Poi Bowl

Defunct college football bowl game held in Honolulu From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Poi Bowl was a college football bowl game played during the late 1930s in Honolulu, Hawaii, at Honolulu Stadium. The game featured the then-Hawaii Rainbows and, usually, an invited team from the Pacific Coast Conference.

Operated1936–1939
Conference tie-insPacific Coast Conference
Quick facts (defunct), Stadium ...
Poi Bowl (defunct)
StadiumHonolulu Stadium
LocationHonolulu, Hawaii
Operated1936–1939
Conference tie-insPacific Coast Conference
Succeeded byPineapple Bowl
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History

The game was contested in early January from 1936 to 1939. The bowl was named after poi, a traditional taro-based staple food in Polynesia, on suggestion from Vernon "Red" McQueen, sports editor of The Honolulu Advertiser.[1] In December 1938, the contest was renamed as the Pineapple Bowl at the request of the University of Hawaii at Manoa.[1]

The university invited teams from the Pacific Coast Conference to participate in the Poi Bowl every year except for 1937, when they played a local all-star team.[2] The game was normally contested on New Year's Day, except in 1939 when the holiday fell on a Sunday, and by mutual agreement of the teams in 1937 due to heavy rain.[3]

For the 1937 game, Hawaii's opponent was to be determined by a Christmas Day contest between Kamehameha alumni and the "Town Team".[4] However, when that game ended in a tie, an all-star roster of players from those two teams was selected.[5]

Game results

The University of Hawaii went 1–3 in the Poi Bowl.[6]

More information Date, Winner ...
DateWinnerLoserAttendanceRef.
January 1, 1936USC38Hawaii618,000[7]
January 2, 1937Hawaii18Honolulu All-Stars125,000[8]
January 1, 1938Washington53Hawaii1313,000[9]
January 2, 1939UCLA32Hawaii718,000[10]
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While NCAA records indicate the January 1939 edition was staged as the Poi Bowl,[11] contemporary newspaper reports indicate it was held under the Pineapple Bowl name.[1][12]

The media guide of the now-Hawaii Rainbow Warriors football program does not include any Poi Bowl games in their bowl game history.[13] Results do appear in the NCAA's bowl game history, in the "Unsanctioned Or Other Bowls" section.[11]

See also

References

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