NCAA College Bowl Games / Rose Bowl tickets
Welcome Rose Bowl fans! Now, you can effortlessly buy tickets to the Rose Bowl with Golden Tickets. Rose Bowl tickets the can be viewed by clicking on the link below.
Welcome to Golden Tickets
Golden Tickets is your one-stop source for Rose Bowl Tickets. Think of us as your passport to the best Rose Bowl tickets with over 16 years of experience in the business of obtaining first-class Rose Bowl seats in a secure and flexible online environment. We are founding members of the National Association of Ticket Brokers (NATB) and have been in excellent standing with the Better Business Bureau for 16 years.
As an industry leader, you can count on Golden Tickets for:
- On-time delivery of your Rose Bowl tickets;
- Encrypted ticket orders processed through a secure server;
- and Convenient payment and delivery options.
Rose Bowl tickets are available for sale online 24 hours a day. Clicking on any link on our Rose Bowl Tickets page will take you to our secure server to complete your purchase. For your own protection, a Golden Tickets representative may contact you to verify your billing information. If you cannot find the Rose Bowl tickets you're looking for, please call us at (800) 288-2461 for assistance.
Search for additional Rose Bowl Tickets by clicking here. If your interests extend beyond Rose Bowl Tickets, visit our Quick Ticket Finder.
About the Team or Event
Members of Pasadena’s Valley Hunt Club, former residents of the East and Midwest eager to showcase their new home’s mild winter weather, staged the first Tournament of Roses in 1890. "In New York, people are buried in snow," announced Professor Charles F. Holder at a Club meeting. "Here our flowers are blooming and our oranges are about to bear. Let's hold a festival to tell the world about our paradise."
More than 2,000 people turned out on New Year's Day to watch a parade of flower-covered carriages, followed by foot races, polo matches and tugs-of-war on the town lot. The abundance of flowers prompted Professor Holder to suggest "Tournament of Roses" as a suitable name for the festival.
During the next few years, the festival expanded to include marching bands and motorized floats. The games on the town lot (which was re-named Tournament Park in 1900) included ostrich races, bronco busting demonstrations and a race between a camel and an elephant (the elephant won). Reviewing stands were built along the Parade route, and Eastern newspapers began to take notice of the event. In 1895, the Tournament of Roses Association was formed to take charge of the festival, which had grown too large for the Valley Hunt Club to handle.
The Rose Parade's elaborate floats have come a long way since the Tournament's early days. Although a few floats are still built by volunteers from their sponsoring communities, most are built by professional float building companies and take nearly a year to construct.
The yearlong effort pays off on New Year's morning, when millions of viewers around the world enjoy the Rose Parade and the Rose Bowl.
About the Stadium
- Stadium re-entry is prohibited. The game ends after sunset - do NOT forget a jacket or coat
- Stadium gates open at noon
- A customer service ticket window is located at the "Will Call" booth outside of Gate B and inside the stadium perimeter fence at tunnel 28
- The following items are prohibited from entering the stadium: backpacks or large purses, bottles, cans, balls, coolers, thermoses, alcoholic beverages, weapons, baskets, umbrellas, throwing toys, noise makers (air horns, whistles, etc.), banners, signs, poles and large still and video cameras. Small, hand-held still and video cameras will be admitted
|
|