Mr. Rose Bowl
Roger Carlson
When he and his grandfather walked up to the ticket window at the
Rose Bowl on New Year’s Day in 1944, the price of the ticket was
$4.40 and, since the famed saucer attracted only 68,000, they were
pretty decent seats, as well.
It was in the midst of WWII and because of travel restrictions,
the Washington Huskies brought a 4-0 record to Pasadena and were
thoroughly trounced by USC, 29-0.
“Now the tickets are $125 each,” said Robert Matthews, 74, who has
seen every game since, with Wednesday’s kickoff between Washington
State and Oklahoma marking his 60th straight game.
Sometimes he saw the game solo, but for the most part, wife Anita,
son Lyle and, for the last 38 games, his son Wayne, have accompanied
him.
A one-time Colton High student who went on to San Bernardino
Valley College, the retired banker and 20-year resident of Corona del
Mar is just a fan of the West Coast with no affiliation to any team.
It was not long after that first game that the Pacific Coast
Conference and the Big Ten signed a pact to send each conference’s
champion to the Rose Bowl (except no one could repeat), and Matthews
was among the majority who hated the pact, which began with the 1947
game.
“We wanted Army (9-0-1) with Glenn Davis and Doc Blanchard,” said
Matthews. Instead, they got Illinois (8-2) and Buddy Young, which
took UCLA apart, 45-14.
Among the moments that stick with Matthews is the ’72 game
(Stanford defeated Michigan, 13-12, in a thriller with quarterback
Jim Plunkett at the helm).
Also, USC’s 42-37 victory over Wisconsin in 1963. “My wife went
with me to that one,” Matthews said. “Ron VanderKelen, Pete Beathard,
a very exciting game.”
And, the 17-14 Michigan State victory over UCLA in 1956. “It was
right at the last,” recalls Matthews, who can run off a number of
other momentous occasions, among them involving USC’s Charlie White
and Anthony Munoz, Sam Cunningham and Shelton Diggs, a product of San
Bernardino.
Also, when Woody Hayes brought his Buckeyes of Ohio State west. “I
did not like Woody Hayes, one bit,” said Matthews.
On Wednesday it’s Washington State and Oklahoma and Matthews makes
no bones about it: he doesn’t care for the meddling of the BCS, which
allows the Orange Bowl to pluck Iowa away for its game with USC.
Time-honored tradition dictates Iowa should be playing Washington
State, but, as he admits, he didn’t like the Big Ten deal, either,
when it began.
Over the years, Matthews has had to work at it to get tickets,
settling for scalpers on many occasions, but said he generally only
had to pay $10 or so above the cost of the tickets.
He has the game programs and ticket stubs from all of the Rose
Bowl games and among his treasures is an autograph from sportscaster
Bill Stern, one of the all-time golden voices of sports in the radio
days of the ‘40s and ‘50s.
The Rose Bowl is not his only vice. He and Anita are season ticket
holders for UC Irvine basketball and baseball. But he finds himself
wavering a little on baseball because of last spring’s weather, which
was cold, to say the least.
As for the future?
New Year’s Day is on a Thursday when No. 61 rolls around.
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