Report: Rose, city sue UCLA for alleged SoFi plan

5 hours ago 3
  • Associated Press

Oct 30, 2025, 12:52 PM ET

LOS ANGELES -- The city of Pasadena, California, and the Rose Bowl Operating Company have sued UCLA for allegedly trying to move its college football games from one of the sport's most iconic stadiums to the much newer SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, California, the Los Angeles Times reported Wednesday.

According to the Times, the suit accuses UCLA of "profoundly" betraying its trust by attempting to relocate its home games from the facility the Bruins have called home for 43 years to the home of the NFL's Los Angeles Rams and Los Angeles Chargers.

UCLA's current lease runs through 2044. But the stadium is 26 miles from campus, and the Bruins (3-5, 3-2 Big Ten) have struggled with attendance in recent years. This season, UCLA's average attendance for its four home games is roughly 35,000.

SoFi Stadium opened in September 2020, is about 12 miles from UCLA's campus and has a capacity of 70,240.

"This lawsuit arises in an era when money too often eclipses meaning and the pursuit of profit threatens to erase the very traditions that breathe life into institutions," the suit claims. "Some commitments are too fundamental to be traded away."

UCLA has undergone several major changes over the past two seasons. It joined USC, Washington and Oregon in leaving their longtime conference home, the Pac-12, for the Big Ten in 2024.

Earlier this season, the Bruins fired second-year coach DeShaun Foster and replaced him with interim coach Tim Skipper. They've also changed offensive and defensive coordinators this season.

The Times reported UCLA's outside counsel, David L. Scrader, sent a letter to Pasadena attorney Nima Mohebbi in March, saying the school's efforts to conduct "preliminary discussions" about relocating games did not constitute a "material breach" of its contract.

But Pasadena officials and stadium representatives claim a potential move could cost Pasadena and its residents more than $1 billion in damages. City officials said in the suit that taxpayers have funded more than $150 million in renovations with an additional $130 million in bonds that were recently refinanced for additional upgrades.

The Rose Bowl, a designated National Historic Landmark, is best known for hosting the "grandaddy" of college football's bowl games since 1922 and has a seating capacity of about 89,000. The Bruins have called the Rose Bowl home since leaving the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in 1982.

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