History of Fiesta Bowl

As reported in Wikipedia:

The creation of Fiesta Bowl grew out of the frustration of the Western Athletic Conference in trying to obtain suitable bowl invitiations for its champions. In 1968 and 1969, respectively, champions Wyoming and Arizona State failed to obtain any invitation, while in 1970, undefeated Arizona State was bypassed by the major bowls and had to settle for a less prestigious Peach Bowl appearance. The Fiesta Bowl therefore initially provided an automatic bowl tie-in for the Western Athletic Conference champion.

The 1971 inaugural game featured another top ten Arizona State squad against top twenty opponent Florida State. By 1975, the game was able to attract Big Eight co-champion Nebraska to play undefeated Arizona State in a matchup of top five teams. In 1977, the game was again able to attract a top five opponent in Penn State.

In 1978, Arizona and Arizona State each joined the Pac 10 Conference, and the Fiesta Bowl’s tie-in with the Western Athletic Conference ended. The game continued to attract high quality matchups, however, and beginning with the 1981 game shifted to New Year’s Day with the other major bowl games.

A major breakthrough occurred in 1987 when the top two teams in the country, Miami and Penn State, agreed to play for the National Championship in the Fiesta Bowl. Both universities were independents at that time, all of the so-called major bowls had tie-ins with conferences, and of the other bowls only the Fiesta Bowl had the resources to pull off a matchup of this magnitude. The 1987 game, won by Penn State 14-10, was the most watched college football game, in terms of television viewership, until the 2006 Rose Bowl Game. Two years later, #1 Notre Dame played undefeated#3 West Virginia for the National Championship at the Fiesta Bowl. By this time, the Fiesta Bowl’s ability to stage games with national championship implications propelled it to major-bowl status in the minds of college football fans, replacing the Cotton Bowl as a member of the postseason’s “top four.”

For the 1991 game, several major universities declined invitations due to the State of Arizona’s decision at that time not to adopt the Martin Luther King Holiday.

In 1992, the Fiesta Bowl was invited to participate in the Bowl Coalition, a predecessor to the Bowl Championship Series, assuring the game would feature major conference champions or prestigious runners up, and the possibility of hosting further national title games. When this series incorporated a title game with a preset rotating site beginning in 1996, the Fiesta Bowl was the first to host the game, featuring undefeated #1 Nebraska playing undefeated#2 Florida for the National Championship. Finally, with the addition of the Big Ten and Pac 10 conferences to the rechristened Bowl Championship Series, the Fiesta Bowl became a permanent fixture in the four year BCS National Championship Game rotation. In 1998, the Fiesta Bowl featured the first BCS National Championship Game, which Tennessee won over Florida State, 23 to 16.

Seattle advances to U.S. football championship for first time

Shaun Alexander came back from last week’s concussion to rush for a team playoff-record 132 yards and two touchdowns Sunday, and Seattle pressured Carolina stars Jake Delhomme and Steve Smith into oblivion in a 34-14 rout for the NFC championship.

The Seahawks picked off three passes in winning their 12th straight home game and shattering the fifth-seeded Panthers’ stunning postseason road run.

In Denver, Colorado, meanwhile, the wildest road trip since “Animal House” rocks on.

The next stop for the Pittsburgh Steelers will be the Super Bowl in Detroit on February 5 and a date with the Seahawks, thanks to a 34-17 dismantling of the Denver Broncos on Sunday in the AFC title game.

“We were sitting, looking at an outside shot to be in the Super Bowl,” Steelers linebacker Clark Haggans said. “This is an unbelievable feeling to be here right now.”

Defense carries the Seahawks

In Seattle, it was the defense that really carried the Seahawks. It yielded only 62 yards, three first downs and no real threats in the first half.

Then, with Carolina desperate, Seattle allowed virtually nothing until it had a 20-point lead.

Mike Holmgren, only the fifth coach to lead two franchises to the Super Bowl — he won in 1997 and lost in 1998 with Green Bay — praised his defense this week for the enormous pressure it applied to opponents all season. That defense led the league in sacks and was always in Delhomme’s face, helping force two first-half interceptions that were decisive.

The Panthers weren’t helped when starting running back Nick Goings was sidelined in the first quarter after a massive hit by linebacker Lofa Tatupu. They already were minus their top two runners, Stephen Davis and DeShaun Foster.

The Seahawks had their horse, though, and by the second half, they could turn to Alexander. As he always has this season, he delivered some big runs as the crowd chanted “M-V-P, M-V-P.”

Hasselbeck finished off the Panthers with a gorgeous pump fake that had cornerback Chris Gamble on all fours. Darrell Jackson caught the 20-yard pass for a 27-7 lead, and it was time to celebrate in the Pacific Northwest.

Several players did a Qwest Field leap into the stands at the end as the crowd chanted “Super Bowl, Super Bowl.” Their 30-year-old team, which tried to leave Seattle for Los Angeles a decade ago, is, indeed, headed for the big game.

Alexander grabbed the George Halas Trophy and carried it down the field as majestically as he totes a football. He only stopped when he reached the end zone, surrounded by photographers and cheerleaders.

Seahawks owner Paul Allen raised the team’s 12th man flag, then waved a white towel to whip the crowd of 67,837 into a frenzy.

Steelers open up offense

In Denver, the Steelers were led by 275 yards and two passing touchdowns from Ben Roethlisberger and a touchdown by Jerome Bettis. Pittsburgh became the first team since the 1985 New England Patriots to win three postseason road games en route to the Super Bowl. Counting the regular season, they’ve played five of their last six away from Pittsburgh.

“It feels great today, I’ll tell you that,” Steelers owner Dan Rooney said. “The coach already told me we’re going to the Super Bowl to win it, not just to be there.”

Outschemed, outplayed and pushed around all day, the Denver Broncos shuffled off to their locker room, heads down, after their first home loss in 10 tries this season.

“We did not complete the mission and it’s frustrating,” linebacker Ian Gold said. “But anytime you make it to the AFC championship game and you lose, you hope to lose to a team like that.”

Indeed, it’s hard to deny the Steelers are deserving. Their next game will be for their fifth championship — that elusive “One For The Thumb” — that the franchise couldn’t get in the 1970s heyday of Bradshaw, Swann, Stallworth and Harris.

Against Denver, the Steelers came out passing, not running, much the same way they did when they upset Indianapolis last week. Roethlisberger called pass plays on seven of Pittsburgh’s first 11 snaps and threw completions on five of those.

The first drive resulted in a field goal. On Denver’s next possession, Pittsburgh’s Joey Porter blitzed to force a Jake Plummer fumble. Five plays later, Roethlisberger hit Cedrick Wilson for a touchdown and a 10-0 lead, quieting the Invesco Field crowd much as the Steelers did in Indy last week and Cincinnati the week before.

After a Denver field goal, the Steelers essentially salted this game with a 14-play, 80-yard drive that ate up nearly 71/2 minutes and had the Broncos defense totally off balance and gasping for air.

Bettis capped it by bulling in from the 3 for a 17-3 lead to put him well on his way to the Super Bowl. Cowher smiled widely for that one, remembering Bettis’ near disaster on the goal line last week in Indy.

“This is a great group of guys, how we got here, we’re a different team,” Cowher said. “We’re a focused team, no matter what’s happened, we’ve stayed together. We’ve got a resilient group.”

Road’s made of Steel: Pittsburgh heads to Super Bowl

The most famous road trip since “Animal House” rocks on.

Big Ben, The Bus and all those Terrible Towels will make the next stop on their wildly successful road trip at the Super Bowl in Detroit, thanks to a 34-17 dismantling of the Denver Broncos yesterday in the AFC title game.

“We were sitting, looking at an outside shot to be in the Super Bowl,” Steelers linebacker Clark Haggans said. “This is an unbelievable feeling to be here right now.”

Unbelievable and almost unprecedented.

Led by 275 yards and two passing touchdowns from Ben Roethlisberger and a touchdown by Jerome Bettis, the Steelers became the first team since the 1985 Patriots to win three road games en route to the Super Bowl. Counting the regular season, they’ve played five of their final six away from Pittsburgh. The Steelers became the first team to beat the Nos. 1, 2 and 3 seeds in the playoffs.

While there’s no John “Bluto” Blutarsky — the character who called for a road trip when things got tough for the Delta House fraternity in “Animal House” — this Pittsburgh group has plenty of characters of its own.

There’s Bettis, The Bus, who stuck around for a 13th year with hopes of playing in his first Super Bowl, in his hometown of Detroit.

There’s Roethlisberger, Big Ben, the second-year quarterback who looked every bit the veteran in this one, completing 21-of-29 passes and keeping the Steelers going on 6-of-7 crucial third-down situations in the first half.

There’s the coach, jut-jawed Bill Cowher, who worked the sideline in his usual manner, jabbing his finger at Bettis, then hugging him, smiling and scowling, too. This was tough love at its best — and good enough to move the Steelers back to the Super Bowl for the first time since 1995.

And all those loyal Pittsburgh fans. An estimated 8,000 came to Denver and they stayed well after the game, waving their Terrible Towels in the corner of Denver’s Invesco Field until security finally had to ask them to leave.

“It feels great today, I’ll tell you that,” owner Dan Rooney said. “The coach already told me we’re going to the Super Bowl to win it, not just to be there.”

Outschemed, outplayed and pushed around all day, the Broncos (14-4) shuffled off to their locker room, heads down, after their first home loss in 10 tries this season.

“We did not complete the mission and it’s frustrating,” linebacker Ian Gold said. “But anytime you make it to the AFC championship game and you lose, you hope to lose to a team like that.”

Indeed, it’s hard to deny the Steelers (14-5) are deserving. Their next game will be against Seattle for the fifth championship — the elusive “One For The Thumb” — the franchise couldn’t get in the 1970s heyday of Bradshaw, Swann, Stallworth and Harris.

UCF is on the radar for trio of bowl games

While Champs Sports Bowl officials consider Florida State playing a bowl game in Orlando, UCF ponders the possibility of a long plane flight for its first bowl trip — to Hawaii.

“We would love to have Central Florida. UCF would work well for us,” Hawaii Bowl Executive Director Jim Donovan said. “[Coach] George O’Leary has a national story going, and that appeals to us.”

The Christmas Eve bowl in Honolulu has third pick among C-USA teams, but it’s possible the Knights (8-3) could be the third pick even if they win Saturday’s C-USA Championship Game against Tulsa (7-4).

Common thinking is that Saturday’s winner has a trip to the Liberty Bowl at stake. But Liberty Bowl officials declined to commit to taking the C-USA champ while investigating how many tickets UCF and Tulsa would sell for their New Year’s Eve game in Memphis, Tenn. By contract, the Liberty does not have to pick the C-USA champion, just its favorite C-USA team.

“We think UCF’s a great story. It’d be nice for them if they kept it going,” Liberty Executive Director Steve Ehrhart said. “When Conference USA added its championship game, we said we’d want to wait until that game was played to decide a team.”

A UCF loss would all but eliminate the Knights from Liberty consideration and make the bowl consider Tulsa or Memphis (6-5). Memphis never has played in its hometown bowl, has a marquee star in runner DeAngelo Williams to market and could sell droves of tickets. That’s true even if UCF wins.

GMAC Bowl executives have told C-USA they’re studying, too, though they’re focused on UTEP (8-3) and UCF, sources close to the league said. GMAC gets the second pick of C-USA teams. The Dec. 21 bowl invited Toledo (8-3) on Monday, and school officials in Toledo were told of the likelihood of facing the Miners or Knights.

Ehrhart spent Monday and Tuesday calculating how many tickets the Knights would sell for a Dec. 31 game with Fresno State should the Knights beat Tulsa. Conversations with UCF Athletic Director Steve Orsini and others in and around the football program put the number between 10,000 and 15,000, a total that is crucial to an eastern bowl with a West Coast team already invited.

Meanwhile, Champs Sports is focusing on Colorado-FSU, arguably the bowl’s best ticket and television match since moving to Orlando. Both teams would have to lose conference title games Saturday, the Buffaloes (7-4) to No. 2 Texas in the Big 12 and the Seminoles (7-4) to No. 5 Virginia Tech in the Atlantic Coast Conference.

Champs Sports prefers Clemson (7-4) ahead of FSU, Boston College (8-3) and Georgia Tech (7-4), but both the Gator and Peach bowls pick their ACC teams before Champs Sports does, and Clemson is not expected to be around for Orlando’s selection. The most likely scenario is Clemson in the Peach Bowl against Georgia or Alabama.

FSU Coach Bobby Bowden prefers the Orange Bowl, the landing area for the ACC champion. The Seminoles can secure a slot in the Orange by upsetting Virginia Tech. Beyond a trip to Miami, though, Bowden said, “I’d just like to have the next-best bowl, whatever it is.”

Fiesta Bowl queen represents UA

A UA student was crowned the 2006 Fiesta Bowl queen last week, a change from last year when an ASU student was chosen.

Jeanine Zelik, a social studies senior, said it is a “huge honor” to represent the UA as queen of the Fiesta Bowl.

“I feel very privileged and honored to be a part of this court,” Zelik said.

The Tostitos Fiesta Bowl, one of the four games in the Bowl Championship Series, will be held in Tempe on Jan. 2.

Both Zelik and Kate Rook, a pre-education sophomore, knew two weeks ago that they would be one of the four students on the court, but they had to wait until last week to find out who had enough votes to be queen.

Zelik and the other princesses, whose families flew or drove into Tucson for the coronation, were crowned during the Homecoming ceremony Thursday night and rode in Saturday’s Homecoming parade, Zelik said.

Candidates were selected based on community service, grades and personality that were determined through interviews, an essay and letters of recommendation, Zelik said.

Gina Chappin, the Fiesta Bowl director of public relations, was unavailable for comment over the weekend.

All four court members, which include two students from ASU, will not only represent Arizona at the Fiesta and Insight bowls, but will also promote and participate in more than 50 charity events throughout the year as Fiesta Bowl ambassadors, Rook said.

Rook and her family were at the Homecoming ceremony on Thursday, she said, but missed the Homecoming parade and game Saturday for a friend’s wedding.

“I was really bummed that I missed Homecoming,” Rook said.

Now that she knows she will be queen, Zelick said she is preparing herself to juggle her responsibilities with her schoolwork.

Zelik has been involved in many organizations on campus, including the Chi Omega sorority and Arizona Ambassadors. She is also a Women’s Health student coordinator and advocate, she said.

“I’m not nervous, but excited and anxious now that the ball’s rolling,” Zelik said.

Zelik said she is going to miss some of her classes for some events, but she is making arrangements with her professors beforehand.

“I’m not worried at all, it just means a little less sleep,” Zelik said. “It’s something you have to be dedicated to, and I’m going to give it my all.”

TURNING A DREAM INTO REALITY!

When the clock hits 0:00 on January 2, 2006, it will mark the 35th and final Fiesta Bowl game to be played at Sun Devil Stadium, leaving breathless plays, historic games, Heisman Trophy winners and legendary coaches, among the countless memories.

Frank Kush led Arizona State to victory in the first three Fiesta Bowl games and an undefeated season in 1975 with a 17-14 victory over Nebraska when his son, Danny, kicked the game-winning field goal. Coach Kush has since had the field at Sun Devil Stadium named after him.

The stadium has also been the site of five Fiesta Bowl games that decided college football’s national championship. The first, between Penn State and Miami in 1987, is still the most watched college football game of all time, while the most recent in 2003 was a double-overtime instant classic between Ohio State and Miami.

Joe Paterno of Penn State has a 6-0 Fiesta Bowl record, Lou Holtz is the only coach with a win, loss and tie in Fiesta Bowl history and Tom Osborne got his first Fiesta Bowl win, after four consecutive losses, when Nebraska won the national championship in 1996.

Kansas State, Oregon State and, most recently, Utah have all had their biggest wins in school history in the Fiesta Bowl. The Arizona Wildcats still have the only shutout in Fiesta Bowl history, blanking Miami, 29-0, in 1994.

The first Fiesta Bowl played on Christmas was in 1976, the first Fiesta Bowl on New Year’s Day came in 1982 and the first, and only, Fiesta Bowl played on New Year’s Eve was in 1997.

Tony Dorsett was the first Heisman winner to play in a Fiesta Bowl, while Marcus Allen, Vinny Testaverde, Rashaan Salaam, Danny Wuerffel, Ricky Williams and Eric Crouch are other Heisman winners to take the field at Sun Devil Stadium.

The 35th Annual Tostitos Fiesta Bowl will undoubtedly add to the many existing memories and history of the Fiesta Bowl at Sun Devil Stadium.

Since the first game at Sun Devil Stadium in 1971, the Fiesta Bowl has generated an economic impact of more than $1 billion to the state’s economy and paid more than $282 million to universities and colleges.

In addition, 19 of the past 20 Fiesta Bowl games have been sell-outs. All of this is because of a dream that has since turned into reality, helping to make the Fiesta Bowl one of the nation’s top bowl games.
It all started in 1968 when former Arizona State University President G. Homer Durham spoke to an athletic awards banquet and proposed that Phoenix should have a football bowl game.

The idea could have died right there, as it had several times in the past. But Arizona Republic sports editor Verne Boatner wrote a column supporting the idea, and several Valley of the Sun business leaders banded together to bring a bowl game to Phoenix.

Getting a bowl game anywhere is a long shot. Countless contingencies from cities all over the country had paraded before the NCAA’s Extra Events Committee, lavish presentations in hand, only to be told, “No, the NCAA doesn’t need another bowl game.”

And in December of 1968, a bowl game for Phoenix was merely an idea, let alone a well thought out plan to place before the NCAA.

But then things started to roll. Prominent Valley sports enthusiast Glenn Hawkins called a meeting of the area’s top community leaders, who ultimately put together the package that was to become one of the most phenomenal stories in bowl history.

“There was a lot of interest,” Boatner said at the time. “A lot more than I thought there would be. I didn’t believe that so many influential people could be brought together in one place.”

Jack Stewart, who was one of the driving forces for bringing the game to Phoenix, was elected to head the effort. He and the current original members of the Executive Committee — Hawkins, George Isbell, Jim Meyer, Donald D. Meyers, Karl Eller, Bill Shover and George Taylor, later to be joined by Don Dupont — put together the successful plan that would get an NCAA sanction for the game.

Key to the Fiesta effort was to win over the Western Athletic Conference for a tie-up. Then WAC Commissioner Wiles Hallock provided the direction to achieve that — his immediate past position had been that of Director of Public Relations at the NCAA’s headquarters in Kansas City.

With Hallock along, the Phoenix group appeared before the NCAA Extra Events Committee on Jan. 10, 1970, in Washington D.C. It was at that time that the group proposed to make the bowl a charitable venture, with portions of the proceeds committed to the fight against drug abuse. This was to be a key point for the Fiesta Bowl. The NCAA had granted only one new bowl during the 1960s — Atlanta’s Peach Bowl, also a charity game.

The Fiesta’s effort, however, was thorough. Then Washington State athletic director and chairman of the NCAA Extra Events Committee Stan Bates said that he never had seen a group as well prepared. A few months later, Bates would become commissioner of the Western Athletic Conference after Hallock moved to the Pacific-8 Conference.

The group stressed vital points in its presentation. They told the NCAA that the Rose Bowl was the only bowl game outside of the South and that Arizona had the population and the climate, the game would be played for a worthy cause and they hastened to add that good WAC teams had been overlooked for bowl appearances in the past.

“Your presentation was so well received that I can think of no important questions to ask,” Bates said afterwards.

But victory was to be farther away. On April 27, 1970, the NCAA Council, the official policy-making body of the organization, rejected six bowl bids, including one for the Valley of the Sun.

The group could have taken the defeat and moved on in their lives. Instead, they kept on fighting. A year later, on April 26, 1971, the NCAA Council approved a bowl game in Arizona, and the Fiesta Bowl was born.

Highlights of the Fiesta Bowl include:

Dec. 19, 1969 — A committee of nine community leaders is formed to coordinate efforts to start a bowl game in Arizona. The nine original members of the Fiesta Bowl board of directors were: Don Dupont, Karl Eller, Glenn Hawkins, George Isbell, Jim Meyer, Don Meyers, Bill Shover, Jack Stewart and George Taylor.
April 26, 1971 — The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) approves the application made by the Arizona Sports Foundation for an Arizona-based bowl game at the annual NCAA meetings held in Houston.
June 10, 1971 – A contest is co-sponsored by the Arizona Sports Foundation and the Arizona Republic to “Name the Bowl Game.” More than 6,500 entries are received, and 73 of the entries choose the name Fiesta. In a blind drawing of the 73 winning entries, Gary Keltner is the lucky winner and walks away with four lifetime tickets to the Fiesta Bowl Football Classic.
Dec. 21, 1971 – The First Annual Fiesta Bowl Ice Cream Eating Contest is held at Diamond’s Department Store at the Thomas Mall. A team of five girls defeats a team of five boys who each had to eat a bowl of ice cream that consisted of vanilla, raspberry sherbert, almonds and chocolate sprinkles.
Dec. 26, 1971 – Arizona State University student Patricia Fierro is crowned the first Fiesta Bowl Queen at an event held in conjunction with the Martha Mitchell Fashion Fiesta and Goldwaters’ Style Show at the Mountain Shadows Hotel in Scottsdale.
Dec. 27, 1971 – The first Fiesta Bowl Marathon is held and attracts 127 runners. The winners of the race are introduced at halftime during the First Annual Fiesta Bowl Football Classic.
Dec. 27, 1971 — The years of hard work finally payoff when Arizona State plays Florida State in the inaugural Fiesta Bowl game. The Sun Devils win a 45-38 shootout over the Seminoles in front of 51,098 fans. A record $168,237 is paid to each team, which at that time was the highest payout ever for a first-year bowl game.
Dec. 16, 1972 — The inaugural Fiesta Bowl Parade is held and begins an era for the Fiesta Bowl that shows a tremendous growth in pageantry-oriented events. The first Parade features 45 balloon-type entries, including a four-story Santa Claus, that are guided down the route by more than 300 Boy Scouts in front of 25,000 street spectators.
Dec. 27, 1973 — The Fiesta Bowl begins a National Junior Tennis Tournament that has featured some of the game’s best, including Tracy Austin, Michael Chang and Andre Agassi.
Dec. 27, 1974 – Bleachers are erected for the first time along Central Avenue, and the Fiesta Bowl Parade attracts more than 100,000 street spectators.
Dec. 28, 1974 — CBS televises the first national network telecast of the Fiesta Bowl, as Oklahoma State grinds out a 16-6 victory over Brigham Young. CBS covered Fiesta Bowl games from 1974 through 1977 and returned to televise the Fiesta Bowl during the Bowl Alliance from 1996 through 1998.
Dec. 28, 1975 — Arizona State and Nebraska, with respective records of 11-0 and 10-1, combine for the best overall regular season record of any non-New Year’s Day game. The Sun Devils hang on for a thrilling 17-14 victory, and finish second in the final national polls. Many believe this was the game that put the Fiesta Bowl on the map.
Dec. 17, 1977 — The Fiesta Bowl Parade is syndicated for television coverage on a national basis, with an estimated viewing audience of 1.2 million people. Syndicated coverage of the parade grew steadily from that point, with Broadcast Communications Inc., of Indianapolis, signing on for a three-year contract.
Feb. 19, 1978 – A Tucson Fiesta Bowl Committee is established to help promote the Phoenix-based Fiesta Bowl on a statewide basis.
April 24, 1978 — NBC wins the rights to televise the Fiesta Bowl and begins a long relationship that lasts from 1978 through 1995.
Dec. 17, 1978 — The Fiesta Bowl National Pageant of Bands is born, and features 31 bands in the inaugural event – 16 from Arizona and 15 out-of-state hopefuls. All 31 bands marched in the Fiesta Bowl Parade and competed in a field competition at Scottsdale Municipal Stadium
Dec. 26, 1980 — The Fiesta Bowl celebrates its Tenth Anniversary with a then-record crowd of 66,738 on hand to watch Penn State defeat Ohio State, 31-19, in beautiful 80-degree temperatures under a clear blue Arizona sky.
Oct. 21, 1981 – The Tucson Fiesta Bowl Committee presents the inaugural Tucson Fiesta Bowl Golf Invitational with proceeds benefiting the Fiesta Bowl Youth Development Program, a program designed to benefit the Boys and Girls Clubs of Tucson.
Jan. 1, 1982 — Kicking off on New Year’s Day for the first time, the Fiesta Bowl is a resounding success with a sellout crowd of 71,053 on hand for a matchup between Penn State and Southern Cal. Penn State slips past USC and Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Allen, 26-10, in a game that recorded a 19.3 rating, still the second highest in Fiesta Bowl history.
Dec. 31, 1982 – The First Annual Fiesta Bowl 10K is held in downtown Phoenix before the Fiesta Bowl Parade. More than 3,500 competitors take part in the first race, which was televised nationally by 100 markets. American record-holder Thom Hunt wins the initial event.
Dec. 31, 1982 — The Fiesta Bowl Parade continues to grow in stature, as more than 10 million viewers from across the nation tune into the syndicated television broadcast.
Jan. 2, 1984 — A crowd of 66,484 watches one of the most exciting finishes in Fiesta Bowl history, as Ohio State scores the game-winning touchdown with just 39 seconds on the clock to defeat Pittsburgh, 28-23.
Dec. 7-16, 1984 – The first Fiesta Bowl Million Dollar Hole-in-One contest is held at the Arizona Biltmore Country Club, and the champion of the finals fails to nail an ace but still drives away in a Ford Mustang.
Dec. 29, 1984 – The Fiesta Bowl 10K features more than 5,000 runners, making it the largest race in Arizona, and is named one of the 20 best in the nation by Runner’s World magazine.
Sept. 26, 1985 – Sunkist Growers enters a five-year, multi-million dollar sponsorship agreement with the Fiesta Bowl as title sponsor of what will be called the Sunkist Fiesta Bowl Football Classic and Sunkist Fiesta Bowl Parade. It marks the first-ever title sponsorship of a college football bowl game and increases the Fiesta Bowl’s payout to more than $1 million per team.
Dec. 7-15, 1985 – The Fiesta Bowl takes its fans to the ballpark with two new softball events, the Fiesta Bowl Softball Classic and the Fiesta Bowl Homerun Derby, increasing the bowl’s calendar to 46 events.
Dec. 27, 1985 – The Tucson Fiesta Bowl Committee hosts the inaugural Fiesta Bowl Basketball Classic, featuring the hometown Arizona Wildcats against Boston College, Princeton and Wisconsin.
Dec. 31, 1985 – Eight of the top world-class milers, including past Olympic medalists and marathon champions, compete in the first Fiesta Bowl Mile. Steve Scott, a NCAA champion and Olympic long-distance runner, wins the inaugural event.
Oct. 19, 1986 — Michael Andretti captures the inaugural Fiesta Bowl 200, a 200-mile Indy car race in October at the world’s fastest one-mile oval track at Phoenix International Raceway.
Jan. 2, 1987 — The Fiesta Bowl is in the world’s spotlight when it hosts its first national championship game between No. 1 Miami and No. 2 Penn State, the nation’s only undefeated and untied teams. “The Battle for Number 1” comes down to the final seconds when Penn State’s Pete Giftopoulos intercepts Heisman Trophy winner Vinny Testaverde’s pass to preserve the victory. More than 52 million people watched the historic game, which is still the most watched college football game of all time with a 25.1 rating.
Sept. 15, 1988 — The Fiesta Bowl moves its kickoff time to mid-afternoon, filling the void created by the Rose Bowl’s move to ABC. A new NBC television contract allows the Fiesta Bowl’s team payout to approach the $3 million mark per team.
Nov. 3, 1988 – The Fiesta Bowl joins forces with Phoenix International Raceway and Checker Auto to present the Checker 500, the first ever NASCAR Winston Cup Race in Arizona.
Dec. 30, 1988 — The Fiesta Bowl stages a “Takedown One” wrestling competition between the national teams of the United States and Soviet Union at ASU’s Activity Center. The Soviet Union wins a convincing decision in front of approximately 8,000 fans.
Jan. 2, 1989 – The Fiesta Bowl hosts its second game in three years that decides college football’s national champion. Notre Dame jumps out to a 23-6 halftime lead over West Virginia to cruise to a 34-21 victory and the school’s 11th national championship. It marks the fourth consecutive year that the Fiesta Bowl champion finishes first or second in the final polls.
Jan. 1, 1990 — The Fiesta Bowl becomes the first bowl game ever to award money solely to academic departments within universities that participated in its football game. The Fiesta Bowl established $100,000 educational endowment chairs within the University of Nebraska’s Department of Agronomy and Florida State University’s Department of Meteorology.
Dec. 29, 1990 – The Fiesta Bowl enters a joint partnership with the Scottsdale Prevention Institute to stage the Third Annual Fiesta Bowl Duck Race. Throughout the years, the duck race has become the world’s largest of its kind with 75,000 ducks racing down the Salt River Project canal in one of the bowl’s top events.
Feb. 5, 1991 — Sunkist Growers consolidates its sponsorship of the Fiesta Bowl Football Classic after a huge citrus freeze in December 1990 hinders its winter citrus crop. Sunkist, however, continues its sponsorship of the nationally televised Sunkist Fiesta Bowl Parade.
July 10, 1991 — The Fiesta Bowl is invited to join college football’s Bowl Coalition, which includes the Cotton, Orange and Sugar Bowls. Champions from the Atlantic Coast, Big East, Big Eight, Southeastern and Southwest conferences, along with Notre Dame and two at-large teams will annually fill the eight slots in the four games.
Dec. 31, 1991 — Comedic writer and humorist Erma Bombeck, a Paradise Valley resident, serves as grand marshal of the Sunkist Fiesta Bowl Parade. The Parade attracts more than 300,000 spectators and receives a 5.1 rating/16 share on NBC’s national telecast.
Dec. 21, 1992 — IBM signs an agreement with the Fiesta Bowl making IBM, which is a worldwide leader in the development of sales of business systems, software and services, title sponsor of the IBM OS/2 Fiesta Bowl Football Classic. IBM associates its OS/2 “Operating System/2″ line with the football classic.
Dec. 31, 1992 –The First Annual Motorola Mile is held on the Parade route in front of more than 300,000 spectators. Nearly 1,000 runners compete in a participant mile, which was followed by Arizona’s top high school boys and girls milers competing in a one-mile run down Central Avenue.
Jan. 17-24, 1993 — More than 2,000 volunteers, many affiliated with the Fiesta Bowl, work 18 hours a day for eight days to stage and promote the 1993 U.S. Figure Skating Championships at America West Arena in Phoenix.
June 26, 1993 — Approximately 100 Fiesta Bowl volunteers and staff members assist in planning and staging a parade in downtown Phoenix to honor the NBA’s Western Conference champion Phoenix Suns. Nearly 300,000 spectators line the parade route on a day when temperatures reach 114 degrees.
Dec. 5, 1993 — The Fiesta Bowl and the Dial Corp stage the inaugural “Dial Invitational - A Fiesta Bowl Event,” a collegiate basketball doubleheader at America West Arena. Arizona State plays Big East foe Boston College in the first game, while Arizona battles Oklahoma State in the second game.
Dec. 7, 1993 — Tempe-based MicroAge, Inc., becomes the title sponsor of the MicroAge Fiesta Bowl Parade, marking the first time in the parade’s 23-year history that an Arizona company has served as title sponsor of the event. MicroAge, a public company founded in 1976, is among Arizona’s top 10 public companies by revenue.
Dec. 31, 1993 — The 23rd Annual MicroAge Fiesta Bowl Parade is the biggest and most successful in the event’s history with nearly 400,000 people lining Central Avenue. George Brett, a 13-time all-star with the Kansas City Royals and future baseball Hall of Famer, is the grand marshal. John Teets, chairman, president and CEO of the Dial Corp, is selected as the parade’s first ever-honorary grand marshal.
Jan. 1, 1994 — The Arizona Wildcats record the first shutout in Fiesta Bowl history by blanking the favored Miami Hurricanes, 29-0. Arizona’s defense, known as “Desert Swarm,” has four sacks, three interceptions, causes two fumbles and forces Miami to punt a Fiesta Bowl record 10 times.
Jan. 18, 1994 — Sherry Henry becomes the first woman president of one of the five major bowl games and the first in the 23-year history of the Fiesta Bowl. Henry, general manager of the Fiesta Inn, was also the first woman to be selected to the Fiesta Bowl Board of Directors in 1986.
April 17, 1994 — A record 740 teams compete in the annual Fiesta Bowl 3-on-3 State Championships street basketball tournament. The tournament, which attracts over 3,000 participants, is held at the Arizona Center in downtown Phoenix.
June 21, 1994 – The Fiesta Bowl announces that the telecast of its game will return to CBS, beginning in January 1996. CBS televised the Fiesta Bowl from 1974 through 1977, the first national telecast of the Fiesta Bowl.
Aug. 4, 1994 — The Fiesta Bowl receives official notification that it will be a part of a new College Football Bowl Alliance, consisting of the Fiesta, Orange and Sugar bowls. The Bowl Alliance guarantees the three bowls a national championship game on a rotating basis, unless a team from the Pac-10 or Big Ten is ranked first and/or second in the final regular season polls.
Sept. 8, 1994 –The Fiesta Bowl announces that it will host the first Bowl Alliance national championship game on January 2, 1996, at Sun Devil Stadium. As the highest finisher in the bidding process, the Fiesta Bowl has the option of which year to host the title game.
Sept. 8, 1994 — The Dial Corp agrees to serve as the Fiesta Bowl’s “backup” sponsor for a six-year period, beginning with the 1996 Fiesta Bowl and extending through the Fiesta Bowl in 2001, unless a new title sponsor is found. The agreement between The Dial Corp and the Fiesta Bowl supplants title sponsorship by IBM OS/2, which continued through the 1995 game.
Oct. 5, 1994 — NBA superstar Charles Barkley is introduced at a press conference at the Fiesta Bowl office as the Grand Marshal for the 24th Annual MicroAge Fiesta Bowl Parade.
June 28, 1995 — The Phoenix & Valley of the Sun Convention & Visitor’s Bureau honors the Fiesta Bowl by awarding it the Silver Phoenix Award, which is given to an individual or organization that has made significant contributions to the community and to Valley tourism.
Aug. 5, 1995 — Frito-Lay, Inc. and the Fiesta Bowl announce at a press conference that Frito-Lay has signed a comprehensive marketing and media agreement with the Fiesta Bowl that includes title sponsor of the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. This unprecedented agreement positioned the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl as the highest-paying college bowl game of all time.
Oct. 28, 1995 — The Eighth Annual Bank of America Fiesta Bowl Duck Race smashes its own world record with 75,000 rubber ducks sold for the non-profit Scottsdale Prevention Institute and the non-profit Fiesta Bowl.
Nov. 15, 1995 — Don Meyers, one of the Fiesta Bowl’s original founders, is given the first ever Fiesta Bowl Lifetime Achievement Award at the Fiesta Bowl Founder’s Reception. The reception highlights the bowl’s first 25 years and recognizes the nine original founders, all 25 presidents and the 2,500 Fiesta Bowl volunteers.
Nov. 16, 1995 — Grambling State head coach Eddie Robinson, the winningest coach in college football history, is named the grand marshal for the 25th Annual MicroAge Fiesta Bowl Parade.
Jan. 2, 1996 – More than 25,000 fans attend the first-ever Tostitos Fiesta Bowl Tailgate Party, an event held just north of Sun Devil Stadium during the hours leading up to the game.
Jan. 2, 1996 — The highly-anticipated national title clash between No. 1 Nebraska and No. 2 Florida surprisingly turns into a blowout, as the Cornhuskers rush for a Tostitos Fiesta Bowl record 524 yards and use a smothering defense to post a 62-24 victory and claim its second consecutive national championship. Nebraska’s Tommie Frazier rushes for 199 yards, an NCAA bowl game record for a quarterback, which includes a dazzling 75-yard touchdown run that is named college football’s play of the year.
April 2, 1996 — The Tostitos Fiesta Bowl announces that it has paid a college football bowl record $27.2 million to Nebraska and Florida for the national championship game. It is also announced that the national title game and surrounding events generated an economic impact of $96.8 million of new money and attracted nearly 50,000 out-of-state visitors to Arizona.
April 14, 1996 — The Eighth Annual Fox 10 Fiesta Bowl 3-on-3 Street Basketball Tournament smashes its own record with 962 teams battling for great prizes and bragging rights. Jill Williams of Glendale nails a 3-point basket and walks away with a $5,000 scholarship as part of the Fiesta Bowl $5,000 shot. Nick Moore of Dallas, Texas, claims the slam-dunk title with an electrifying dunk over three chairs and a ball rack.
Sept. 21, 1996 — The Fiesta Bowl is awarded the coveted Pinnacle Award, considered the most prestigious award in the festival industry, for the 25th Anniversary campaign at the International Festivals and Events Association (IFEA) convention in Orlando, Fla. The award was the bowl’s first ever and included competition from 834 entries from around the globe.
Oct. 30, 1996 — Olympic gold medalist and Arizona native Kerri Strug is announced as the grand marshal for the 26th Annual MicroAge Fiesta Bowl Parade. Strug earned international attention when her vault on an injured ankle in the final portion of team competition helped the U.S. gymnastics team seize its first-ever gold medal during the 1996 Olympic Games.
Dec. 31, 1996 — The Fiesta Bowl takes over full operations of the Tempe Tostitos Fiesta Bowl Block Party, and the event is a huge success with national and local eyes focused on Tempe, Arizona. Highlighting the evening is a 225-pound replica of a Tostitos tortilla chip plunged into a giant jar of salsa at midnight to officially ring in the New Year. National entertainment acts, including the Gin Blossoms, Monkees, Del Amitri and LeAnn Rimes, rock downtown Tempe in the most celebrated Block Party ever.
July 22, 1997 — The Tostitos Fiesta Bowl receives official notification that it has been selected to the new College Football Bowl Alliance, guaranteeing one national championship and games with the nation’s top teams over at least the next four years. The Fiesta Bowl is joined by the Sugar, Orange and Rose bowls in this new system, which will guarantee a true national championship game for the first time ever.
Sept. 23, 1997 — In an unprecedented move in college athletics, the Arizona Sports Foundation, the entity that owns and operates the Fiesta Bowl, signs a letter of intent to acquire the Tucson-based Copper Bowl. It marks the first time in history that two bowl games will be operated under the same umbrella.
Oct. 9, 1997 — The Fiesta Bowl announces that it will host college football’s first unified national championship game on Jan. 4, 1999, at Sun Devil Stadium. As the highest finisher in the bidding process, the Fiesta Bowl has its choice of which year to host the title game.
Nov. 6, 1997 — The Arizona Sports Foundation announces that Tucson’s bowl game will be called the Insight.com Bowl, after signing Insight Enterprises, Inc., as the title sponsor to a multi-year agreement. Formerly known as the Copper Bowl, the Insight.com Bowl becomes the first known sporting event named after a World Wide Web site.
Dec. 31, 1997 – For the first time in the Fiesta Bowl’s history, the game is held on New Year’s Eve, creating an electrifying evening in downtown Tempe with the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl and the Tempe Tostitos Fiesta Bowl Block Party being held at the same time. Kansas State quarterback Michael Bishop is the star of the game, while The B-52’s highlight the Block Party, which attracts a record 175,000 people.
Sept. 28, 1998 – The Fiesta Bowl calendar of events, featuring 51 year-round spectator and participatory events, is branded the Fiesta Bowl Festival.
June 1, 1998 – The Fiesta Bowl reaches an agreement with the Football Writers Association of America to host an annual Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Banquet in the Phoenix area beginning in January 1999. The banquet will recognize the nation’s top coach, as selected by the FWAA, and Eddie Robinson, the winningest coach in college football history.
Dec. 15, 1998 – Heisman Trophy winners Ricky Williams and Tony Dorsett are announced as co-grand marshals for the 28th Annual MicroAge Fiesta Bowl Parade. The two running backs were the talk of the college football season, as Williams broke Dorsett’s 22-year-old record for career rushing yards. It is also announced that the STS-95 NASA Astronaut crew, featuring American hero John Glenn, will serve as the Honorary Grand Marshals for the parade.
Jan. 4, 1999 – Tennessee completes its best season in school history with a 23-16 victory over Florida State in front of a Fiesta Bowl-record 80,470 fans in the first unified national championship game in college football history. Tennessee’s Peerless Price proves worthy of his name with four receptions for a career-high 199 yards, including a 79-yard game-clinching touchdown reception in the fourth quarter. Vice President Al Gore is one of several celebrities on hand in a game that ABC televises in prime time on Monday night.
Jan. 14, 1999 – Tennessee head coach Phillip Fulmer is presented with the Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year trophy at the inaugural America West Airlines Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Banquet at the Arizona Biltmore Resort.
May 13, 1999 – The Tostitos Fiesta Bowl announces that the 1999 national championship game between Tennessee and Florida State generated a record economic impact of $133 million and attracted 69,000 out-of-state visitors, according to a study by the Arizona State University College of Business.
July 19, 1999 – The Fiesta Bowl announces that the STS-93 NASA astronaut crew, featuring Commander Eileen Collins, the first American female to command a space flight, will participate in the 1999-2000 Fiesta Bowl game week activities.
Dec. 31, 1999 – A record crowd of 200,000 people usher in the new millennium to the sounds of Sugar Ray and Billy Idol at the Tempe Tostitos Fiesta Bowl Block Party. MILLennium Avenue is the place to be on this special night, as the crowd enjoys six stages of music, pep rallies, fireworks, carnival rides and food and beverage booths.
Jan. 13, 2000 – Virginia Tech head coach Frank Beamer is named the 1999 Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year at the America West Airlines Eddie Robinson Coach of the Year Banquet. Beamer beats out finalists Glen Mason of Minnesota and June Jones of Hawaii at the event, which is televised nationally on Fox Sports Net and held at The Phoenician Resort.
April 26, 2000 – The Fiesta Bowl announces that the Insight.com Bowl will be the first football game ever played at Bank One Ballpark when the game moves to Phoenix beginning this year. The ballpark will be reconfigured to make it football friendly for the fans, with seats added along the playing field, bringing the special seating capacity to 50,000.
Aug. 25, 2000 – Kristy Kay Stover is crowned the 30th Fiesta Bowl Queen at the Wells Fargo Fiesta Bowl Queen’s Gala presented by JCPenney. Stover, a junior at Arizona State University, is joined on the court with Robyn Lende, April Lonigro and Rebecca McCartney.
Oct. 6, 2000 – The Fiesta Bowl and Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation announce a long-term partnership with the Fiesta Bowl Parade. The parade, which has been called one of the top six parades in the nation by USA Today, will now be titled the Fort McDowell Fiesta Bowl Parade presented by Fort McDowell Yavapai Nation.
Dec. 20, 2000 – The Fiesta Bowl announces its support of Arizona’s law enforcement officers and firefighters through a scholarship program to assist the surviving children of fallen public servants. The Fiesta Bowl commits $100,000 to the 100 Club, a non-profit organization that provides immediate financial assistance to the families of Arizona law enforcement officers and firefighters in cases of critical injury or death in the line of duty.
Dec. 28, 2000 – Bank One Ballpark is rocking and rolling as Iowa State gets its first-ever bowl victory in a hard-fought 37-29 victory over Pittsburgh in the Insight.com Bowl. Billed as “College Football Like You’ve Never Seen It Before,” the Insight.com Bowl is all that and a whole lot more in its Bank One Ballpark debut. Energetic fans, hard-hitting action and plenty of surprises are the norm where nothing is left standing, including the goal posts, which were dismantled in record time by the more than 25,000 Cyclone fans.
Jan. 1, 2001 – The third largest crowd in Tostitos Fiesta Bowl history, and the largest for a non-championship game, watch the Oregon State Beavers put an exclamation point on their remarkable season with a 41-9 victory over Notre Dame. The Oregon State faithful have plenty to celebrate, as the Beavers finish the season with an 11-1 record, their best in school history, and their first bowl victory in 39 years.
Sept. 25, 2001 – The Fiesta Bowl and Fox Sports Net join forces to produce a new weekly college football television show entitled the Fiesta Bowl Roundtable presented by Alltel. The show is devoted to the national college football scene and includes roundtable discussions with host Brad Cesmat of KTAR Radio and other Phoenix-area media members.
Dec. 7, 2001 – Luis Gonzalez of the World Series champion Arizona Diamondbacks is introduced as the grand marshal for the Fort McDowell Fiesta Bowl Parade. Gonzalez had the game-winning RBI single in the bottom of the ninth inning to lead the D-Backs to a thrilling Game 7 victory and World Series championship over the New York Yankees at Bank One Ballpark in Phoenix.
Dec. 29, 2001 – The Fort McDowell Fiesta Bowl Parade is the most emotional in the event’s history, as the parade’s participants and spectators wear red, white and blue to honor the nation after the tragedies of September 11. The parade theme is “Spirit of America” and honors New York City’s firehouse members of Engine 22, Ladder 13 and officers of New York Police Department’s Midtown South Precinct.
Jan. 1, 2002 – The 31st Annual Tostitos Fiesta Bowl is branded the “Just In Case National Title Game”, as Oregon and Colorado enter the game ranked No. 2 and No. 3, respectively, in the Associated Press and USA Today/ESPN polls. It’s the Ducks, however, who provide the “quack” during the game, as Oregon quarterback Joey Harrington leads a convincing, 38-16, victory with 350 yards passing and four touchdowns.
Nov. 7, 2002 – Baseball legend Cal Ripken Jr., whose remarkable consecutive games streak was voted Major League Baseball’s Most Memorable Moment by baseball fans worldwide, is announced as the Grand Marshal for the 32nd Annual Fort McDowell Fiesta Bowl Parade. In addition to leading the Parade, Ripken will also serve as a special guest and be involved in the coin toss at the national championship Tostitos Fiesta Bowl.
Dec. 8, 2002 – Ray Mills of Phoenix nails a hole-in-one and wins $1 million in the AT&T Fiesta Bowl Million Dollar Hole-in-One presented by Ernst & Young. It’s the first time in the 18-year history of the event, someone is able to record an ace and win the cash prize. Mills used a seven-iron on the 158-yard hole, bouncing the ball on the front of the green before it rolled in the hole.
Jan. 3, 2003 – In what many people call one of the greatest games in college football history, Ohio State upsets the defending national champion Miami Hurricanes in a double-overtime classic. The Buckeyes, who finish with a school best 14-0 record, rely on a tenacious defense that forces five turnovers and stops the potent Miami offense on three consecutive plays from the one-yard line in the second overtime to claim the school’s fifth consensus national championship.
May 5, 2003 – The 32nd Annual Tostitos Fiesta Bowl and surrounding events generate a record economic impact of $228 million to the state’s economy, according to a study by the W. P. Carey Sports Business Program at Arizona State University. The national championship game between Ohio State and Miami reaches a record $153.7 million, while attracting 90,094 out-of-state visitors to the Valley of the Sun.
Dec. 29, 2003 – The Fiesta Bowl announces that it will honor the families of the crew lost in the Space Shuttle Columbia tragedy during the Fort McDowell Fiesta Bowl Parade and the Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. For the past 15 years, the Fiesta Bowl has been host to many guests, yet none as distinguished as guests and crews from NASA missions.
Dec. 2, 2004 – Olympic Gold Medalist Jennie Finch is named the Grand Marshal for the 2004 Fort McDowell Fiesta Bowl Parade. One of the most recognized athletes in women’s sports, Finch helped lead the USA Softball team to gold in Athens by outscoring their opponents 51-1 in dominating fashion. She was also named one of People Magazine’s 50 Most Beautiful People and appeared on late-night TV with David Letterman and Jimmy Kimmel.
Dec. 28, 2004 – The Insight Bowl draws its biggest crowd in history with Notre Dame and Oregon State battling in a rematch of the 2001 Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. The Beavers are victorious once again, 38-21, behind the four touchdown passes of Derek Anderson, who ties an Insight Bowl record.
Jan. 1, 2005 – Utah caps its perfect season with an exclamation point on the bright BCS stage with a 35-7 win over Pittsburgh in the 34th Annual Tostitos Fiesta Bowl. The Utes become the first team from a non-BCS conference to earn a spot in one of the four BCS bowls, and they don’t disappoint a sold-out crowd primarily filled with Utah fans. Heisman finalist quarterback Alex Smith throws four touchdown passes and sets a Fiesta Bowl record for passing efficiency to showcase his versatility, helping to make him the No. 1 pick in the 2005 NFL Draft.
April 26, 2005 – BCS Coordinator Kevin Weiberg announces that the Fiesta Bowl will host the first BCS National Championship Game on Jan. 8, 2007, at the new stadium in Glendale. The game will be played a week after the regular Tostitos Fiesta Bowl and include the nation’s top two teams for college football’s ultimate prize. It will also be the first time a city will host three bowl games, with the Insight Bowl, Tostitos Fiesta Bowl and BCS National Championship game, all scheduled within a two-week timeframe.

Super Bowl trophy & rings by the numbers

Immediately following a Super Bowl victory, NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue presents the winning team with the Vince Lombardi Trophy.

“Sometimes it is slightly damaged during the celebration,” says Ed Wawryneck, vice president of Tiffany & Co., the trophy’s manufacturer. “We always have an extra in case a catastrophe occurs, but so far nothing major has ever happened.”

A trophy is then returned to Tiffany & Co. for any repairs and the engraving of the team names and the final score onto the base. It then goes back to the team for permanent possession. The particulars of the Vince Lombardi Trophy:

Weight 7 pounds
Height 22 inches
Man-hours To Complete 72
Made of Sterling silver *
Year Designed 1966
First Sketched On A napkin
Sketched By Oscar Riedener **
Crafted by Hand
Made In Parsippany, NJ
Made By Tiffany
Value $12,500
* — Including nuts and bolts; ** — Former Tiffany VP of design

Rose Bowl News

On January 4, 2006 at 5:00 p.m. (PST) the
Rose Bowl Game will host the BCS National
Championship, once again showcasing the
best of collegiate football in “The Granddaddy
of All Bowl Games”. The Rose Bowl will be
broadcast exclusively on ABC and
on ESPN radio.