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The 1999 Rose Bowl was the 85th Rose Bowl game
and was played on Friday January 1, 1999 at the Rose Bowl
Stadium in Pasadena, California. It was a college
football bowl game.
The game featured Wisconsin beating
UCLA by a score of 38-31. Ron Dayne of Wisconsin was
named the Rose Bowl Player of the Game.[1]
He tied a modern Rose Bowl record with four touchdowns. This was
the first year that the Rose Bowl became part of the Bowl Championship Series,
ending a 52 year exclusive agreement between the Big Ten and Pac-10
conferences. The UCLA Bruins were en route to a BCS
Championship Game with a #2 ranking until a horrendous ghack
against a mediocre Miami Hurricanes team in a
rescheduled late-season game (due to hurricanes) exposed
their defensive problems and dropped their ranking, so the
traditional match-up occurred. This was the first year that the
game was branded with corporate sponsorship. Unlike the other bowl
games, the sponsor was not added to the title of the game, but
instead as a presenter, so it became known as The Rose Bowl
Game presented by AT&T.[2]
Bowl
Championship Series
The Bowl Coalition was restructured into the Bowl Alliance for
the 1995 season, involving five conferences (reduced to four for
the 1996 season) and three bowls. The championship game rotated
among the three bowls. However, it still didn't include the Pac-10
or Big Ten champs.
Michigan and Nebraska split
the National Championship during the 1997
season after never having met on the field. After a protracted
round of negotiations, the Bowl Alliance was reconfigured into the
Bowl Championship Series for
the 1998 season. The Pasadena Tournament of
Roses, which operates the Rose Bowl Game, agreed to release the Big Ten or
Pac-10
champions if necessary to facilitate a national championship game.
In return, the Rose Bowl was added to the yearly national
championship game rotation.
Teams
UCLA
Bruins
Main article: 1998 UCLA
Bruins football team
Beginning in November, the Bruins were ranked number 2 behind Tennessee. It
appeared that they would face the Volunteers in the BCS
championship. The UCLA Bruins went undefeated through the 1998
football season until their final game. In late September, Miami was forced to postpone
their game with UCLA due to Hurricane
Georges. The game was rescheduled for December 5 and for the #2-ranked
Bruins, a trip to the National Championship game was at stake. The
Hurricanes put up over 600 yards of total offense and the result
was a stunning 49-45 victory. Instead of advancing to the first
Bowl Championship series game (the 1999 Fiesta Bowl) as a contender for
the national championship, the Bruins "settled" for the Rose Bowl,
something that previously had been the ultimate goal of the Pacific
Ten conference champion.
Wisconsin
Badgers
Wisconsin ended up
in a three way tie for first place in the Big Ten with Michigan and Ohio State. All
three teams had 7-1 conference records. Michigan had defeated
Wisconsin 27-10 in "The Big House". Wisconsin and Ohio
State did not meet. The Rose Bowl tiebreaker formula gave Wisconsin
the Rose Bowl berth, since Michigan's overall record was the worst
of the three (having lost to Syracuse and Notre Dame to start the season), and Ohio
State had been in the 1997 Rose Bowl previously, whereas
Wisconsin had been in the 1994 Rose Bowl previously (in the event
of a tie for first place, the Big Ten final tiebreaker awards the Rose
Bowl berth to the team which has gone longest period of time
without an invitation). The circumstances of this selection and the
fact that UCLA had so recently fallen from the lofty #2 in the
nation status led many to deride and seriously underestimate the
Badgers; most notably, ESPN
analyst Craig James with his infamous
declaration that Wisconsin was "the worst team to ever play in
the Rose Bowl."
Game
summary
The weather was sunny and 74 degrees. Several Rose Bowl records
were equaled or broken. The UCLA Bruins set the single team Rose
Bowl record for total yards. In his final college game, Cade McNown, the UCLA
quarterback, passed for 340 yards, the fourth-highest total in bowl
history, and UCLA finished with 538 yards, 418 in the air.
Wisconsin running back Ron Dayne tied the modern Rose Bowl record of
four touchdowns along with Eric Ball from the 1986 Rose Bowl and Sam Cunningham
from the 1973 Rose
Bowl. The teams would break an older record of 931 combined
yards of offense, combining for 1,035 total yards.
In the second quarter, UCLA took its only lead of the game
(21-14) with back-to-back touchdowns.
Scoring
First
quarter
- Wisconsin - Ron Dayne, 54-yard run. Matt Davenport
converts.
- UCLA - Jermaine Lewis, 38-yard pass from Cade McNown. Chris
Sailer converts.
Second
quarter
- Wisconsin - Dayne, seven-yard run. Davenport converts.
- UCLA - Durell
Price, 61-yard pass from Freddie Mitchell. Sailer
converts.
- UCLA - Danny Farmer, 41-yard pass from McNown. Sailer
converts.
- Wisconsin - Dayne, 10-yard run. Davenport converts.
- Wisconsin - Davenport, 40-yard field goal.
Third
quarter
- Wisconsin - Dayne, 22-yard run. Davenport converts.
- UCLA - Lewis, 10-yard run. Sailer converts.
Fourth
quarter
- Wisconsin - Jamar Fletcher, 46-yard interception return.
Davenport converts.
- UCLA - Sailer, 30-yard field goal
Aftermath
Rose Bowl
records
Eight Rose Bowl records were set or tied in the game.
With his four touchdowns, Ron Dayne tied three modern Rose Bowl
touchdown records: most touchdowns, most rushing touchdowns and
most career rushing touchdowns. With 24 points, he also tied most
points in game and career. These records are shared along with Eric Ball from the 1986 Rose Bowl
and Sam
Cunningham from the 1973 Rose Bowl. Vince Young would also join this group
following the 2006
Rose Bowl, and the records still stand as of the 2008 Rose Bowl.
Dayne was named the Rose Bowl MVP for 1999 and would repeat this feat in
the 2000 Rose
Bowl, becoming one of only three (now, four) players to ever
repeat as a Rose Bowl MVP (and the only player from the Big Ten
Conference).
For the teams, the following records were broken, but no longer
stand.
- Total offense: UCLA, 538 yards (old record: 519 by Southern
California vs. Ohio State in the 1980 Rose Bowl, surpassed by 574 yards
for USC in the 2006 Rose Bowl).
- Total offense, two teams: UCLA and Wisconsin, 1,035 yards (old
record: 931 yards by Oregon and Penn State in the 1995 Rose Bowl
and Southern California and Ohio State in the 1980 Rose Bowl,
surpassed by USC and Texas with 1,130 yards in the 2006 Rose
Bowl).
- Most yards per play: 7.6, Wisconsin (old record: 7.5 by Iowa
vs. California in the 1959 Rose Bowl, surpassed by Miami at 7.74 in
the 2002 Rose
Bowl).
- Most points in one half, two teams (tie): 45; Wisconsin 24,
UCLA 21 (ties Southern California 35, Ohio State 10 in the 1973 Rose Bowl,
surpassed by USC and Texas with 53 points in the second half of the
2006 Rose
Bowl).
Wisconsin travel budget
audit
The University paid for a traveling party of 832 people. This
included the football team, marching band, university officials,
their spouses, cheerleaders, and three Bucky mascots. A large
number stayed at the Beverly Hills
Hotel.[3] In a
review by the Wisconsin State Joint Legislative Audit Committee in
1999, the committee found that the University of Wisconsin spent
$2,093,500 on the trip, versus a post season revenue share of
$1,806,800.[4]
Subsequent reviews found a number of areas where expenses could
have been reduced substantially.
References
External
links
| Wisconsin Badgers bowl
games |
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