1944 Rose Bowl

1944 Rose Bowl
30th Rose Bowl Game
1234 Total
Washington 0000 0
USC 07139 29
Date January 1, 1944
Season 1943
Stadium Rose Bowl
Location Pasadena, California
MVP Norman Verry (G) – USC
Attendance 68,000 [1]

The 1944 Rose Bowl, played on January 1, 1944, was a college football bowl game, the 30th Rose Bowl game. This was the only Rose Bowl game to feature two teams from the same conference (Pacific Coast Conference), necessitated by the travel restrictions imposed by the war effort. This game determined the champion of the Pacific Coast Conference for the 1943 college football season. The USC Trojans defeated the Washington Huskies, 29–0, in a one-sided game.[2][3]

The favored Washington Huskies team had a record of four wins and no losses in its abbreviated season, without any Pacific Conference games. Their opponents were Whitman College, the Spokane Air Command, the March Field Flyers, and again against the Spokane Air Command.

By the time Washington arrived in Pasadena for the game, they had lost a dozen players to active military duty, including two of their best backs, Jay Stoves (who had transferred from Washington State, which did not field a team due to the war) and Pete Susick.[3] Washington filled its roster holes with Navy V-12 trainees and draft rejects who recently arrived on campus, leaving only 28 players available for the game.[3] Oddsmakers made the Huskies two-touchdown favorites to beat USC, but the fielded team differed greatly from that of the regular season.[3]

The USC quarterback, Jim Hardy, threw three touchdown passes to lead the Trojans. This victory was the Trojans' seventh Rose Bowl victory and also gave them their Pacific Coast Conference championship.[4] For the first time, the Rose Bowl was broadcast on the radio abroad to all American servicemen, with General Eisenhower in Western Europe allowing all troops who were not on the front lines to tune in and listen.[5] This was the first Rose Bowl radio broadcast abroad to American servicemen, as General Dwight D. Eisenhower allowed all troops in western Europe not on the front lines to tune in and listen.[3]

Scoring

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter

References

  1. 2003 UW media guide, p. 323
  2. "Rose Bowl 1944". Rose Bowl History. Archived from the original on 1 December 2008. Retrieved 12 December 2008.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 http://sportspressnw.com/2122752/2011/wayback-machine-pest-welchs-crazy-war-years
  4. "The Rose Bowl 1944". mmbolding.com. Archived from the original on 19 December 2008. Retrieved 12 December 2008.
  5. "Huskies (University of Washington) Football, 1889-2008". historylink.org. April 11, 2008. Retrieved 12 December 2008.
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