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We have Rose Bowl Tickets to the biggest events. From the biggest events in the world down to your local. If there is Rose Bowl tickets available we have the tickets. We have been selling Rose Bowl Tickets since 1988 and we are registered with the NATB and BBB.
How do I purchase Rose Bowl Tickets?
Click on the link above to purchase Rose Bowl Tickets. Ordering Rose Bowl Tickets early insures you a place in the general seating area of your choice. To order Rose Bowl Tickets securely online simply click the "Buy Rose Bowl Tickets!" link above.
How do I get my Rose Bowl Tickets?
All of our Rose Bowl Tickets are either shipped via Federal Express or available for pick up at one of our four Los Angeles offices.. Please note that we do not deliver on Saturday unless, that option is specially requested on your order.
Mention"Concerts" when you buy your Concerts, Sports, or Theater Tickets from ConcertTickets.org and we will ship them for FREE.
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More Rose Bowl information
The entire Rose Bowl Schedule and Tickets are available 24 hours a day on our site. If you already have tickets to a Rose Bowl event check out our Rose Bowl Seating Chart.
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Rose Bowl Address Information.
Rose Bowl Address is 1001 Rose Bowl Drive, Pasadena, CA 91103
Rose Bowl Seating Chart.
Click here for the Rose Bowl Seating Chart.
Feel free to call us regarding any questions you have about your tickets on our Rose Bowl Seating chart.
Rose Bowl History and Information
The history of New Year's Day football in Pasadena predates the initial game which was played at the Rose Bowl. In 1902, the competition of Roses Association, which took over for the Valley Hunt Club when the parades and revelry outgrew the latter's abilities, determined to stage a football game. For that match up, Stanford hosted visiting inspiration Michigan, an effort planned to endorse sunny SoCal to those suffering through blizzards back East. The competition finished in the third quarter, though, when Stanford admitted defeat in the midst of a 49-0 woodshed whooping, which directed the Association to drop football in favor of Roman-style chariot racing.
Gratefully, in 1916 the organizers came to their senses and returned to the gridiron. The Rose Bowl was built in the image of the Yale Bowl, the first great recent football stadium, and the era of Grandaddyism was born.
Today, the Rose Bowl is more than a game, it's an organization. It's a New Year's party in Old Town Pasadena, a parade with more backgrounds and history than the game itself. Locals lean to fly the coop during the celebrations as the whole area grows impassable with throngs of fans and parade lovers filling the sidewalks and drenched in the southern California sun. Curbside presentation for the parade is the die-hard's way to go, and those precious spots along Colorado Boulevard vanished fast, thanks to a city regulation allowing people to start gathering at noon the day before. Shop fronts, doorways, lampposts and mailboxes all vanish in a sea of Roses pilgrims hoping for an open view. It's a crowd sight reminiscent of Mardi Gras, only without the nakedness. Securing a spot on the sidewalk is as easy as teaching yourself to sleep without laying down, but game tickets are a little harder to come by.
Back in 1901, history of the Rose Bowl game, the organizers of the Tournament of Roses was agonizing how to draw people to the activities on New Year's Day. James Wagner, then president of the Tournament carried the idea of a post season football game to get the much desired audience.
Fielding Yost, the coach of the unbeatable Michigan football team challenged the University of California. California refused but Stanford stepped up to meet Michigan's challenge. Michigan's team overwhelmed Stanford in a 49-0 score in front of eight thousand people.
The football game made revenue. However, due to the one sided triumph, organizers thought that the viewers would not show up for yet another football game and swapped the post season football game with chariot racing. However, the chariot racing was formed with problems. The amateur chariot racers would run into each other. Soon after, the organizers required out professional racers, but then, the viewers assumed that the races were permanent. Later, the organizers determined to return to the post season football game.
In 1916, the second Tournament of Roses football games took place where Washington State conquered Brown 14-0. The Rose Bowl game has been nicknamed the "Grandaddy of Them All" and since 1947, it has been a sellout.
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