The Rose Bowl Game, themed Building Dreams, Friendships, & Memories, was a contractual sell-out, with 64,500 tickets allocated to the participating teams and conferences. Ticket prices for all seats in the Rose Bowl are listed at $145. The remaining tickets went to the Tournament of Roses members, sponsors, City of Pasadena residents, and the general public. The Rose Bowl stadium capacity is listed at approximately 91,000.
In support of Luttrell's heroism, the Tournament of Roses recognized The Boot Campaign, an organization that works directly with Luttrell and his foundation to raise awareness for our military by its sale of combat boots purchased and worn by supporters with proceeds benefiting military charities.
Teams
The teams that traditionally play in the Rose Bowl game (since 1947) are the champions of the Pacific Coast Conference, and subsequently Pacific-10, representing the "West" (which was renamed the Pac-12 in 2011 with the addition of the University of Colorado and the University of Utah) and Big Ten conferences, unless one team (or both teams) play in the BCS National Championship Game. Then, according to the BCS rules, the first year the Rose Bowl loses a team to the National Championship Game and a team from the non-automatic qualifying group is an automatic qualifier, that team will play in the Rose Bowl.[11] Should the non-AQ qualify for the BCS Championship, and face either the Big Ten or Pac-10 Champion, the Rose Bowl may replace the Big Ten/Pac-10 Champion with a team from same conference, so long as it is in the Top 14 of the final BCS Standings. The teams, which were based on the final BCS Standings released on December 5, 2010, were selected by the football committee of the Pasadena Tournament of Roses Association.
Wisconsin started their season by sweeping their nonconference slate, with wins over UNLV in Las Vegas, San Jose State, Arizona State, and Austin Peay at home. However, a loss in their conference opener against Michigan State put a dampener on their season. The Badgers would recover and win seven consecutive games, including a win over then-No. 1 Ohio State and a win in Iowa City over a ranked Iowa squad. Bret Bielema's squad brought in a solid defense that had allowed just 7 rushing touchdowns this season. On the other side of the ball, Wisconsin had 3 running backs with at least 13 touchdowns (John Clay, Montee Ball, and James White) and had the top rushing attack in the Big Ten. Wisconsin QB Scott Tolzien, who led the nation in completion percentage (by completing 74.3% of his passes), played his final game as a Badger.
The Horned Frogs finished the regular season with a perfect 12–0 record, winning eight conference games and the Mountain West Conference title. The game not only marked their first trip to Pasadena but the first by a team from the conference to play in a New Year's Day bowl game. The Frogs had completed their second consecutive perfect regular season, and were making their sixth consecutive bowl appearance. The Rose Bowl was their second consecutive BCS bowl game and the fourth appearance by a Mountain West conference member (the Frogs lost the 2010 Fiesta Bowl to Boise State and Utah played in the 2009 Sugar Bowl and the 2005 Fiesta Bowl, winning both).[13] The team was situated on the West sideline.
TCU finished the regular season as the conference leader in scoring offense (520 points, 43.3 average) and scoring defense (137 points, 11.4 average). TCU came into the game with the nation's #1 ranked defense. The Frogs were led by senior quarterback Andy Dalton, who completed 194 of 293 passes for 2,638 yards for 26 touchdowns, and tailback Ed Wesley, who carried 162 times for 1,065 yards and scored 11 touchdowns. Dalton, playing in his final game as a Horned Frog, led the nation in career wins for an active quarterback at 41. TCU became the fifth team outside of the conference partnership to play in the Rose Bowl game since the formation of the BCS.
Game summary
Scoring summary
Scoring play
Score
1st quarter
WIS – Philip Welch 30-yard field goal, 10:43
WIS 3–0
TCU – Bart Johnson 23-yard pass from Andy Dalton (Ross Evans kick), 6:55
TCU 7–3
WIS – John Clay 1-yard run (Philip Welch kick), 3:46
WIS 10–7
TCU – Andy Dalton 4-yard run (Ross Evans kick), 0:36
TCU 14–10
2nd quarter
WIS – Philip Welch 37-yard field goal, 0:00
TCU 14–13
3rd quarter
TCU – Luke Shivers 1-yard run (Ross Evans kick), 11:56
TCU 21–13
4th quarter
WIS – Montee Ball 4-yard run (failed 2-point conversion), 2:00
TCU 21–19
Statistics
Statistics
Wisconsin
TCU
First Downs
20
18
Total offense, plays - yards
67–385
49–301
Rushes-yards (net)
46–226
26–82
Passing yards (net)
159
219
Passes, Comp-Att-Int
12–21–0
15–23–0
Time of Possession
36:35
23:25
Notes
Second game decided by two points, joining the 1966 game (UCLA 14, Michigan State 12).
Wisconsin head coach Bret Bielema became the eighth person to both play and coach in a Rose Bowl Game.
The 24 points scored in the first quarter by the two teams were the most in Rose Bowl history and the first time both teams scored in double digits.
TCU has since moved up to BCS AQ status as a member of the Big 12 Conference. By accepting the Big 12's invitation, they changed their minds about joining the Big East Conference.