The Morning Call (Sunday)

Stadium known for being the site of special sports moments

- By Mike Jensen

There’s only one guarantee I’m willing to make about what goes down Monday inside the Rose Bowl when Penn State takes on Utah. It will be memorable.

How is that guaranteed? Because I’ve never walked inside that stadium without witnessing something special. Surely, there have been unmemorabl­e sporting events held there, but I’ve just never seen any.

I’ve been there only five times, by the way. But here are my Top Five, in reverse order:

5. 1996 Rose Bowl

When a school hasn’t been to a bowl game since 1949 and hadn’t had a winning season since 1971 ... making that Rose Bowl was historic for Northweste­rn. Sure, Southern Cal was there too, but that wasn’t the story.

“We didn’t feel left out,” USC coach John Robinson said after it was over. “We were left out.”

Northweste­rn being in the game was the news going in. The memory, however, was Keyshawn Johnson. The Trojans receiver owned the day, with 12 catches for 216 yards, as USC took a 41-32 victory over the team that had led the nation in scoring defense.

Robinson called it “one of the best football games I’ve ever been in.” But only No. 5 on my list.

4) 1994 men’s World Cup final

This is officially a crazy list when a World Cup final is No. 4. Honestly, the game itself wasn’t that memorable, beyond the heat of the day and the tension that never left the stadium from start to finish.

After a scoreless tie, the lasting memory of the entire tournament . . . Roberto Baggio missed a penalty kick, sending it far over the bar. Brazil over Italy on penalty kicks.

To understand how big that moment was, you had to be paying attention to the rest of that World Cup held all over the United States.

Brazil may have been the dominant team, but Baggio had been the dominant player. (Think Lionel Messi or Kylian Mbappe in this World Cup, then add a couple of highlights.) I’d covered Italy’s quarterfin­al and semifinal wins over Spain and Bulgaria. Lord, what a show Baggio had put on.

My lead paragraph from the Spain game in Foxborough, Massa chusetts: “Fallen Spanish bodies littered the grounds yesterday, players lying everywhere on the field, so stunned by one of the most dramatic goals of the World Cup that they could not stand.

“And it was Roberto Baggio who had struck them all down.”

Then Baggio scored twice in five minutes in the semifinal against Bulgaria at Giants Stadium.

“This is my work,” Baggio said right after the game. “This is my life.”

When he missed the penalty kick against Brazil, he just stared after the ball, which had gone into the crowd as a Brazilian party broke out around him. Baggio stayed in place, staring at the ground, hands on hips.

“I was there in body and spirit,” he said later. “My concentrat­ion was good. I don’t know how I shot it the way I did.”

3) 2017 Rose Bowl

Maybe it didn’t have the stakes of some of the others, but what a game it was, USC getting past Penn State at the very end. A 52-49 thriller that took 4 hours, 12 minutes and featured Saquon Barkley seemingly juking past USC’s entire team on one 79-yard TD run and Trace McSorley finding receiver Chris Godwin again and again.

The only reason it wasn’t a spot higher on the list: A national title wasn’t on the line.

2) 2006 Rose Bowl

This was for a national title, and it sure looked like USC had this one too until Texas quarterbac­k Vince Young decided otherwise. The future Eagle ran for three secondhalf touchdowns, including the game-winner with 19 seconds left, as the Longhorns won 41-38.

The stories were due right at the buzzer to make deadline, but the drama was all baked in.

Which brings us to . . .

1) 1999 Women’s World Cup final

If I had to list the most historic national sporting events I’ve covered, this has to top the list.

By the final against China, the United States women’s national soccer team had crossed over into the popular culture. Maybe if you’re old enough to remember, the striking memory still is veteran defender Brandi Chastain with the last kick of the penalty shootout, then whipping her jersey off.

The real hero of that World Cup had been goalkeeper Briana Scurry, making PK saves. And the biggest play until the penalty kicks had been Kristine Lilly heading a ball away from the line in the 100th minute.

Some days before that final, I’d written a story on goal celebratio­ns and asked Chastain about them, since the U.S. had been having a bunch of them.

“It’s a chance to see the person outside the soccer player,” Chastain had told me. “That’s real, when those emotions come out.”

I’d asked Chastain what she’d do if she scored a goal.

“I think everyone in their own quiet time thinks about it,” she said.

The world eventually saw her answer. “Momentary insanity” is how Chastain afterward described her celebratio­n, which simply fit the historic moment, in a place that specialize­s in them.

 ?? MARK J TERRILL/AP ?? Southern Cal cornerback Daylon McCutcheon dashes for a 53-yard touchdown after recovering a fumble in the second quarter against Northweste­rn in the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1, 1996, in Pasadena, Calif.
MARK J TERRILL/AP Southern Cal cornerback Daylon McCutcheon dashes for a 53-yard touchdown after recovering a fumble in the second quarter against Northweste­rn in the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1, 1996, in Pasadena, Calif.
 ?? SEAN M. HAFFEY/GETTY FILE ?? Former Whitehall and Penn State running back Saquon Barkley leaves USC defenders in his wake en route to a 79-yard touchdown run.
SEAN M. HAFFEY/GETTY FILE Former Whitehall and Penn State running back Saquon Barkley leaves USC defenders in his wake en route to a 79-yard touchdown run.
 ?? MIKE BLAKE/REUTERS ?? Texas quarterbac­k Vince Young celebrates a 41-38 victory over USC for the national championsh­ip at the 92nd Rose Bowl game on Jan. 4, 2006.
MIKE BLAKE/REUTERS Texas quarterbac­k Vince Young celebrates a 41-38 victory over USC for the national championsh­ip at the 92nd Rose Bowl game on Jan. 4, 2006.
 ?? ERIC RISBERG/AP ?? United States’ goalkeeper Briana Scurry blocks a penalty kick by China’s Ying Liu during a shootout in the 1999 World Cup final.
ERIC RISBERG/AP United States’ goalkeeper Briana Scurry blocks a penalty kick by China’s Ying Liu during a shootout in the 1999 World Cup final.

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