1928 Rose Bowl

1928 Rose Bowl
14th Rose Bowl Game
1234 Total
Pittsburgh 0060 6
Stanford 0070 7
Date January 2, 1928
Season 1927
Stadium Rose Bowl
Location Pasadena, California
MVP Biff Hoffman (FB) – Stanford
Attendance 70,000

The 1928 Rose Bowl Game was a match between Stanford (7–2–1) and the Pittsburgh Panthers (8–0–1). Usually, the Rose Bowl was played on January 1, but in 1928, that fell on a Sunday, so the game was played on January 2, 1928. At this time, the Rose Bowl was the top and only bowl game, an east-vs.-west matchup. Stanford won the game, 7–6.[1]

Coaching

The coach for Pittsburgh was Jock Sutherland, while the Stanford coach was Glenn Scobey Warner. Sutherland had played on several of Warner's Pitt teams while Warner was head coach at Pitt. Warner was head coach at Pitt from 1915 to 1923 and coached the Panthers to three undefeated seasons, 33 straight wins, and was credited with three national championships for Pitt before going to Stanford in 1924.

Game summary

Stanford's Frank Wilton had been the goat of the 1927 Rose Bowl: with Stanford leading 7–0 late in the game, an Alabama defender broke through the line and blocked his punt, setting up the Tide's tying touchdown. In the 1928 game, Wilton again made a critical error, losing the ball after being hit on his own 20 yard line, allowing Pitt's Jimmy Hagan to run the fumble in for a touchdown. Walt Heinecke of Stanford blocked Allen Booth's point after attempt, holding Pitt's lead to 6–0. Later in the game, Wilton had his redemption when teammate Spud Lewis fumbled a yard from the goal. Wilton scooped up the ball and crashed through for the tying touchdown. The kick was good, and Stanford held on for a 7–6 win.[2]

Scoring

Third quarter

Individual stats

Rushing

Game notes

The capacity of the Pasadena Rose Bowl Stadium was increased to 76,000, adding 19,000 seats. At game time, the temperature was 70 °F (21 °C).

References

  1. 2009-10 Rose Bowl Media Guide, Pasadena Tournament of Roses, December 2009
  2. "Lucky Fumble Gives Cards Win," Oakland Tribune, January 3, 1928, p25
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