March madness is
certainly named correctly.
This season, much
like every other, has been full of upsets, bracket busters and teams that have
shocked the world.
For only the
seventh time in history a 15 seed beat a two seed when Florida Gulf Coast took
down Georgetown.
Florida Gulf Coast
has only been eligible for the tournament for two seasons.
Who would have
ever dreamed they would take down a powerhouse like Georgetown?
Not many, but I’m
sure they had no doubt they would be winning the game.
How are you ever
going to win if you don’t go into the match thinking that you will?
There’s no right
or wrong way to fill out a bracket.
Really, you have
just as good a chance by flipping a coin as you do by spending hours
researching each match up.
Kids who pick by
color and mascot have just as good a shot as anyone.
That’s the madness
of it and that’s also the appeal.
The tournament
gives you a reason to be glued in to your television screen and your computer
for days.
Locked in, rooting
for teams you’ve never pulled for in your life, simply because you picked them
in your bracket.
It’s the perfect
marketing scheme.
It makes every
game seem important to every fan.
No matter whether
you have any allegiance to a team or not, if you pick them in your bracket, you
better believe you’ll be their biggest fan for one game.
It’s all about
peaking at the right time.
Teams that just
barely make it in or make it in by winning a conference tournament and getting
an automatic bid sometimes have an advantage over teams that have been at the
top all season.
Teams like Florida
that make it to the conference tournament and struggle can either come in with
added determination to prove they really do deserve to be a three seed, or on
the other hand, can come in downtrodden and flop in the first round.
There are also
teams like LaSalle.
Ever heard of
them?
Kansas State
didn’t seem like they had and had a difficult battle with them, and eventually
lost the game.
Kansas State not
unlike Georgetown was expected to be a contender at least to the Elite Eight.
Neither the
Wildcats nor the Hoyas made it past game one.
The TV deal that
CBS and Turner have currently airs every single tournament game over four
different networks.
That’s an
incredible amount of basketball in just a few weeks, especially the first
Thursday through Sunday of the tournament.
Previously, CBS
would air the games and cut back and forth between contests based on which
games were the most exciting.
There were
certainly advantages to that including the anticipation of knowing what was
going on and only having to go to one network to get all the content.
Now, fans have to
find TruTV in order to catch some games and it’s been said that one of the biggest
upsets of the tournament is finding that channel on the first try.
It’s great having
all the games on television, but it does lose a little bit of the luster
somehow.
There’s nothing
quite like college sports and while football may be king, for at least one
month, college basketball rivals the enthusiasm and excitement of football.
Bowl season is
special, but even New Years Day bowls can’t top the craziness of the opening
weekend of March Madness.
There’s something
magical about those 48 games.
Win and you’re in.
Survive and
advance.
So let the madness
continue.
There are more
upsets to be had, more high fives to pass around, and more brackets to burn.
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