March
Madness
March Madness,
what does it mean, what's it all about?
When you do a search for March madness on
google you get about 2.8 million results,
depending upon which database you access.
At the time of my query, the number 1 spot
didn't belong to a basketball team or a
sport gambling site, not even close. The
site in the number 1 position belonged to
a middle school student out of Kentucky,
a person by the name of Sandye Kabalen who
attends Clark Moores Middle School in Richmond.
As
I read over this person's site it became
quite clear that the page wasn't about this
person's love for the game of basketball
but rather, a page about math. The author
of this page who happened to rank #1 for
a very lucrative term or phrase wasn't trying
to promote anything other than a novel way
to help other children
understand math. Good on you Sandye
Kabalen.
Further
down the google list in position #3 is the
Illinois
High School Association web site at
http://www.marchmadness.org. Upon further
inspection of their site we discover that
the ISHA states that the term March
Madness originated in 1908 when a small
invitation high school basketball tournament
mushroomed into a 900-school competition
by the 1930's. As the tournament wound down
to what was known at the time as the "Sweet
Sixteen", it was drawing sell out crowds
to the University of Illinois Huff Gymnasium.
And keep in mind that this was well before
television was invented and the college
game became popular with the average fan.
In
1939 the assistant executive secretary of
the Illinois High School Association, Henry
V. Porter, was so impressed by the phenomenon
that he wrote an essay titled "March
Madness". The term struck a chord with
the newspaper reporters of the time and
they used the phrase to describe phenomenon
throughout the 1940's and 50's.
Although
the term is now a registered trademark owned
by the Illinois High School Association,
more people have come to think of it as
being the NCAA Basketball Tournament. Which
will undoubtedly bring us back to google
to continue our search on March Madness.
The
#10 position in google belongs to a writer
for the National Review named Stephen Moore.
Now Mr. Moore clearly enjoys the game of
basketball and offers many suggestions on
how to make the tournament better. My favorite
suggestion is for a woman named Bonnie Bernstein
to wear a halter-top. Now I have no idea
who she is but if another man thinks she
should be wearing a halter-top, clearly
I would have to take his word for it that
this would be most beneficial to at least
another form of March Madness!
As
I clicked through more and more pages in
google I would have to admit that the consensus
would all agree that the term has something
to do with basketball. It doesn't matter
if it is high school basketball of old or
collegiate basketball of today. March Madness
has come to unite a lot of people who use
the sport to fill their own needs. Whether
it is a school age child who uses it as
a means to help other children focus on
mathematical problems or video game manufacturers
looking digitize a past time, March madness
touches so many lives in so many different
ways. Personally, I view March Madness as
a signal that yet another long cold winter
has come to an end.
Lucky
Lester
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