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Rose Bowl (stadium)

Coordinates:34°09′40″N118°10′05″W / 34.161°N 118.168°W /34.161; -118.168
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Home stadium of the UCLA Bruins and site of the Rose Bowl Game. Pasadena, California
"Rose Bowl Stadium" redirects here. For the cricket stadium, seeRose Bowl (cricket ground). For other uses, seeRose Bowl (disambiguation).

Rose Bowl
Spieker Field at the Rose Bowl
America's Stadium
Aerial view from south in 2018
Rose Bowl is located in the Los Angeles metropolitan area
Rose Bowl
Rose Bowl
Location in theLos Angeles metro area
Show map of the Los Angeles metropolitan area
Rose Bowl is located in California
Rose Bowl
Rose Bowl
Location in California
Show map of California
Rose Bowl is located in the United States
Rose Bowl
Rose Bowl
Location in the United States
Show map of the United States
Address1001 Rose Bowl Drive
LocationPasadena, California, United States
Coordinates34°09′40″N118°10′05″W / 34.161°N 118.168°W /34.161; -118.168
Elevation830 feet (255 m)
Public transitA LineMemorial Park (via shuttle bus)
OwnerCity of Pasadena
OperatorRose Bowl Operating Company
Capacity89,702[1]
Record attendance106,869[2]
(1973 Rose Bowl)
Field size109.75 m × 48.75 m (360.1 ft × 159.9 ft)[3]
SurfaceBermuda grass[4]
Construction
Broke ground1922[5]
OpenedOctober 28, 1922
first Rose Bowl game:
January 1,1923
Construction cost$272,198
($5.11 million in 2024[6])
ArchitectMyron Hunt[7]
Tenants
Rose Bowl Game (NCAA) 1923–present
Caltech Beavers (NCAA) 1923–1976
Loyola Lions (NCAA) 1951
CSULA Diablos 1957–1960, 1963–1969
Los Angeles Wolves (NASL) 1968
Pasadena Bowl 1946–1966, 1969–1971
Los Angeles Aztecs (NASL) 1978–1979
UCLA Bruins (NCAA) 1982–present
Los Angeles Galaxy (MLS) 1996–2002, 2023, 2024
Website
rosebowlstadium.com
The Rose Bowl
Panorama in October2004, hostingArizona
NRHP reference No.87000755[8]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPFebruary 27, 1987
Designated NHLFebruary 27, 1987[9]

TheRose Bowl[a] is an outdoor athleticstadium located inPasadena, California, United States. Opened in October 1922, the stadium is recognized as aNational Historic Landmark and a California Historic Civil Engineering landmark.[9] With a modern all-seated capacity of 89,702,[1] the Rose Bowl is the20th-largest stadium in the world, the11th-largest stadium in the United States, and the10th-largest NCAA stadium.[13] The stadium is 10 miles (16 km) north-northeast of downtownLos Angeles.

The Rose Bowl is best known as acollege football venue, specifically as the host of the annualRose Bowl Game. Since1982, it has served as the home stadium of theUCLA Bruins football team of theBig Ten Conference. FiveSuper Bowl games,third most of any venue, have been played in the stadium. The Rose Bowl is a notedsoccer venue, having hosted the1994 FIFA World Cup Final,1999 FIFA Women's World Cup Final, and the1984 Olympic Soccer Gold Medal Match, as well as numerousCONCACAF,Copa America, andUnited States Soccer Federation matches.[14]

The stadium and adjacentBrookside Golf and Country Club are owned by the city of Pasadena and managed by the Rose Bowl Operating Company, a non-profit organization whose board is selected by council members of the city of Pasadena. UCLA and thePasadena Tournament of Roses also have one member on the company board.

History

[edit]

Design and construction

[edit]
Construction in 1921; note the original horseshoe shape

Through January1922, thebowl now known as the Rose Bowl Game was played atTournament Park, about three miles (5 km) southeast, adjacent to the campus of theCalifornia Institute of Technology (Caltech). ThePasadena Tournament of Roses Association, the game's organizer, realized the temporary stands were inadequate for a crowd of more than 40,000, and sought to build a better, permanent stadium.

The stadium was designed by architectMyron Hunt in 1921. His design was influenced by theYale Bowl inNew Haven, Connecticut, which opened in 1914. TheArroyo Seco was selected as the location for the stadium. The Rose Bowl was under construction from February 27, 1922, to October 1922.[15][16] The nearbyLos Angeles Memorial Coliseum also was under construction during this time and would be completed in May 1923, shortly after the Rose Bowl was completed. Originally built as a horseshoe, the stadium was expanded several times. The southern stands were completed in 1928, enclosing the stadium into a complete bowl. The stadium remains uncovered, with spectators having no protection from the elements.[17]

The field's alignment is nearly north–south, offset slightly northwest, and theelevation at street level is approximately 830 feet (255 m) abovesea level.

The stadium's name was alternatively "Tournament of Roses Stadium" or "Tournament of Roses Bowl", until being settled as "Rose Bowl" before the1923 Rose Bowl game,[18] in reference to the unusually named (at the time) Yale Bowl.

The stadium is in a residential area. Streets are converted to one lane by the Pasadena Police Department to ease ingress and egress during major events. When constructed, the majority of visitors arrived to the bowl via thePacific Electric interurban streetcar system; however, this service ended in 1958. Weather permitting, the 36 holes ofBrookside Golf Course are used for parking, providing 20,000 spaces. There are nine paved parking lots that provide spaces for another 6,000 vehicles. In 2016, Rose Bowl contractedParkJockey to streamline parking in and around the stadium. There is improved signage, a shuttle service to help visitors get to the stadium and mobile generator-powered lighting for visitors walking on the golf course at night.

Dedication

[edit]

The first game was a regular season contest in 1922, whenCalifornia defeatedUSC 12–0 on October 28. This was the only loss for USC and Cal finished the season undefeated. California declined the invitation to the1923 Rose Bowl game and USC went instead. The stadium was dedicated officially on January 1, 1923, when USC defeatedPenn State 14–3.

Seating

[edit]

The stadium seating has been reconfigured several times since its construction in 1922. The South end was filled in to complete the bowl and more seats have been added. The original wooden benches were replaced by aluminum benches in 1969. New grandstand and loge seats were installed in 1971.[19] New red seat backs were added to 22,000 seats prior to the1980 Rose Bowl.[19] A Rose Bowl improvement was conducted because of UCLA's 1982 move and the1984 Summer Olympics. This resulted in new seat backs for 50,000 seats.[19]

For many years, the Rose Bowl had the largest football stadium capacity in the United States, eventually being surpassed byMichigan Stadium (107,601).[20][21] The Rose Bowl's maximum statedseating capacity was 104,091 from 1972 to 1997.[19] Some of the seats closest to the field were never used during this time for UCLA regular season games, and were covered bytarps. Official capacity was lowered following the1998 Rose Bowl. Slightly different figures are given for the current capacity because the lower-level seats behind the team benches are not used for some events since the spectators can not see through the standing players or others on the field. UCLA reports the capacity at 91,136.[22] The Tournament of Roses reports the capacity at 92,542.[23] The2006 Rose Bowl game, which was also the BCS championship game, had a crowd of 93,986.[24] In the 2011 contest between TCU and Wisconsin, the listed attendance was 94,118. As of 2008, the Rose Bowl is the 11thlargest football stadium, and is still the largest stadium that hosts post-season bowl games.[25] For concerts held there, the Rose Bowl holds almost 60,000 people. The stadium's 2014 remodeling removed the lower "lettered row" seats on each side behind the players' benches and provided access in and out of the stadium for the lower sections of the Rose Bowl, restoring its original design.

For the 2021 season, UCLA began using a tarp to decrease capacity and cover the north upper end zone, the tarp spells out U-C-L-A with advertisements on the side. This brought official capacity down to 69,747 seats.[26]

Renovations

[edit]
Exterior of the Rose Bowl stadium before the renovation

The press box was updated before the1962 Rose Bowl with an elevator and two rows. The cost was $356,000. The Press Box was refurbished for UCLA's move in 1982 and the 1984 Summer Olympics.[19] In 2011 and 2012, the press box was undergoing renovation as part of the larger renovation originally budgeted at $152 million in 2010.[27] Costs had increased to $170 million during construction.[28] Work proceeded during the 2011 football season, and was expected to be completed before the UCLA Bruins' first home game in 2012.[28] Some unforeseen problems had been encountered due to the stadium's age and some renovations done in the early 1990s.[28] Most of the planned renovations were completed in 2013. Because of the increased construction cost, items deferred for the future are additional new restrooms, the historic field hedge, new entry-gate structures, ribbon boards and additional new concession stands. The stadium started "The Brick Campaign" to help pay for some of the cost of the renovations.[29] The Brick Campaign, completed in 2014, features a large logo of thePasadena Tournament of Roses and the donor bricks arranged by universities in front of the south main entrance to the stadium. A large 30 feet (9.1 m) tall by 77 feet (23 m) wideLED video display board was added to the north end of the stadium as a part of the renovation.

Court of Champions and Rose Plaza

[edit]

The Court of Champions is at the stadium's south end. Rose Bowl game records along with the names of the coaches and the MVP players, are shown on the plaques attached to the exterior wall. The Hall of Fame statue is also at the Court of Champions. The 2014 renovation allows more plaques to be placed on the wall and floor for future games. The statue ofJackie Robinson, who played football withPasadena City College, was dedicated in 2017. In 2019,Brandi Chastain's statue was added outside of the south gate. The statue portrays Brandi in her celebration of her winning penalty kick in the1999 FIFA Women's World Cup final, where she exposed hersports bra after removing her jersey.[30] The image of her celebration was described inThe New York Times as "most iconic photograph ever taken of a female athlete",[31] and it has been considered one of the more famous photographs of a woman celebrating an athletic victory.[32][33] A statue to honorKeith Jackson, the longtimeABC broadcaster who had called many games from the Rose Bowl, was unveiled on December 14, 2019, at the stadium's Rose Plaza. The commemorative bricks are located in front of Gate A. There are sections reserved for the City of Pasadena, Tournament of Roses, Rose Bowl, and each school of the Pac-12 and Big Ten conferences.

Terry Donahue Pavilion

[edit]

The seven-storyTerry Donahue Pavilion is named for the former UCLA football head coach, who was the winningest coach in UCLA and Pac-12 history. It houses the press boxes, broadcast booths, premium seating, boxes and suites. There are 54 luxury suites, 48 loge boxes, 1,200 club seats, state-of-the-art press boxes and a new broadcast center. The previous press box was replaced by a new self-contained media area capable of accommodating 318 credentialed working press, along with a separate level dedicated to game day operations, including TV and radio broadcasting, instant replay booths, coaching staffs and an emergency command center.[34] The radio and TV booths were renamed "TheKeith Jackson Broadcast Center" in December 2015. Jackson, the formerABC-TV sportscaster, coined the phrase "TheGranddaddy of Them All" for theRose Bowl game.[35]

1922 Locker Room Museum

[edit]

The old 1922 Rose Bowl locker room was restored in 2017 and converted into a little museum. Sections are dedicated to the construction of the Rose Bowl, the Rose Bowl games, UCLA football, and the NFLSuper Bowl games played at the Rose Bowl.

Venue rankings

[edit]

In 1999,Sports Illustrated listed the Rose Bowl at number 20 in the Top 20 Venues of the 20th Century.[36] In 2007, Sports Illustrated named the Rose Bowl the number one venue in college sports.[37]

Football

[edit]

Rose Bowl Game

[edit]
Main article:Rose Bowl Game

The Rose Bowl stadium is best known in the U.S. for its hosting of theRose Bowl, apostseasoncollege football game. The game is played after theTournament of Roses Parade on New Year's Day, or, if January 1 is a Sunday, on Monday, January 2. The stadium's name has given rise to the term "bowl game" for postseason football games, regardless of whether they are played in a bowl-shaped or "Bowl"-named stadium. The Rose Bowl Game is commonly referred to as "The Granddaddy of Them All" because of its stature as the oldest of all the bowl games. The visual of the afternoon sun setting on theSan Gabriel Mountains on New Year's Day is recognized as an important part of the tradition of the game.[38][39][40] Since 1945, the Rose Bowl has been the highest attended college football bowl game.[41]

Since its opening, the Rose Bowl stadium has hosted the bowl game every year except in 1942 and 2021. The1942 Rose Bowl was moved toDurham, North Carolina, at the campus ofDuke University. Duke, which played in the game on January 1, volunteered to host the contest because of security concerns on the West Coast in the weeks following theattack on Pearl Harbor.[42][43] The2021 Rose Bowl was played atAT&T Stadium inArlington, Texas due to capacity restrictions in place in California due to theCOVID-19 Pandemic.

BCS National Championship

[edit]
Texas andAlabama on January 7,2010
Main article:BCS National Championship Game
Florida State andAuburn on January 6,2014

Starting with the1998 season, the Rose Bowl became part of theBowl Championship Series (BCS). The2002 and2006 games also were the BCS Championship games, matching the #1 and #2 BCS teams in the nation. The2010 BCS National Championship Game was played six days after theRose Bowl game as a completely separate event from the Tournament of Roses, though it managed the event. The stadium hosted the2014 BCS National Championship Game, the final game before the BCS was replaced by the currentCollege Football Playoff, when it celebrated its 100th anniversary of the Rose Bowl game.[44]

SeasonGameDateVisiting teamPointsHome teamPointsSpectators
20012002January 3Nebraska14Miami3793,781
20052006January 4Texas41USC*3893,986
20092010January 7Texas21Alabama3794,906
2013 2014  January 6Auburn31Florida State3494,208

Note: *USC later vacated all wins during the season.

College Football Playoff semifinals

[edit]
Main article:College Football Championship Game

The Rose Bowl Game is one of the six primary bowls of theCollege Football Playoff (CFP), which replaced the BCS effective with the2014 season. Every three years, the Rose Bowl will match two of the top four teams selected by the system'sselection committee to compete for a spot at thenational championship game. The first CFP semifinal game at the Rose Bowl was the2015 Rose Bowl, whose winner advanced to thechampionship game on January 12 atAT&T Stadium inTexas. AT&T Stadium later hosted the2021 Rose Bowl, also a CFP semifinal, with limited attendance due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.

SeasonRose BowlDateVisiting teamPointsHome teamPointsSpectators
20142015January 1#3Florida State20#2Oregon5991,322
20172018January 1#3Georgia54 (2OT)#2Oklahoma4880,072[45]
20202021January 1#4Notre Dame14#1Alabama3118,373
20232024January 1#4Alabama20#1Michigan27 (OT)83,928[46]

Though the Rose Bowl is eligible to bid on hosting theCollege Football PlayoffChampionship Game in years it is not hosting a semifinal, it has no plans to do so. The first championship game held inSouthern California was atSoFi Stadium inInglewood in January2023.[47]

College Football Playoff quarterfinals

[edit]
SeasonRose BowlDateVisiting teamPointsHome teamPointsSpectators
20242025January 1#8Ohio State41#1Oregon2190,732

UCLA Bruins football

[edit]
Main article:UCLA Bruins football
Previous edition of Rose Bowl records at Hall of Champions
UCLA–USC football game at the Rose Bowl; the 2008 edition marked a return to the tradition of both teams wearing home jerseys

The Rose Bowl stadium has been the home football field forUCLA since1982.[22] The UCLA Bruins had played their home games at theLos Angeles Memorial Coliseum since1928. There was an attempt to build a 44,000-seat stadium on campus, at the site whereDrake Stadium eventually was built. However, the proposal was blocked by influential area residents, as well as some politicians.[48][49]

At the start of the1982 NFL season, with theOakland Raiders scheduled to move into the Coliseum, UCLA decided to relocate its home games to the Rose Bowl Stadium.[50] The Bruins went on to play two straight Rose Bowl games in their new home stadium, the1983 Rose Bowl and the1984 Rose Bowl. UCLA has participated in five Rose Bowl games since moving to the stadium. The stadium is the host of theUCLA–USC rivalry football game on even numbered years, alternating with the Coliseum. In the first rivalry game at the stadium between UCLA and USC in 1982, USC fans sat on the west side of the stadium and UCLA fans sat on the east side of the stadium, mirroring an arrangement that existed when the teams shared the Coliseum. Both teams also wore their home uniforms. In 1984, USC fans were moved to the end zone seats, which ended the tradition of shared stadium. Because of the shared arrangement, and the participation of USC in a number of Rose Bowl games, both schools have winning records in each other's home stadium. The Bruins travel 26 miles from campus to Pasadena to play home games, but only 14 miles to their biggest road game at USC every other year.[48] The Bruins have played 12 Rose Bowl games in the stadium. The attendance of 105,464 for the1976 Rose Bowl is the largest crowd to ever watch a UCLA football game in the stadium. It is a record that is not likely to be broken, as the Rose Bowl seating has been reduced to 91,136 for UCLA Bruins Football[22] and 92,542 for the Rose Bowl Game.[23]

In November 2025, it was reported that the Bruins were planning on breaking their lease with the Rose Bowl to move toSoFi Stadium inInglewood, the current home of theLos Angeles Rams andLos Angeles Chargers. The move has been met with negative reception from fans and analysts as well as a lawsuit from the city of Pasadena.[51]

Caltech Beavers football

[edit]

Caltech, a university located in Pasadena, played most home games in the Rose Bowl from the time of its construction until the school dropped football in1993. Caltech jovially claimed to play before the greatest number of empty seats in the nation.[52]

Junior Rose Bowl

[edit]

The stadium hosted theJunior Rose Bowl from 1946 to 1971 and 1976 to 1977. Between 1946 and 1966 and 1976 and 1977, the game pitted theCalifornia Junior College football champions against theNJCAA football champions for the national championship. It was organized by the Pasadena Junior Chamber of Commerce. The Junior Rose Bowl became thePasadena Bowl from 1967 to 1971; it was billed as the Junior Rose Bowl the first two years, but instead two teams from theNCAA College Division competed (then later the University Division, usually featuring teams that were not invited to other major bowls).

The Pasadena Turkey Tussle

[edit]

The Turkey Tussle is a football game that takes place at the Rose Bowl Stadium between the two rival schools in thePasadena Unified School District. The yearly competition between John Muir High School and what is now Pasadena High School began in the 1940s. Before switching to the current games within Pasadena High School and John Muir High School, the event initially featured Pasadena Community College and John Muir Junior College (CBS News). The stadium usually gets hundreds of fans, students, alumni, and parents/families from both sides filling the seats at the Rose Bowl Stadium. The winner of the football matchup takes home the iconic Victory Bell, which is then displayed in the halls of either school.

1983 Army–Navy game

[edit]

The Rose Bowl stadium is the only site west of the Mississippi River to host anArmy–Navy Game (1983). The city of Pasadena paid for the traveling expenses of all the students and supporters of both theU.S. Naval Academy andU.S. Military Academy.[53] The attendance was 81,000.[54][55] The game was brought to the Rose Bowl as there are a large number of military installations and servicemen and women, along with many retired military personnel, on the West Coast.[53] While the game has been held in multiple locations, only the 1926 game inChicago, this 1983 game, and the 2023 game inBoston have been played outside theMid-Atlantic region. The game is most frequently played inPhiladelphia, followed by theNew York area and theBaltimore–Washington area.

Super Bowl

[edit]
Main article:Super Bowl

The stadium has hosted theSuper Bowl five times. The first wasSuper Bowl XI in January 1977, when theOakland Raiders beat theMinnesota Vikings 32–14. The game was also played there in 1980 (XIV), 1983 (XVII), 1987 (XXI) and 1993 (XXVII). The Rose Bowl is one of two venues (withStanford Stadium) to host a Super Bowl though having never served as the full-time home stadium for an NFL or AFL team (Stanford Stadium hosted oneSan Francisco 49ers game after the1989 Loma Prieta earthquake).

SeasonDateSuper BowlVisiting teamPointsHome teamPointsSpectators
1976January 9,1977XIOakland Raiders32Minnesota Vikings14103,438
1979January 20,1980XIVLos Angeles Rams19Pittsburgh Steelers31103,985
1982January 30,1983XVIIMiami Dolphins17Washington Redskins27103,667
1986January 25,1987XXIDenver Broncos20New York Giants39101,063
1992January 31,1993XXVIIBuffalo Bills17Dallas Cowboys52  98,374

The NFL has a policy limiting the hosting of a Super Bowl to metropolitan areas with NFL teams. The Rose Bowl was not considered as a Super Bowl site after theRams andRaiders departed the Los Angeles area in1995. The most recent Super Bowl held in Southern California was Super Bowl (LVI) in February 2022 at the Rams' andChargers'SoFi Stadium inInglewood (the Rams returned to Los Angeles in2016, the Chargers thefollowing year).

See also:History of the National Football League in Los Angeles

Although proposed, no NFL team has called the Rose Bowl a regular season home. After losing both its local teams in the Los Angeles market in 1995, theNational Football League began looking to either start or relocate a franchise to the Los Angeles area. The closest the Rose Bowl came to being the home of an NFL team was in 1996 when theSeattle Seahawks announced a relocation to Los Angeles with the Rose Bowl as their planned stadium but the move was blocked by the NFL.[56] After many years of varying offers, no deal could be struck between the NFL owners, the stadium's owner, and the City of Pasadena, following a vote of disapproval by its residents in November 2006.[57]

On November 19, 2012, Pasadena officials approved a proposal which could have allowed an NFL team to temporarily play in the Rose Bowl.[58][59] The Rose Bowl, however, never ended up acting as a home field for an NFL team. When theLos Angeles Rams moved fromSt. Louis prior to the 2016 NFL season, the Rose Bowl was considered as a temporary home before the Rams ultimately settled on playing in USC'sLos Angeles Memorial Coliseum, the Rams' home from 1946 to 1979. TheLos Angeles Chargers went toDignity Health Sports Park as their temporary venue in 2017.

Soccer

[edit]

Though best known as an American football stadium, the Rose Bowl is also one of the most decoratedsoccer (association football) venues in the world. The stadium hosted the prestigious1994 FIFA World Cup Final (an event watched by over 700 million people worldwide), the1999 FIFA Women's World Cup Final (at the time the most attended women's soccer match in history), and the1984 Olympic Gold Medal Match, making it the only venue in the world to host all three of international soccer's major championship matches.[60] It has also hostedMLS Cup 1998, the2002 and2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup Finals, and theCONCACAF Cup in 2015.

TheUnited States men's national soccer team has played 17 games in the Rose Bowl, thefourth most of any venue. It has hosted 5U.S. women's national team matches.Mexico has played a number of friendlies in the stadium against nations other than the United States.

In the past, it was also the home ground of twoNorth American Soccer League clubs, theLos Angeles Wolves in 1968 and theLos Angeles Aztecs in 1978 and 1979. From 1996 through 2002, the stadium was the home ground ofMajor League Soccer clubLos Angeles Galaxy.[61] The stadium once again hosted the Galaxy on July 4, 2023, in a one-off game (nicknamedEl Tráfico) withcity rivalsLos Angeles FC, being previously delayed from its original date of February 25, 2023.[62][63] The match set a new MLS attendance record for a standalone match, with 82,110 spectators.[64]

On July 27, 2016, the Rose Bowl hosted a2016 International Champions Cup match betweenChelsea andLiverpool. Chelsea won the match 1–0. The Rose Bowl also hosted a2018 International Champions Cup match betweenF.C. Barcelona andTottenham Hotspur where Barcelona won 5–3 in penalty kicks after a 2–2 draw.

Major soccer tournaments

[edit]

The Rose Bowl is one of two stadiums to have hosted theFIFA World Cup finals for both men and women. The Rose Bowl hosted the men's final in1994 and the women's final in1999. (The only other stadium with this honor is theRåsunda Stadium nearStockholm, Sweden, which hosted the men's final in1958 and the women's final in1995.) Both Rose Bowl finals were scoreless after doubleextra time and decided onpenalty shootouts;Brazil beatingItaly in the1994 FIFA World Cup Final 3–2, and theUnited States beatingChina in the1999 women's final 5–4.[65][66]

The Rose Bowl also hosted group stage matches of theCopa América Centenario in 2016.[67] It also hosted several matches including the final of the1984 Olympics men's soccer tournament. It has also regularly featuredCONCACAF Gold Cup matches including two finals.

The Rose Bowl was a candidate to host matches during the2026 FIFA World Cup, butFIFA selectedSoFi Stadium instead. The Rose Bowl will be a venue during the2025 FIFA Club World Cup and the2028 Summer Olympics.[68]

1984 Summer Olympics - Men's Football

[edit]
DateTime[1]Team #1ResultTeam #2RoundAttendance
July 2919:30 Italy1–0 EgyptGroup D37,430
July 3019:00 Brazil3–1 Saudi ArabiaGroup C40,799
July 3119:00 Italy1–0 United StatesGroup D63,624
August 119:00 Morocco1–0 Saudi ArabiaGroup C36,909
August 219:00 Costa Rica1–0 ItalyGroup D41,291
August 319:00 Morocco0–2 BrazilGroup C49,355
August 519:00 France2–0 EgyptQuarter-finals66,228
August 619:00 Yugoslavia5–2 West GermanyQuarter-finals58,439
August 818:15 France4–2 (a.e.t.) YugoslaviaSemi-finals97,451
August 1019:00 Yugoslavia2–1 ItalyBronze100,374
August 1119:00 France2–0 BrazilFinal101,799

1994 FIFA World Cup

[edit]
DateTime[2]Team #1ResultTeam #2RoundAttendance
June 1816:30 Colombia1–3 RomaniaGroup A91,856
June 1916:30 Cameroon2–2 SwedenGroup B93,194
June 2216:30 United States2–1 ColombiaGroup A93,469
June 2616:30 United States0–1 RomaniaGroup A93,869
July 313:30 Romania3–2 ArgentinaRound of 1690,469
July 1316:30 Brazil1–0 SwedenSemi-final91,856
July 1612:30 Sweden4–0 Bulgaria3rd place match91,500
July 1712:30 Brazil0–0
(3–2 on pen.)
 ItalyFinal94,194

1999 FIFA Women's World Cup

[edit]
DateTime[3]Team #1ResultTeam #2RoundAttendance
June 2016:00 Italy1–1 GermanyGroup B17,100
June 2018:30 North Korea1–2 NigeriaGroup A17,100
July 1010:15 Norway0–0
(4–5 on pen.)
 Brazil3rd place match90,185
July 1012:30 United States0–0
(5–4 on pen.)
 ChinaFinal90,185

2025 FIFA Club World Cup

[edit]
DateTime (UTC−8)Team #1Res.Team #2RoundAttendance
June 1512:00Paris Saint-GermainFrance4–0SpainAtlético MadridGroup B80,619
June 1718:00MonterreyMexico1–1ItalyInter MilanGroup E40,311
June 1918:00Paris Saint-GermainFrance0–1BrazilBotafogoGroup B53,699
June 2118:00River PlateArgentina0–0MexicoMonterreyGroup E57,393
June 2312:00Atlético MadridSpain1–0BrazilBotafogoGroup B22,992
June 2518:00Urawa Red DiamondsJapan0–4MexicoMonterreyGroup E14,312
^ All times inUTC−8.

Other events and usage

[edit]

Pasadena events

[edit]
4th of July Fireworks over the Rose Bowl

The Rose Bowl has hosted the Pasadena "Americafest"Independence Day celebration annually since 1927.[69] The annual fireworks show is considered one of the top fireworks shows in the nation. In 2023, AmericaFest did not take place, being replaced by a rescheduledEl Tráfico (originally scheduled for February 25), however a firework show did occur after the game.[70] In 2025 the annual fireworks show was replaced by a drone show, due to concerns about fireworks being fire hazards, these concerns likely triggered by theEaton Fire, which had happened earlier in the year.[71] Another local event is the Rose Bowl Flea Market held the second Sunday of each month, on the stadium parking lots. Hosted by promoter R.G. Canning, it claims to be the largestFlea market on the West Coast.[72] The stadium hosts the annual "Turkey Tussle" homecoming football game betweenJohn Muir High School andPasadena High School, in late October. The Rose Bowl hosted its annual graduation ceremonies for Blair High School, John Muir High School and Pasadena High School until 1984, before staging it at the individual schools until 1998. Currently all three high schools along with John Marshall Fundamental Secondary School hold their graduation ceremonies at thePasadena Civic Auditorium in early June until 2019. On June 4, 2021, thePasadena Unified School District used the Rose Bowl to hold their high school graduation ceremonies for all four high schools, along with Rose City High School and Center for Independent Studies.

An eagle design at the 2025 Independence Day drone show at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, California.

1932 Summer Olympics

[edit]
Main article:Cycling at the 1932 Summer Olympics

The Rose Bowl was thetrack cycling venue for the1932 Summer Olympics.[73]

Concerts

[edit]
The Bowl filling up for Beyonce's On the Run Tour in 2014.
DatePerformer(s)Opening act(s)Tour/EventAttendanceNotes
September 15, 1968[74]Big Brother and the Holding Company
June 6, 1982[75][76]Peace Sunday: We Have a Dream
July 2, 1982[77]JourneyBlue Öyster Cult
Triumph
Aldo Nova
Escape Tour83,214
August 1, 1982[78]Budweiser Superfest 1982
June 18, 1988[79]Depeche ModeOrchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark
Thomas Dolby
Wire
Pet Shop Boys
Music for the Masses Tour60,000[80] - 80,000[81]The concert was filmed and recorded for the group's documentary-concert film and live album101.
June 27, 1992[82]The CureCranes
Dinosaur Jr.
Wish Tour35,000The show attracted the lowest attendance for a single concert in the history of the stadium.
October 3, 1992[83]Metallica
Guns N' Roses
MotörheadGuns N' Roses/Metallica Stadium Tour68,639ComedianAndrew Dice Clay opened for Guns N' Roses and introduced the band when they came onstage.
January 31, 1993Michael JacksonSuper Bowl XXVII halftime show
July 31, 1993Juan GabrielBecomes the first Latin American singer to perform at the Rose Bowl.
April 16, 1994[84]Pink FloydThe Division Bell Tour129,060The band became the first ever act to perform two consecutive nights at the stadium.
April 17, 1994[84]
July 17, 1994[85]Kenny G
Whitney Houston
1994 FIFA World Cup closing ceremony
October 19, 1994[86]The Rolling StonesRed Hot Chili Peppers
Buddy Guy
Voodoo Lounge Tour119,140
October 21, 1994[86]
January 21, 1995[87]EaglesSheryl CrowHell Freezes Over Tour60,000
June 27, 1998Lilith Fair1998 Tour
July 10, 1999Jennifer Lopez1999 FIFA Women's World Cup closing ceremony
July 17, 1999[88]Lilith Fair1999 Tour
June 9, 2000[89]'N SyncPinkNo Strings Attached Tour
July 24, 2001[90]Eden's Crush
Samantha Mumba
PopOdyssey62,196
June 15, 2002[91]Various artistsWango Tango
May 17, 2003[91]
May 15, 2004[91]
October 25, 2009[92]U2The Black Eyed PeasU2 360° Tour97,014The concert was streamed on the group's officialYouTube channel, and also filmed for the band's concert filmU2360° at the Rose Bowl. The show also attracted the highest attendance for a single concert in the history of the stadium.
July 28, 2013[93]Justin Timberlake
Jay-Z
DJ CassidyLegends of the Summer63,162
August 2, 2014Beyoncé
Jay-Z
On the Run Tour96,994
August 3, 2014
August 7, 2014Eminem
Rihanna
The Monster Tour110,346
August 8, 2014
September 11, 2014One Direction5 Seconds of Summer
Jamie Scott
Where We Are Tour165,170During the performance on September 13, the band performed a cover of "Happy Birthday" byMildred J. Hill dedicated to Niall; and also of "I Gotta Feeling" byThe Black Eyed Peas, "Beautiful Girls" bySean Kingston, "Stand by Me" byBen E. King and "Rock Your Body" byJustin Timberlake, along with a snippet of "I Want". The band also became the first ever act to perform three consecutive nights at the stadium.
September 12, 2014
September 13, 2014
July 25, 2015Kenny Chesney
Jason Aldean
Brantley Gilbert
Cole Swindell
Old Dominion
The Big Revival Tour
Burn It Down Tour
53,864
May 14, 2016BeyoncéDJ KhaledThe Formation World Tour55,736Big Sean,Yo Gotti,Ne-Yo,Ty Dolla Sign,Fat Joe,Remy Ma,Trey Songz, andSnoop Dogg joined DJ Khaled during the opening act. Beyoncé becomes the first female headliner at the stadium.[94]
August 20, 2016ColdplayBishop Briggs
Alessia Cara
Stargate
A Head Full of Dreams Tour120,062The concert was streamed in China and the Philippines.[95]
August 21, 2016Bishop Briggs
Alessia Cara
May 20, 2017U2The LumineersThe Joshua Tree Tour 2017123,164
May 21, 2017
July 29, 2017MetallicaAvenged Sevenfold
Gojira
WorldWired Tour60,509
September 16, 2017[96]Green DayCatfish and the BottlemenRevolution Radio Tour36,912[97]
October 6, 2017[98]ColdplayTove Lo
Alina Baraz
A Head Full of Dreams Tour64,442The proceeds from these shows went towards the relief efforts for theCentral Mexico earthquake.[99]
May 18, 2018[100]Taylor SwiftCamila Cabello
Charli XCX
Reputation Stadium Tour118,084Shawn Mendes was the surprise guest. Swift performed "There's Nothing Holdin' Me Back" with Shawn.
May 19, 2018Troye Sivan andSelena Gomez were the surprise guests. Swift performed "My My My!" with Troye and "Hands To Myself" with Selena.
August 18, 2018[101]Ed SheeranSnow Patrol
Anne-Marie
÷ Tour62,321
September 22, 2018Beyoncé
Jay-Z
Chloe X Halle andDJ KhaledOn the Run II Tour106,550
September 23, 2018
May 4, 2019[102]BTSBTS World Tour Love Yourself: Speak Yourself113,040Becomes the first South Korean act to perform at The Rose Bowl.[103]
May 5, 2019[104]
August 22, 2019The Rolling StonesKaleoNo Filter Tour56,974This concert was originally scheduled to take place on May 11, 2019.
November 15, 2020For King & CountryA Drummer Boy Christmas Tour
August 18, 2023Karol GAgudelo
Young Miko
Mañana Será Bonito Tour115,703 / 115,703$25,446,544
August 19, 2023Agudelo
September 30, 2023ColdplayH.E.R.
070 Shake
Music of the Spheres World Tour136,043 / 136,043TwoLos Angeles shows were originally going to be played atSoFi Stadium inInglewood, but were cancelled due to production issues and were eventually rescheduled for the Rose Bowl over a year later.[105]
October 1, 2023
April 18, 2025AC/DCThe Pretty RecklessPower Up Tour
September 6, 2025OasisCage the ElephantOasis Live '25 Tour
September 7, 2025

Other events

[edit]

The stadium was used formidget car racing in the 1940s and early 1950s.[106][107]

The stadium held its first country music festival in June 1981, named A Day in the Country.The event was produced by Richard Flanzer of AtlanticPacific Music.

The stadium hosted the 2007Drum Corps International World Championships August 7 through August 11, 2007. The Rose Bowl was the final stadium to host the championship before DCI moved their corporate offices toIndianapolis with the championships being held atLucas Oil Stadium until at least 2028. This was the first (and only) time the DCI championships had ever been held west ofDenver,Colorado in the 52-year history of DCI.

It hosted auditions for the top American television show,American Idol, on August 8, 2006. The stadium has also been used as part of the music video shoot for the song "The Last Song", the second single released by the American rock bandthe All-American Rejects, which features the band performing the song in the middle of the stadium to an empty crowd.

The stadium's Court of Champions was the site of a "Roadblock" fromseventeenth season of the CBS reality TV showThe Amazing Race where teams had to help decorate three sections of thetheme float for the 2011 New Year's DayRose Parade.[108]

In November 1997, theInternational Churches of Christ (Los Angeles) gathered at the Rose Bowl for their Worship Service, with an attendance of 17,000.[109]

TheBrookside Golf Course hosted theLos Angeles Open on thePGA Tour in1968, won byBilly Casper in late January.[110]

The Rose Bowl was used for high school graduation ceremonies for theAlhambra Unified School District's Alhambra High School, Mark Keppel High School and San Gabriel High School on May 27, 2021,La Cañada Unified School District's La Cañada High School on June 3, 2021, andGlendale Unified School District's Glendale High School and Herbert Hoover High School on June 10, 2021, and Crescenta Valley High School on June 11, 2021, instead of holding at their respective campuses due to the COVID-19 restrictions.

Present status

[edit]
Largecard stunt[111] performed at the 2004 Rose Bowl Game viewed from the Southeast corner

The Rose Bowl and adjacent golf course are managed by the Rose Bowl Operating Company, a non-profit organization whose board is selected by council members of the City of Pasadena. UCLA and the Pasadena Tournament of Roses also have one member on the company board. In 2007 it was reported that Rose Bowl stadium itself runs on a yearly operational loss.[57] While it generated funds with the annual lease with UCLA ($1.5 million), theTournament of Roses ($900,000), and a regularly hosted flea market ($900,000), it makes up the loss by relying on funds generated by the adjacent city-ownedgolf course ($2 million).[57] The stadium at the time was unable to finance many of the capital improvements it needed to be considered a modern facility, including new seats, wider aisles, additional exits, a wider concourse, a renovated press box, a state-of-the-art videoscoreboard, new field lighting, ribbon boards, extra suites and a club. The estimated cost for such improvements ranges from $250 million and $300 million.[57] The stadium had long-term leases with its two major tenants, thePasadena Tournament of Roses (2019) and UCLA (2023). In 2006, the Rose Bowl and the City of Pasadena launched a $16.3 million capital improvement program that benefited both UCLA and the Tournament of Roses. New locker rooms for both UCLA and visiting teams, as well as a new media interview area were constructed.[22] The USC Athletic department attempted to negotiate with the Rose Bowl to play games there in 2007, out of concerns that the Los Angeles Coliseum Commission would not negotiate, in a decade-long rent impasse between the commission and the university.[112]

In April 2009, The Rose Bowl Operating Company unveiled a Rose Bowl Strategic Plan, which addressed the objectives to improve public safety; enhance fan experience; maintain national historic landmark status; develop revenue sources to fund long-term improvements; and enhance facility operations. On October 11, 2010, the Pasadena City Council approved a $152 million financing plan for the major renovation of the stadium.[113] Groundbreaking ceremonies for the first of three phases of the project were held on January 25, 2011. The newly constructed video board was used for the June 25,2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup Final. The costs increased as the project went on, and by December 2012 were estimated at $194 million and the project to be completed by 2015.[114] The Rose Bowl and UCLA leases were extended to 2043 and 2044 respectively.[114][115] The renovations were completed in 2016.[34] In 2019, the Rose Bowl reported a profit of $335,000.[116] However, golf course usage has declined year after year, and UCLA football attendance has waned.[116] The stadium had reported $211.8 million in outstanding debt at the beginning of 2020.[116] The Rose Bowl is limited by law to 15 events per year with more than 20,000 in attendance.[117][118] But it can host an unlimited number of small events, such as weddings, for which it made $1.5 million in 2019.[116]

In 2024,Stephen A. Smith proposed moving The Rose Bowl Game from the Rose Bowl. His argument being traffic to and from the stadium was unacceptable, taking way too long for fans to arrive at the stadium and leave in a timely manner. His proposed alternative being newly builtSoFi Stadium for theLos Angeles Rams andLos Angeles Chargers as it has much better supporting infrastructure and location inInglewood. This was immediately slammed by college football fans calling it the worst take of all time, noting the Rose Bowl as an important site in the history of both college and professional sports.[119] In December 2024, it was announced that the Rose Bowl would be renovated to prepare for the2028 Summer Olympics by adding one of the largest video boards, field level clubs, improved seats, and add new field level clubs.[120]

Notable dates

[edit]

Seating and attendance records

[edit]
  • Rose Bowl Game records:1973 Rose Bowl, January 1, 1973, Attendance: 106,869. Number 1 ranked and undefeated USC vs. number 3 Ohio State. This is the stadium record, as well as the NCAA bowl game record.[2][22][41] The smallest Rose Bowl game crowd in the stadium was the1934 Rose Bowl with 35,000 in attendance to see Columbia defeat Stanford.[41] Three days of rain had turned the stadium into a small lake, and it rained on New Year's Day in 1934, one of the few times in the history of the tournament.[121] The largest crowd to watch a Rose Bowl Game after the1998 Rose Bowl and seating reconfiguration, was 96,371 in the2024 Rose Bowl.
  • NFL Super Bowl record:Super Bowl XIV, Pittsburgh Steelers – Los Angeles Rams, January 20, 1980, Attendance: 103,985. This is an NFL post-season record.[122] This also stood as an overall NFL record until broken by a 1994 Pre-season game played atEstadio Azteca (Aztec Stadium) in Mexico City.[123][124]
  • 1984 Summer Olympics (Games of the XXIII Olympiad)Football (Soccer) Tournament – France defeated Brazil 2–0 in the final to win the gold medal on August 11. The attendance was 101,799 setting a record for the largest crowd for a soccer game held in the United States (since broken by a 2014 Manchester United-Real Madrid exhibition at theMichigan Stadium inAnn Arbor, Michigan which drew 109,318). The attendance was also the Olympic football record until the Final of the2000 Olympic Football Tournament at theStadium Australia inSydney which drew 104,098.[125]
  • College football regular season record:UCLA–USC, November 19, 1988, Attendance: 100,741.[126] Undefeated second-ranked USC (9–0) and quarterbackRodney Peete met sixth-ranked UCLA (9–1) and quarterbackTroy Aikman with a berth in the Rose Bowl Game on the line. Since the 1998 renovations, the largest regular season crowd was for the 2002 UCLA-USC game, with an attendance of 91,084.[126] The largest attendance for a UCLA game, with an opponent other than USC, is 88,804, for the 2000 game against theMichigan Wolverines.[126] The lowest attendance with fans in seats for a UCLA regular season game was 27,143, againstBowling Green on September 3, 2022; lower than the former record, which saw 32,513 attend against Oregon State on November 7, 1992.[127][128] This is still the Bruins' lowest attendance record for a conference opponent. The first game played at the Rose Bowl, on October 28, 1922, between USC and Cal had an attendance of 35,000.[129] All four UCLA home games during the 2020 football season, including the USC game, had an official attendance of zero, due to restrictions from theCOVID-19 pandemic.[130]
  • Professional soccer record: June 16, 1996: In an historic doubleheader witnessed by 92,216 fans, theU.S. men's national team played Mexico for the championship of1996 U.S. Cup, followed by the MLS conference leadersLos Angeles Galaxy vs.Tampa Bay Mutiny. The crowd was the largest ever to see a U.S. professional soccer league match.
  • 1994 FIFA World Cup:The final, held on July 17 sawBrazil defeatItaly 3–2 after a penalty shootout. Attendance was 94,194.
  • 1999 FIFA Women's World Cup:The final on July 10, 1999, was the most attended women's sports event in history with an official attendance of 90,185. TheUSA defeatedChina 5–4 in apenalty shootout.
  • 2011 CONCACAF Gold Cup:93,420 fans saw Mexico defeating the United States 4–2 in the2011 Gold Cup Championship match on June 25, 2011.
  • Soccer, exhibition match: Recently, a sold-out crowd of 93,702 people attended the July 30, 2022 friendly betweenReal Madrid andJuventus.[131][132] On August 1, 2009, an attendance of 93,137 showed up whenFC Barcelona defeated theLos Angeles Galaxy 2–1 in an exhibition match, making itthe largest soccer attendance in the United States since the 1994 World Cup.[133]
  • Concert: British-Irish boy bandOne Direction played 3 sold out nights at the Rose Bowl in September 2014 on the same tour, making them the first act ever to accomplish this.
  • MLS single-game record: On July 4, 2023, the postponed 20thEl Tráfico derby match betweenLos Angeles Galaxy andLos Angeles FC brokeMLS single-game attendance record with 82,110 people with the match ended in a 2–1 victory for the Galaxy.[134]

Other notable dates

[edit]

Statues

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Known officially asSpieker Field at the Rose Bowl since 2017.[10][11][12]

References

[edit]
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  107. ^"THEN AND NOW: Midget racing had huge following".San Bernardino Sun. June 7, 2010. RetrievedNovember 15, 2023.
  108. ^Kwiatkowski, Elizabeth (December 13, 2010)."'The Amazing Race' crowns Nat Strand and Kat Chang champs".Reality TV World. RetrievedJanuary 1, 2020.
  109. ^"Kipmckean.com – Get Your Answers Here!".Kip McKean. RetrievedJuly 29, 2015.
  110. ^"Casper's 274 wins LA Open golf".Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Associated Press. January 29, 1968. p. 23.
  111. ^2004 Rose Bowl - World's Largest American Flag.YouTube. May 15, 2007.Archived from the original on December 12, 2021. RetrievedJuly 29, 2015.
  112. ^Rose Bowl says no deal, for now, Los Angeles Times, December 10, 2007
  113. ^Gazzar, Brenda -Pasadena officials unveil Rose Bowl renovation finance plan. Pasadena Star News, September 28, 2010
  114. ^abWang, Jack -The improvements Rose Bowl renovation expenses soar $42 million as UCLA waits patiently – Daily News Los Angeles Daily News, December 22, 2012
  115. ^Bolch, Ben -UCLA's big athletic department deficit has Bruins seeing red - Los Angeles Times (latimes.com). Los Angeles Times, February 4, 2020
  116. ^abcdBermont, Bradley -a downturn, Rose Bowl ekes out a $335,000 profit. Pasadena Star News, February 3, 2020
  117. ^Rose Bowl Asks Council to Authorize Nineteenth Displacement Event in 2023, A Soccer Match in February. Pasadena Now, September 22, 2022The Arroyo Public Lands Ordinance in the Pasadena Municipal Code limits the number of displacement events at the Rose Bowl to no more than 15 in any calendar year, except with the permission of the City Council.
  118. ^Central Arroyo Master Plan City of Pasadena, September 2003 A displacement event is one that is projected to have more than 20,000 in attendance.
  119. ^Sweeney, Kevin (January 3, 2024)."Fans Crush ESPN's Stephen A. Smith for Wanting Rose Bowl to Be Moved to Different Stadium".Sports Illustrated. RetrievedJanuary 6, 2024.
  120. ^Rodriguez, Matthew (December 5, 2024)."Rose Bowl announces $80 million "Lasting Legacy Campaign"".CBS News. RetrievedJanuary 13, 2025.
  121. ^Palladino, Lisa –"OBITUARIES: Cliff Montgomery ’34, Rose Bowl Quarterback"Archived September 3, 2007, at theWayback Machine.Columbia College Today, July 2005
  122. ^Showdown in MotownArchived July 1, 2007, at theWayback Machine by Gil Brant, February 2, 2006
  123. ^Tom Weir –Cardinals deep-six 49ers in historic tilt in Mexico. October 3, 2005, USA Today. Total attendance for record reguklar season game in Mexico City Azteca Stadium is 103,467 breaking the record of 102,368 who saw the Rams play the 49ers on November 10, 1957, at the Los Angeles Coliseum.
  124. ^Tom Weir –Mexico gets ready for football, not futbol. September 25, 2005,USA Today. quote:A 1994 Houston-Dallas exhibition drew a still-standing NFL record 112,376 to Estadio Azteca
  125. ^2000 Olympic Games Football
  126. ^abcUCLA Football – 2007 UCLA Football (Media Guide). UCLA Athletic Department (2007), page 149 (PDF copy available at www.uclabruins.com). Note that the UCLA Bruins have played in six Rose Bowl games with larger crowds: 1956, 1976, 1983, 1984, 1986 and 1994.
  127. ^Bolch, Ben -UCLA's attendance woes could take a ‘record’ turn against Oregon State. Los Angeles Times, October 4, 2019
  128. ^Bolch, Ben (August 28, 2021)."UCLA routs Hawaii in season opener for Chip Kelly's first nonconference Bruins win".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedSeptember 5, 2021.
  129. ^USC 2012 Football Media Guide
  130. ^Football vs. Stanford December 19, 2020. UCLABRUINS.com UCLA Athletic Department
  131. ^"Real Madrid v Juventus 2022 Impact Report"(PDF). Rose Bowl. June 4, 2023. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  132. ^Kirkland, Alex (May 17, 2023)."Real Madrid defeats Juventus in front of 93,702 fans at Rose Bowl".ESPN. RetrievedJuly 6, 2023.
  133. ^FC Barcelona tops Galaxy in front of 93,137 at Rose BowlArchived August 11, 2009, at theWayback Machine
  134. ^mlssoccer."MLS history! El Tráfico at Rose Bowl sets single-game attendance record | MLSSoccer.com".mlssoccer. RetrievedDecember 14, 2023.
  135. ^Rose Bowl Stadium Renames Press Box Terry Donahue PavilionArchived November 19, 2012, at theWayback Machine, UCLABruins.com, November 17, 2012
  136. ^Zahniser, David (July 8, 2013)."Mariachi Guinness World Record broken at Rose Bowl".Los Angeles Times. RetrievedMarch 24, 2025.

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