech 8 California 7
January 1, 1930 Southern California 47 Pittsburgh 14
January 1, 1931 Alabama 24 Washington State 0
January 1, 1932 Southern California 21 Tulane 12
January 2, 1933 Southern California 35 Pittsburgh 0
January 1, 1934 Columbia 7 Stanford 0
January 1, 1935 Tulane 20 Temple 14
January 1, 1936 Stanford 7 Southern Methodist 0
January 1, 1937 Pittsburgh 21 Washington 0
January 1, 1938 California 13 Alabama 0
January 2, 1939 Southern California 7 Duke 3
January 1, 1940 Southern California 14 Tennessee 0
January 1, 1941 Stanford 21 Nebraska 13
January 1, 1942 Oregon State 20 Duke 16
January 1, 1943 Georgia 9 UCLA 0
January 1, 1944 Southern California 29 Washington 0
January 1, 1945 Southern California 25 Tennessee 0
January 1, 1946 Alabama 34 Southern California 14
January 1, 1947 Illinois 45 UCLA 14
January 1, 1948 Michigan 49 Southern California 0
January 1, 1949 Northwestern 20 California 14
January 2, 1950 Ohio State 17 California 14
January 1, 1951 Michigan 14 California 6
January 1, 1952 Illinois 40 Stanford 7
January 1, 1953 Southern California 7 Wisconsin 0
January 1, 1954 Michigan State 28 UCLA 20
January 1, 1955 Ohio State 20 Southern California 7
January 2, 1956 Michigan State 17 UCLA 20
January 1, 1957 Iowa 35 Oregon State 19
January 1, 1958 Ohio State 10 Oregon 7
January 1, 1959 Iowa 38 California 12
January 1, 1960 Washington 44 Wisconsin 8
January 2, 1961 Washington 17 Minnesota 7
January 1, 1962 Minnesota 21 UCLA 3
January 1, 1963 Southern California 42 Wisconsin 37
January 1, 1964 Illinois 17 Washington 7
January 1, 1965 Michigan 34 Oregon State 7
January 1, 1966 UCLA 14 Michigan State 12
January 2, 1967 Purdue 14 Southern California 13
January 1, 1968 Southern California 14 Indiana 3
January 1, 1969 Ohio State 27 Southern California 16
January 1, 1970 Southern California 10 Michigan 3
January 1, 1971 Stanford 27 Ohio State 17
January 1, 1972 Stanford 13 Michigan 12
January 1, 1973 Southern California 42 Ohio State 17
January 1, 1974 Ohio State 42 Southern California 17
January 1, 1975 Southern California 18 Ohio State 17
January 1, 1976 UCLA 23 Ohio State 10
January 1, 1977 Southern California 14 Michigan 6
January 2, 1978 Washington 27 Michigan 20
January 1, 1979 Southern California 17 Michigan 10
January 1, 1980 Southern California 17 Ohio State 16
January 1, 1981 Michigan 23 Washington 6
January 1, 1982 Washington 28 Iowa 0
January 1, 1983 UCLA 24 Michigan 14
January 2, 1984 UCLA 45 Illinois 9
January 1, 1985 Southern California 20 Ohio State 17
January 1, 1986 UCLA 45 Iowa 28
January 1, 1987 Arizona State 22 Michigan 15
January 1, 1988 Michigan State 20 Southern California 17
January 2, 1989 Michigan 22 Southern California 14
January 1, 1990 Southern California 17 Michigan 10
January 1, 1991 Washington 46 Iowa 34
January 1, 1992 Washington 34 Michigan 14
January 1, 1993 Michigan 38 Washington 31
January 1, 1994 Wisconsin 21 UCLA 16
January 2, 1995 Penn State 38 Oregon 20
January 1, 1996 Southern California 41 Northwestern 32
January 1, 1997 Ohio State 20 Arizona State 17
January 1, 1998 Michigan 21 Washington State 16
January 1, 1999 Wisconsin 34 UCLA 31
January 1, 2000 Wisconsin 17 Stanford 9
January 1, 2001 Washington 34 Purdue 24
January 3, 2002 Miami 37 Nebraska 14
January 1, 2003 Oklahoma 34 Washington State 14
January 1, 2004 Southern California 28 Michigan 14
January 1, 2005 Texas 38 Michigan 13
January 4, 2006 Texas 41 Southern California 38
January 1, 2007 Southern California 32 Michigan 18
January 1, 2008 Southern California 49 Illinois 17
January 1, 2009 Southern California 38 Penn State 24
yellow background denotes BCS National Championship game.
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