No article found for “Route Nationale 3 (Haiti)?action=edit&redlink=1”.

East–West Shrine Bowl

☆ Save On Wikipedia ↗
East–West Shrine Bowl
See logo history
StadiumFord Center at The Star
LocationFrisco, Texas
Previous stadiums
Previous locations
Operated1925–present
Websiteshrinebowl.com
Sponsors
Shriners (1925–present)
Former names
East–West Shrine Game (1925–2019)
2026 matchup
East vs. West (West 21–17)

The East–West Shrine Bowl is a postseason college football all-star game that has been played annually since 1925; through January 2019, it was known as the East–West Shrine Game.[1] The game is sponsored by the fraternal group Shriners International, and the net proceeds are earmarked to some of the Shrine's charitable works, most notably the Shriners Hospitals for Children. The game's slogan is "Strong Legs Run That Weak Legs May Walk."

Teams consist of players from colleges across the country, and players may be college seniors or college underclassmen who have declared for the NFL Draft who are eligible to play for their schools.[2] The game and the practice sessions leading up to it attract dozens of scouts from professional teams. Since 1985, some players of Canadian university football have also been invited, even though U Sports and the NCAA play by different football codes.

The game has been played in various locations. Most editions have been held in California, although the most recent edition played there was in 2005. The game has been played in Texas since the February 2024 edition. Since 1979, the game has been played in January or February, and has been played on January 10 or later since 1986. The later game dates allow players from teams whose schools were involved in bowl games to participate.

History

20th century

For most of its history, the game was played in the San Francisco Bay Area, usually at San Francisco's Kezar Stadium or Stanford Stadium at Stanford University, with Pacific Bell Park/SBC Park (now Oracle Park) as a host in its final years in Northern California. For more than half of the games played in the Bay Area, entertainment was provided by the marching band from Santa Cruz High School.[3]

In January 1942, the game was played in New Orleans, due to the December 7, 1941, Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. This one-year relocation was based upon fears that playing the game on the West Coast could make the contest and the stadium a potential target for an additional attack. The game, originally planned for January 1 in San Francisco, was played on January 3 at Tulane Stadium, two days after the 1942 Sugar Bowl was held there.[4]

During this era, the game was not restricted to college seniors—for example, the January 1944 edition of the game featured Robert Hoernschemeyer, Dean Sensanbaugher, and Herman Wedemeyer, each then college freshmen.[5]

A similar all-star game, the North–South Shrine Game, was played in Miami from 1948 to 1973, and a final time in Pontiac, Michigan, in 1976.

Prior to the 50th edition of the game, contested in December 1974, a player from the Boston College Eagles, running back Mike Esposito, was photographed at Shriners Hospitals for Children in San Francisco holding the hand of a young patient while walking down a hallway—the photo was adapted as the Shrine Bowl logo.[6][7] Esposito and the former patient, Nicole Urteaga, met again prior to the 100th edition of the game, played in January 2025.[8]

21st century

Kickoff of the 2017 game at Tropicana Field

In 2006, the game moved to Texas, leaving the San Francisco Bay area for the first time since 1942, and was played at the Alamodome in San Antonio. In 2007, the game relocated to Houston and was played at Reliant Stadium, home of the NFL's Houston Texans, to be closer to one of the 22 Shriners Hospitals for Children; Texas has two Shriner's hospitals, one in Houston and the other in Galveston. The 2008 and 2009 games were held at Robertson Stadium on the campus of the University of Houston.[9][10]

In 2010, the game moved to Florida, and was held at the Citrus Bowl in Orlando. Television coverage moved from ESPN/ESPN2 to the NFL Network, starting with the 2011 game.[11] After two years in Orlando, the 2012 game was held at Tropicana Field in St. Petersburg; it was the sixth different venue (in five cities and three states) in a span of eight contests.

Starting with the January 2017 game, the NFL supplies coaching staffs for the game, drawing from assistant coaches of teams who did not advance to the NFL postseason, and the game is now officiated by NFL officials.[12] The game is played under NFL rules, with some restrictions, such as no motion or shifts by the offense, and no stunts or blitzes by the defense.[13] Prior to the January 2020 playing, organizers renamed the game from East–West Shrine Game to East–West Shrine Bowl.[1]

The 2021 edition of the game, which had been scheduled for January 23, was cancelled due to concerns related to the COVID-19 pandemic.[14]

In July 2021, it was announced that Allegiant Stadium would host the East–West Shrine Bowl on February 3, 2022; the game was scheduled as part of festivities for the 2022 Pro Bowl being held there the following Sunday.[15]

The game moved to Ford Center at The Star in Frisco, Texas, for its January 2024 playing.[16] The 100th edition of the game, held in January 2025, was held at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas.[17] The January 2026 edition returned to Ford Center at The Star.[18]

Game results

Through the January 2026 game (101 editions, 100 games played), the West leads all-time with 55 wins to the East's 40 wins, while 5 games have tied.[19][20][21]

No. Date Winner Score Location Notes
1December 26, 1925West6–0San Francisco
2January 1, 1927West7–3San Francisco
3December 26, 1927West16–6San Francisco
4December 29, 1928East20–0San Francisco
5January 1, 1930East19–7San Francisco
6December 27, 1930West3–0San Francisco
7January 1, 1932East6–0San Francisco
8January 2, 1933West21–13San Francisco
9January 1, 1934West12–0San Francisco
10January 1, 1935West19–13San Francisco
11January 1, 1936East19–3San Francisco
12January 1, 1937East3–0San Francisco
13January 1, 1938 Tie0–0San Francisco
14January 2, 1939West14–0San Francisco
15January 1, 1940West28–11San Francisco
16January 1, 1941West20–14San Francisco
17January 3, 1942 Tie6–6New Orleans
18January 1, 1943East13–12San Francisco
19January 1, 1944 Tie13–13San Francisco
20January 1, 1945West13–7San Francisco
21January 1, 1946 Tie7–7San Francisco
22January 1, 1947West13–9San Francisco
23January 1, 1948East40–9San Francisco
24January 1, 1949East14–12San Francisco
25December 31, 1949East28–6San Francisco
26December 30, 1950West16–7San Francisco
27December 29, 1951East15–14San Francisco
28December 27, 1952East21–20San Francisco
29January 2, 1954West31–7San Francisco
30January 1, 1955East13–12San Francisco
31December 31, 1955East29–6San Francisco
32December 29, 1956West7–6San Francisco
33December 28, 1957West27–13San Francisco
34December 27, 1958East26–14San Francisco
35January 2, 1960West21–14San Francisco
36December 31, 1960East7–0San Francisco
37December 30, 1961West21–8San Francisco
38December 29, 1962East25–19San Francisco
39December 28, 1963 Tie6–6San Francisco
40January 2, 1965West11–7San Francisco
41December 31, 1965West22–7San Francisco
42December 31, 1966East45–22San Francisco
43December 30, 1967East16–14San Francisco
44December 28, 1968West18–7San Francisco
45December 27, 1969West15–0Stanford, California
46January 2, 1971West17–13Oakland, California
47December 31, 1971West17–13San Francisco
48December 30, 1972East9–3San Francisco
49December 29, 1973East35–7San Francisco
50December 28, 1974East16–14Stanford, California
No. Date Winner Score Location Notes
51January 3, 1976West21–14Stanford, California
52January 2, 1977West30–14Stanford, California
53December 31, 1977West23–3Stanford, California
54January 6, 1979East56–17Stanford, California
55January 5, 1980West20–10Stanford, California
56January 10, 1981East21–3Stanford, California
57January 9, 1982West20–13Stanford, California
58January 15, 1983East26–25Stanford, California
59January 7, 1984East27–19Stanford, California
60January 5, 1985West21–10Stanford, California
61January 11, 1986East18–7Stanford, California
62January 10, 1987West24–21Stanford, California
63January 16, 1988West16–13Stanford, California
64January 15, 1989East24–6Stanford, California
65January 21, 1990West22–21Stanford, California
66January 26, 1991West24–21Stanford, California
67January 19, 1992West14–6Stanford, California
68January 24, 1993East31–17Stanford, California
69January 15, 1994West29–28Stanford, California
70January 14, 1995West30–28Stanford, California
71January 13, 1996West34–18Stanford, California
72January 11, 1997East17–13Stanford, California
73January 10, 1998West24–7Stanford, California
74January 16, 1999East20–10Stanford, California
75January 15, 2000East35–21Stanford, California
76January 13, 2001West20–10San Francisco
77January 12, 2002West21–13San Francisco
78January 11, 2003East20–17San Francisco
79January 10, 2004West28–7San FranciscoNotes
80January 15, 2005East45–27San FranciscoNotes
81January 21, 2006West35–31San AntonioNotes
82January 20, 2007West21–3HoustonNotes
83January 19, 2008West31–13HoustonNotes
84January 17, 2009East24–19HoustonNotes
85January 23, 2010East13–10Orlando, FloridaNotes
86January 22, 2011East25–8Orlando, FloridaNotes
87January 21, 2012West24–17St. Petersburg, FloridaNotes
88January 19, 2013West28–13St. Petersburg, FloridaNotes
89January 18, 2014East23–13St. Petersburg, FloridaNotes
90January 17, 2015East19–3St. Petersburg, FloridaNotes
91January 23, 2016West29–9St. Petersburg, FloridaNotes
92January 21, 2017West10–3St. Petersburg, FloridaNotes
93January 20, 2018West14–10St. Petersburg, FloridaNotes
94January 19, 2019West21–17St. Petersburg, FloridaNotes
95January 18, 2020East31–27St. Petersburg, FloridaNotes
96January 23, 2021Canceled[14]
97February 3, 2022West25–24Paradise, NevadaNotes
98February 2, 2023West12–3Paradise, NevadaNotes
99February 1, 2024West26–11Frisco, Texas
100January 30, 2025East25–0Arlington, Texas
101January 27, 2026West21–17Frisco, Texas

For the December 1925 game, NCAA records list a 7–0 final score,[20] while contemporary newspaper accounts report 6–0.[22]

MVP award

The game first named a Most Valuable Player for the January 1945 playing (Bob Waterfield, UCLA quarterback), and named a single MVP through the December 1952 game. Starting with the January 1954 game, two MVPs are selected for each game; they receive the William H. Coffman Award for Most Outstanding Offensive Player, and the E. Jack Spaulding Award for Most Outstanding Defensive Player.[23] Coffman was managing director of the game for 40 years, while Spaulding was one of the organizers of the inaugural playing of the game.[23] MVPs starting with the January 2000 game are listed below.

List of Shrine Bowl MVPs[24]
YearOffensive winnerCollegePositionDefensive winnerCollegePosition
2000Marcus KnightMichiganWRErik FlowersArizona StateDE
2001Steve SmithUtahWRLeo BarnesSouthern MississippiDB
2002Deonce WhitakerSan Jose StateRBEverick RawlsTexasLB
2003Donald LeeMississippi StateTETully Banta-CainCalDE
2004Ryan DinwiddieBoise StateQBBrandon ChillarUCLALB
2005Stefan LeForsLouisvilleQBAlex GreenDukeS
2006Reggie McNealTexas A&MQBJames WycheSyracuseDE
2007Jeff RoweNevadaQBDan BazuinCentral MichiganDE
2008Josh JohnsonSan DiegoQBSpencer LarsenArizonaLB
2009Marlon LuckyNebraskaRBMichael TauiliiliDukeLB
2010Mike KafkaNorthwesternQBO'Brien SchofieldWisconsinDE
2011Delone CarterSyracuseRBMartin ParkerRichmondDT
2012Lennon CreerLouisiana TechRBNick SukayPenn StateCB
2013Chad BumphisMississippi StateWRNigel MaloneKansas StateCB
2014Jimmy GaroppoloEastern IllinoisQBEthan WestbrooksWest Texas A&MDE
2015Marvin KlossSouth FloridaKZa'Darius SmithKentuckyDE
2016Vernon AdamsOregonQBMichael CaputoWisconsinS
2017Elijah McGuireLouisiana–LafayetteRBTrey HendricksonFlorida AtlanticDE
2018Daurice FountainNorthern IowaWRNatrell JamersonWisconsinS
2019Terry GodwinGeorgiaWRJustin HollinsOregonLB
2020Benny LeMayCharlotteRBLuther KirkIllinois StateS
2022E. J. PerryBrownQBDiego FagotNavyLB
2023Jake MoodyMichiganKTrey Dean IIIFloridaS
2024Frank Gore Jr.Southern MissRBJarius MonroeTulaneCB
2025Jacory Croskey-MerrittArizonaRBO'Donnell FortuneSouth CarolinaCB
2026Mark GronowskiIowaQBMason ReigerWisconsinLB

Canadian football invitees

Although the game is an American football competition, a limited number of players of Canadian university football, contested under Canadian football rules, have participated since 1985. The first Canadian football participant was offensive lineman Tom Spoletini of the Calgary Dinos, who played in the January 1985 game.

Usually, Canadian players on the West team come from Canada West schools, while Canadian players on the East team are from the other three Canadian conferences (Ontario University Athletics, Atlantic University Sport, and Quebec Student Sport Federation). One exception was Sean McEwen of the Calgary Dinos (a Canada West school), who played on the East squad in the 2016 game. The only Canadian team that competed under American football rules is the now-defunct Simon Fraser Red Leafs; the only Simon Fraser player to be invited to the game was Ibrahim Khan, who played in 2004.

In 2024, the lone Canadian invitee was Qwan'tez Stiggers, an American who did not play college football but instead became a professional player for the Toronto Argonauts of the Canadian Football League.[25][26] Through the 2024 game, the Calgary Dinos had the most invitees, with 13. The 2025 and 2026 games have included Canada-born invitees from US-based college programs.

Canadian football invitees to the East–West Shrine Bowl 
YearWest teamEast team
1985Tom Spoletini (OL, Calgary Dinos)(none)
1986Kent Warnock (DE, Calgary Dinos)Mike Schad (OT, Queen's Gaels)
1987Leo Groenewegen (OT, UBC Thunderbirds)Louie Godry (OL, Guelph Gryphons)
1988Craig Watson (OL, Calgary Dinos)Pierre Vercheval (OL, Western Mustangs)
1989Brent Korte (DE, Alberta Golden Bears)Leroy Blugh (LB, Bishop's Gaiters)
1990Mark Singer (LB, Alberta Golden Bears)Chris Gioskos (OL, Ottawa Gee-Gees)
1991Mike Pavelec (OL, Calgary Dinos)Paul Vajda (OL, Concordia Stingers)
1992Jason Rauhaus (DE, Manitoba Bisons)Chris Morris (OL, Toronto Varsity Blues)
1993Chris Konrad (DE, Calgary Dinos)Mike O'Shea (LB, Guelph Gryphons)
1994Travis Serke (OT, Saskatchewan Huskies)Val St. Germain (OG, McGill Redmen)
1995Rohn Meyer (OG, Calgary Dinos)Matthieu Quiviger (OT, McGill Redmen)
1996Don Blair (WR, Calgary Dinos)Harry Van Hofwegen (DT, Carleton Ravens)
1997Ben Fairbrother (OL, Calgary Dinos)Mark Farraway (DL, St. Francis Xavier X-Men)
1998Bob Beveridge (OL, UBC Thunderbirds)Dave Miller-Johnston (P/K, Concordia Stingers)
1999Scott Flory (OT, Saskatchewan Huskies)Cameron Legault (DT, Carleton Ravens)
2000Kevin Lefsrud (OT, Saskatchewan Huskies)Kojo Millington (DE, Wilfrid Laurier Golden Hawks)
2001Carlo Panaro (OL, Alberta Golden Bears)Randy Chevrier (DL, McGill Redmen)
2002Jason Clermont (IR, Regina Rams)Kojo Aidoo (RB, McMaster Marauders)
2003Israel Idonije (DT, Manitoba Bisons)Adam MacDonald (LB, St. Francis Xavier X-Men)
2004Ibrahim Khan (OL, Simon Fraser Clan football)Carl Gourgues (OL, Laval Rouge et Or)
2005Nick Johansson (DT, UBC Thunderbirds)Jesse Lumsden (RB, McMaster Marauders)
2006Daniel Federkeil (DE, Calgary Dinos)Andy Fantuz (WR, Western Mustangs)
2007Jordan Rempel (OL, Saskatchewan Huskies)Chris Best (OL, Waterloo Warriors)
2008Dylan Barker (S, Saskatchewan Huskies)
Brendon LaBatte (OG, Regina Rams)
Samuel Giguère (WR, Sherbrooke Vert et Or)
Eric Maranda (LB, Laval Rouge et Or)
2009Simeon Rottier (OT, Alberta Golden Bears)Etienne Légaré (DT, Laval Rouge et Or)
2010Jordan Sisco (WR/SB, Regina Rams)Matt Morencie (C, Windsor Lancers)
2011Anthony Parker (SB, Calgary Dinos)Matt O'Donnell (OT, Queen's Gaels)
2012Ben Heenan (OT, Saskatchewan Huskies)
Akiem Hicks (DE, Regina Rams)
Arnaud Gascon-Nadon (DE, Laval Rouge et Or)
2013Kirby Fabien (OL, Calgary Dinos)Matt Sewell (OT, McMaster Marauders)
2014Evan Gill (DL, Manitoba Bisons)Laurent Duvernay-Tardif (OT, McGill Redmen)
2015Addison Richards (WR, Regina Rams)Daryl Waud (DL, Western Mustangs)
2016David Onyemata (DE, Manitoba Bisons)Sean McEwen, (OL, Calgary Dinos)
Charles Vaillancourt (OL, Laval Rouge et Or)
2017Geoff Gray (OG, Manitoba Bisons)Antony Auclair (TE, Laval Rouge et Or)
2018Mark Korte (OL, Alberta Golden Bears)Regis Cibasu (WR, Montreal Carabins)
2019Joel Van Pelt (DT, Calgary Dinos)Mathieu Betts (DE, Laval Rouge et Or)
2020Carter O'Donnell (OT, Alberta Golden Bears)
Marc-Antoine Dequoy (S, Montreal Carabins)
(none)
2022Deionte Knight (DL, Western Mustangs)(none)
2023Theo Benedet (OL, UBC Thunderbirds)(none)
2024Qwan'tez Stiggers (CB, Toronto Argonauts (CFL)(none)

For the 2025 game, quarterback Kurtis Rourke was invited; a native of Ontario and a player for the Indiana Hoosiers,[27] he was unable to participate due to injury.[28] For the 2026 game, offensive lineman Logan Taylor, a native of Nova Scotia and a player for the Boston College Eagles, was invited.[28]

Hall of Fame

A hall of fame was established in 2002, with additional inductees typically named in the weeks leading up to each annual playing.[29] Through the January 2026 edition, 67 players have been named to the hall of fame.

YearQtyInductees (Game no. played in)
20026Dick Butkus (No. 40), Gerald Ford (No. 10), Eddie LeBaron (No. 25), Ollie Matson (No. 27), Volney Peters (No. 26), Dick Stanfel (No. 26)
20036Hugh McElhenny (No. 28), Craig Morton (No. 40), Merlin Olsen (No. 37), Alan Page (No. 42), Leslie Richter (No. 27), Gene Washington (No. 44)
20045Chris Burford (No. 35), Mike Garrett (No. 41), Gino Marchetti (No. 27), Tom Matte (No. 36), Ed White (No. 44)
20051Pat Tillman (No. 73)
20064Raymond Berry (No. 30), Joe Greene (No. 44), Mike Haynes (No. 51), Bob Lilly (No. 36)
20074Joe DeLamielleure (No. 48), Gale Sayers (No. 40), Paul Warfield (No. 39), Randy White (No. 50)
20086Dave Butz (No. 48), Carl Eller (No. 39), Forrest Gregg (No. 31), E.J. Holub (No. 36), Lenny Moore (No. 31), Larry Wilson (No. 35)
20094Jerry Kramer (No. 33), Charley Taylor (No. 39), Brad Van Pelt (No. 48), Doug Williams (No. 53)
20104Larry Csonka (No. 43), James Groh (No. 21),[a] Jim Walden (No. 35), Kellen Winslow (No. 54)[32]
20112Buck Belue (No. 57), Tom Flick (No. 56)
20122Martín Gramática (No. 74), Joey Harrington (No. 77)
20132Buddy Curry (No. 55), Steve Bartkowski (No. 50)
20142Tony Berti (No. 70), Steve Atwater (No. 64)
20152Tommie Frazier (No. 71), Jim Hanifan (No. 30)
20162Rickey Jackson (No. 56), Chris Chandler (No. 63)
20172Robert Porcher (No. 67), Mark Rypien (No. 61)
20183Brett Favre (No. 66), Willie Roaf (No. 68), Gary Huff (No. 48)[33]
20192Troy Vincent (No. 67), Barry Smith (No. 48)[34]
20202Will Shields (No. 68), Dan Pastorini (No. 46)[35]
20231Nate Burleson (No. 78)[36]
20242Steve Sarkisian (No. 72), Steve Smith Sr. (No. 76)[37]
20252Eddie George (No. 71), Andrew Whitworth (No. 81)[38]
20261Daryl "Moose" Johnston (No. 64)[39]

Inductees range from having played in game No. 10 (January 1935) to game No. 81 (January 2006), with game No. 48 (December 1972) having the most players honored, five.

Pat Tillman Award

Pat Tillman

Game organizers initiated a Pat Tillman Award in 2005, the year that Tillman was posthumously inducted to the game's hall of fame, to recognize "a player who best exemplifies character, intelligence, sportsmanship and service."[40]

List of Pat Tillman Award winners
YearPlayerPos.College
2005Morgan ScalleySUtah
2006Charlie PeprahSAlabama
2007Kyle ShotwellLBCal Poly
2008Justin TryonCBArizona State
2009Collin MooneyFBArmy
2010Mike McLaughlinLBBoston College
2011Josh McNaryLBArmy
2012Tauren PooleRBTennessee
2013Keith PoughLBHoward
2014Gabe IkardCOklahoma
2015Jake RyanLBMichigan
2016Keenan ReynoldsQBNavy
2017Weston SteelhammerSAir Force
2018J. T. BarrettQBOhio State
2019Cody BartonLBUtah
2020James Morgan[41]QBFIU
2022Jack Coan[42]QBNotre Dame
2023Derek Parish[43]DEHouston
2024Trey Taylor[44]SAir Force
2025Jordan Phillips[45]DTMaryland
2026Febechi Nwaiwu[46]OGOklahoma

All-Century Team

In celebration of its 100th anniversary, the East–West Shrine Bowl announced its All-Century Team.[47] Listed in alphabetical order:

B — Herb Adderley, Michigan State
OT/G — Larry Allen, Sonoma State
DL — Jared Allen, Idaho State
DB — Steve Atwater, Arkansas
E — Raymond Berry, SMU
QB — Tom Brady, Michigan
LB — Robert Brazile, Jackson State
OLB — Willie Brown, Temple[b]
DE — Tedy Bruschi, Arizona
DL — Nick Buoniconti, Notre Dame
C — Dick Butkus, Illinois
DB — Kam Chancellor, Virginia Tech
Q — Earl "Dutch" Clark, Colorado College
T — George Connor, Notre Dame
B — Larry Csonka, Syracuse
DT — Curley Culp, Arizona State
QB — Randall Cunningham, UNLV
LB — Fred Dean, Louisiana Tech
OT — Joe DeLamielleure, Michigan State
T — Dan Dierdorf, Michigan
E — Mike Ditka, Pittsburgh
DL — Chris Doleman, Pittsburgh
B — Bill Dudley, Virginia
Q — Tony Dungy, Minnesota
T — Albert Glen "Turk" Edwards, Washington State
T — Carl Eller, Minnesota
Q — John Elway, Stanford
OB — Brett Favre, Southern Mississippi
E — Tom Fears, UCLA
B — Jim Finks, Tulsa
G — Dan Fortmann, Colgate
RB — Eddie George, Ohio State
B — Frank Gifford, UCLA
DT — La’Roi Glover, San Diego State
DT — Joe Greene, North Texas
T — Forrest Gregg, SMU
OL — Russ Grimm, Pittsburgh
B — John Hadl, Kansas
LB — Jack Ham, Penn State
DB — Mike Haynes, Arizona State
E — Bill Hewitt, Michigan
B — Clarke Hinkle, Bucknell
B — Paul Hornung, Notre Dame
LB — Rickey Jackson, Pittsburgh
H — Jimmy Johnson, Santa Clara[c]
G — Jerry Kramer, Idaho
B — Paul Krause, Iowa
T — Bob Lilly, TCU
G — Tom Mack, Michigan
E — John Mackey, Syracuse
OL — Logan Mankins, Fresno State
G — Gino Marchetti, USF
B — Ollie Matson, USF
B — George McAfee, Duke
T — Mike McCormack, Kansas
OL — Randall McDaniel, Arizona State
B — Hugh McElhenny, Washington
WR — Art Monk, Syracuse
B — Lenny Moore, Penn State
T — Bronko Nagurski, Minnesota
FB — Lorenzo Neal, Fresno State
T — Merlin Olsen, Utah State
DE — Alan Page, Notre Dame
H — Ace Parker, Duke
G — Jim Parker, Ohio State
RB — Walter Payton, Jackson State
E — Pete Pihos, Indiana
G — Les Richter, UC Berkeley
WR — Andre Rison, Michigan State
OT — Willie Roaf, Louisiana Tech
OC — Jeff Saturday, North Carolina
B — Gale Sayers, Kansas
WR — Sterling Sharpe, South Carolina
WR — Shannon Sharpe, Savannah State
OG — Will Shields, Nebraska
WR — Steve Smith, Utah
G — Dick Stanfel, San Francisco
B — Roger Staubach, Navy
TE — Ernie Stautner, Boston College
C — Dwight Stephenson, Alabama
T — Joe Stydahar, West Virginia
B — Charley Taylor, Arizona State
LB — Lawrence Taylor, North Carolina
MLB — Zach Thomas, Texas Tech
OLB — Pat Tillman, Arizona State
C — Clyde "Bulldog" Turner, Hardin–Simmons
CB/DB — Troy Vincent, Wisconsin
DE — Mike Vrabel, Ohio State
B — Doak Walker, SMU
B — Paul Warfield, Ohio State

Bob Waterfield, UCLA 

C — Mike Webster, Wisconsin
T — Arnie Weinmeister, Washington
WR — Wes Welker, Texas Tech
DT — Randy White, Maryland
OL — Andrew Whitworth, LSU
Q — Doug Williams, Grambling State
B — Larry Wilson, Utah
TE — Kellen Winslow, Missouri
C — Alex Wojciechowicz, Fordham

Notes

  1. James Groh played in the January 1946 edition of the game following his collegiate career as a guard with Colgate; he declined to pursue a professional career and became an orthopedic surgeon.[30] Groh died in 2015 at the age of 90.[31]
  2. Willie Brown from the Temple Owls—not to be confused with the like-named player from Grambling or the like-named player from USC— blocked a punt and recovered the ball at the four-yard line for the East squad in the January 1996 game.[48] Brown and Tommie Frazier were named MVPs of the game.[24] Brown later played in the CFL in 1998 with the BC Lions.[49]
  3. James L. Johnson from the Santa Clara Broncos played in the January 1941 edition of the game and was selected by the Chicago Bears in the 1941 NFL draft.[50] He died in an airplane crash in Germany in May 1945 while serving in the U.S. Ninth Army.[51] Johnson was inducted to the Broncos' athletic hall of fame in 1975.[52]

References

  1. "East-West Shrine football announces name change". shrinegame.com (Press release). September 12, 2019. Retrieved November 10, 2019.
  2. "Team Selection". shrinegame.com. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  3. Brown, Susan D. (January 13, 2005). "Dedicated to the band". Santa Cruz Sentinel. Retrieved January 22, 2018 via newspapers.com.
  4. "New Orleans Will Get Shrine Game, Kerr Announces". The Fresno Bee. Fresno, California. Associated Press. January 16, 1941. Retrieved January 22, 2018.
  5. "Freshmen are Heroes as East, West Tie, 13-13". Chicago Tribune. AP. January 2, 1944. p. 2-1. Retrieved May 25, 2024 via newspapers.com.
  6. "Story Behind the Logo". shrinegame.com. Retrieved January 4, 2018.
  7. "00th East-West Shrine Bowl Reunites Iconic Pair". shrinegame.com. Retrieved January 18, 2026.
  8. Marden, Andrew (February 9, 2025). "The story behind the Shrine Bowl logo: Nicole Urteaga and Mike Esposito reunite for 100th annual game". KTXL. Retrieved January 18, 2026.
  9. "Utah State's Robinson shines in Shrine Game". Visalia Times-Delta. Visalia, California. Associated Press. January 21, 2008. Retrieved December 25, 2017 via newspapers.com.
  10. Duncan, Chris (January 19, 2009). "Shrine game a 'job interview' for aspiring pros". The News Journal. Wilmington, Delaware. Associated Press. Retrieved December 25, 2017 via newspapers.com.
  11. "Future NFL Stars on Display as 86th Annual East-West Shrine Game Debuts on NFL Network in 2011". shrinegame.com (Press release). December 6, 2010. Archived from the original on November 10, 2011 via Wayback Machine.
  12. "League Partners with East-West Shrine Game for Development". Montgomery Advertiser. Montgomery Alabama. Associated Press. January 1, 2017. Retrieved January 15, 2018 via newspapers.com.
  13. "NCAAF 2017 East West Shrine Game". January 20, 2018. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved January 19, 2019 via YouTube. at 17:54
  14. "2021 East-West Shrine Bowl cancelled due to coronavirus concerns". shrinegame.com (Press release). October 27, 2020. Retrieved October 30, 2020.
  15. "East-West Shrine Bowl heads to Las Vegas in 2022". Las Vegas Raiders. Retrieved 2021-07-07.
  16. "Historic East-West Shrine Bowl Moves to Ford Center in Frisco in 2024". shrinebowl.com (Press release). June 2023. Retrieved June 5, 2023.
  17. "Tickets On Sale for Iconic 100th East-West Shrine Bowl at AT&T Stadium". shrinebowl.com (Press release). September 3, 2024. Retrieved January 18, 2026.
  18. "Tickets On Sale Now as East-West Shrine Bowl Set to Return to Ford Center at The Star in Frisco". shrinebowl.com (Press release). October 14, 2025. Retrieved January 18, 2026.
  19. "East-West Shrine Classic Games". College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from the original on November 1, 2013. Retrieved 2008-12-07 via Wayback Machine.
  20. "Bowl/All Star Game Records" (PDF). ncaa.org. NCAA. 2017. Retrieved January 14, 2018.
  21. @ShrineBowl (February 1, 2024). "FINAL. 11 EAST 26 WEST" (Tweet). Retrieved February 1, 2024 via X (formerly Twitter).
  22. "West Triumphs Over East in Benefit Gridiron Struggle". Daily Press. Newport News, Virginia. Associated Press. December 27, 1925. Retrieved January 14, 2018 via newspapers.com.
  23. "West's Adams, Caputo named Most Outstanding Players". shrinersinternational.org. January 26, 2016. Archived from the original on January 4, 2018. Retrieved January 4, 2018.
  24. "MVP Award Recipients". shrinebowl.com. Retrieved August 11, 2025.
  25. Ambrose, Dominic (January 27, 2024). "Player spotlight: Qwan'tez Stiggers unorthodox journey to the Shrine Bowl". WithTheFirstPick.com. Fansided.
  26. Murray, Jack (January 27, 2024). "Qwan'tez Stiggers: Being NFL Draftee Without CFB Reps Wouldn't be a 'Fairy Tale'". bleacherreport.com. Bleacher Report.
  27. "Canadian QB Kurtis Rourke accepts East-West Shrine Bowl invitation". 3downnation.com. December 5, 2024. Retrieved January 18, 2026.
  28. "Canadian offensive lineman Logan Taylor invited to East-West Shrine Bowl". 3downnation.com. December 26, 2025. Retrieved January 18, 2026.
  29. "Hall of Fame Inductees". shrinegame.com. 2017. Retrieved December 25, 2017.
  30. "Groh '46 Set For Hall of Fame Induction". colgateathletics.com. January 19, 2010. Retrieved January 18, 2026.
  31. Erickson, Nicholas (August 2015). "Groh passed on chance at football fame for career in medicine". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Retrieved January 18, 2026.
  32. Staff Writer (January 27, 2010). "Colgate alum inducted into Shrine Game Hall of Fame". Observer-Dispatch. Retrieved January 16, 2024.
  33. "Brett Favre, Willie Roaf and Gary Huff Selected to 2018 East-West Shrine Game Hall of Fame". shrinegame.com (Press release). Retrieved January 4, 2018.
  34. "Troy Vincent Sr. and Barry Smith selected to 2019 East-West Shrine Game Hall of Fame". shrinegame.com (Press release). December 21, 2018. Retrieved January 18, 2019.
  35. "Will Shields and Dan Pastorini selected to 2020 East-West Shrine Bowl Hall of Fame". shrinegame.com (Press release). December 19, 2019. Retrieved December 22, 2019.
  36. "Nate Burleson, Co-Host of CBS Mornings and The NFL Today, Inducted Into East-West Shrine Bowl Hall of Fame". shrinebowl.com (Press release). January 24, 2023. Retrieved January 29, 2023.
  37. "Steve Sarkisian, Steve Smith, Sr. Selected to East-West Shrine Bowl Hall of Fame". shrinebowl.com (Press release). January 22, 2024. Retrieved February 1, 2024.
  38. "Eddie George, Andrew Whitworth Selected to East-West Shrine Bowl Hall of Fame". shrinebowl.com (Press release). January 14, 2025. Retrieved January 18, 2026.
  39. Preisendorf, Matilda (January 16, 2026). "Cowboys Legend Daryl Johnston Reflects On Shrine Bowl Legacy And Frisco Return". localprofile.com. Retrieved January 18, 2026.
  40. "Pat Tillman Award". shrinebowl.com. Retrieved January 18, 2020.
  41. @ShrineBowl (January 17, 2020). "Congratulations to @FIUFootball James Morgan (@Jmoneyyy12) for being named the recipient of the Pat Tillman Award" (Tweet). Retrieved January 18, 2020 via Twitter.
  42. @NDFootball (February 2, 2022). "Jack Coan. East-West Shrine Bowl Pat Tillman Award" (Tweet). Retrieved February 3, 2023 via Twitter.
  43. @ShrineBowl (February 1, 2023). "Congratulations Derek Parish of @UHCougarFB, winner of the 2023 #ShrineBowl Pat Tillman Award" (Tweet). Retrieved February 3, 2023 via Twitter.
  44. "Trey Taylor named East-West Shrine Bowl Pat Tillman Award winner". goairforcefalcons.com. January 31, 2024. Retrieved February 1, 2024.
  45. @ShrineBowl (January 30, 2025). "Congratulations to the 2025 East-West Shrine Bowl Pat Tillman Award Winner" (Tweet). Retrieved April 27, 2026 via X (formerly Twitter).
  46. @ShrineBowl (January 28, 2026). "What a week for @officialfeb_54 at the East-West Shrine Bowl. Took home the Pat Tillman Award and a DUB 👏" (Tweet). Retrieved April 27, 2026 via X (formerly Twitter).
  47. "All-Century Team". East-West Shrine Bowl. Archived from the original on January 2, 2026. Retrieved November 24, 2025 via Wayback Machine.
  48. "Frazier's passing helps West defeat East". The Philadelphia Inquirer. AP. January 14, 1996. p. D6. Retrieved January 18, 2026 via newspapers.com.
  49. "All-Time Owls in the Pros" (PDF). Record & Fact Book. Temple Owl Athletics. 2025. p. 22. Retrieved January 18, 2026.
  50. "1941 NFL Draft Listing". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved February 18, 2024.
  51. "Former Football Star Dies In German Fighting". The Fresno Bee. June 7, 1945. p. 1. Retrieved January 18, 2026 via newspapers.com.
  52. "Santa Clara Athletic Hall of Fame". santaclarabroncos.com. Retrieved January 18, 2026.

Further reading

  • Maxwell Stiles, The Shrine East-West Game: Football's Finest Hour. Los Angeles, CA: Nashunal Publishing Co., 1950.