NCAA Football tickets / UCLA tickets
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Golden Tickets is your one-stop source for UCLA football tickets. Think of us as your passport to the best UCLA tickets with over 16 years of experience in the business of obtaining first-class NCAA Football 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.
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About UCLA Football
UCLA first opened its doors in 1919 as the University of California, Southern Branch. They fielded a team that same year and went 2-6, losing to Manual Arts HS 74-0 in the 1st game but went on to beat LA City College and the Occidental College Frosh team. They were known then as the Cubs.
In 1924, UCSB reached 4 year status and changed the school moniker from Cubs to Grizzlies. During this time, they played in the old Southern Conference with the likes of Pomona, Whittier, and Cal Tech.
In 1926 the University of Montana Grizzlies became agitated that the upstart UCSB school had taken its name and filed a formal protest directly to UCSB's Vermont Blvd campus. Keeping with the bear motif, the school selected Bruins because Cal had already used Bears. (Incidently, UCLA met Montana in 1929 and beat them, 14-0.)
In 1927, the school changed its name to the University of California at Los Angeles and a year moved their campus to Westwood and joined the Pacific Coast Conference (the precursor to today's Pac-10 conference); thus becoming our modern UCLA Bruins.
About the Stadium
The nation's most famous college football stadium -- The Rose Bowl -- is now in its 19th season as the home of the UCLA Bruin football team. One of the finest football stadiums in America, the Rose Bowl was built specifically for football, but was used for portions of the 1932 Olympic Games and was also the soccer site for the 1984 Olympics. The Rose Bowl has also been the site of four Super Bowls, most recently Super Bowl XXVII on January 31, 1993, and was a venue for the 1994 World Cup and 1999 Women1s World Cup soccer tournaments, including the championship games. It is currently the home of the Galaxy of Major League Soccer.
In 1998, new individual chairs were installed in the seating areas between the end zones as part of a plan to bring the Rose Bowl into the 21st Century as America1s premier college football stadium. Also, improved seating areas for the physically challenged have been installed, as has a new sound system.
In 1997, a state-of-the-art video board, as well as new matrix-style scoreboards, were added to the the Rose Bowl. Construction that began last year on additional concession stands and restrooms has been completed. In addition, team dressing rooms have recently been renovated.
Prior to the 1992 season, the Rose Bowl built a new three-level press box. In addition to modern facilities for the print and electronic media, the new press box has two levels of executive and club suites, some of which are still available for lease. Three elevators service this state-of-the-art facility.
In addition, the Rose Bowl also received a new state-of-the art lighting system prior to 1992 season. The system included new lights, fixtures and towers.
Completed in 1922, the Rose Bowl was first used for the USC-California game that year. The stadium was horseshoe shaped and seated 57,000 persons when it hosted the 1923 Rose Bowl Game. The south end was enclosed prior to the 1929 game and enlarged to seat 76,000 spectators. Demands for more and more seats led to further enlargements, to 83,677 in 1932 and to 100,807 in 1949.
With the new seating configuration, the current seating capacity is 91,136, though a record 106,869 witnessed the 1973 USC-Ohio State Rose Bowl contest.
In conjunction with UCLA1s move in 1982 and the Olympics, a Rose Bowl improvement program resulted in the refurbishing of the press box, adding permanent concession stands and backs for more than 50,000 seats. In recent years, all of those areas have enjoyed additional enhancements.
The Rose Bowl has many firsts to its record. On Jan. 1, 1927, radio stations across the nation were linked together for the first time in a coast-to-coast broadcast. On Jan. 1, 1954, the UCLA-Michigan State Rose Bowl Game was the first west-to-east color telecast on a nationwide hookup.
The Rose Bowl has 77 rows of seats. It measures 880 feet from the north to south rims and 695 from east to west. Its circumference around the rim is 2,430 feet, compared to 1,350 feet at field level. It took 28 miles of lumber to provide the original seats. There are 79,156 square feet of natural grass on the floor of the stadium.
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