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Football Long Beach Poly Wilson

Long Beach Poly vs Wilson: A History of ‘The Big Game’

The562’s coverage of Long Beach Poly Athletics for the 2025-26 school year is sponsored by Former Jackrabbits Wendell “WoWo” Moe, Jr. & Tyson Ruffins.

The562’s coverage of Long Beach Wilson Athletics is sponsored by Joel Bitonio, Class of 2009.

With the 93rd incarnation of “The Big Game” taking place this Friday, it’s time to take a look back at the city’s oldest rivalry. Long Beach Poly and Wilson have been playing each other annually since 1932, making the series older than 26 of the 32 NFL franchises.

The two teams first played in 1932, more than 30 years before the first Super Bowl and just ten years after the Bears and Packers (considered the NFL’s oldest rivalry) had their first clash. Back then, the meeting was always referred to as “the Big Game,” a moniker that faded over the last few decades.

This year the game has taken on increased attention and excitement as both Poly and Wilson are undefeated atop the Moore League at 3-0, with first place on the line when they meet at Veterans Memorial Stadium Friday at 7pm. It’s also the last meeting of the two teams at Vets before its scheduled demolition at the end of the season.

According to legendary Wilson coach Skip Rowland, the reason the two teams didn’t meet until ’32, despite Wilson’s first season being in 1926 (and Poly’s in 1908), is that school officials were afraid of potential unruliness. Turns out, they were right—the first game ended in a 0-0 tie, sparking an on-field student riot, which lasted for some time until a wise school official turned on the sprinklers and played “The Star Spangled Banner.”

Poly dominated the early years of the rivalry as they have the latter years, with Wilson not scoring their first TD against the Jackrabbits until 1936, when Norm Standlee crashed into the end zone. By the late 30s, the game had been moved to the Rose Bowl, with crowds regularly reaching 30,000 plus.

Finally in 1943, Wilson’s “Jinx Busters” team got their first win against Poly, in a game that is still among the city’s most talked about. The Bruins, who were the clear-cut better team, won 37-7—Wilson’s team and fans marched up and down 2nd Street, and in and out of Long Beach’s theaters, holding an all-night impromptu victory parade.

One phenomenal game between now and then was in 1950, when the Jackrabbits and Bruins met in the first game played at Veterans Memorial Stadium. Wilson was coached by Poly alum Jim Lineberger that year; Lineberger was one of the Poly and Wilson servicemen who wrote a letter home from overseas in World War II, begging the city to build a football stadium in honor of the war dead from among Long Beach’s ranks. In Vets’ first game, Lineberger’s Wilson squad beat his alma mater 13-12.

The late 50s and early 60s were the golden period for Wilson, with the Bruins winning their only back-to-back Moore League titles ever in ’60 and ’61. In that era, only league champions went to the CIF playoffs, which often left second-place Wilson (even if they were ranked second or third in CIF) out of the fun.

Mike Giers was an All-American lineman for Poly in that era, and he said, “By today’s rules, I’m pretty sure we would have played them for a championship.”

Since Poly revived their program in 1980, with a CIF title won by Jim Barnett, it’s been more or less all Jackrabbits—in fact, the last time Wilson beat Poly on the field was 34 years ago, in 1991. Poly has won comfortably in most of the intervening years–although Wilson did pick up a technical win in 2015 when Poly forfeit a 67-30 win over the Bruins, which resulted in the Bruins winning the Moore League title that year.

This year, Wilson’s hoping to party like it’s 1991, when they defeated Poly 37-22 en route to clinching their first outright Moore League title since 1967 (when future Angels All-Star Bobby Grich was their QB). 

Note: Some interviews taken from Football in Long Beach, by Mike Guardabascio

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Mike Guardabascio
An LBC native, Mike Guardabascio has been covering Long Beach sports professionally for 18 years, with his work published in dozens of Southern California magazines and newspapers. He's won numerous state and national honors for his writing as well as the CIF Southern Section’s Champion For Character Award, and is the author of three books about Long Beach history.
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