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Madness: the Ten Most Memorable NCAA Basketball Finals

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The annual NCAA Basketball Tournament, which has become known as "March Madness" has emerged as a major sports event, matched only by the Super Bowl and the Olympics. In Madness, Mark Mehler and Charles Paikert tell the stories behind the ten most compelling and memorable championship games in tournament history, from North Carolina's triple-overtime victory over Wilt Chamberlain's Kansas Wildcats in 1957 to Duke's heart stopping victory over underdog Butler in 2010. As a bonus, five more games that just missed the cut are also examined. Madness goes beyond the games to tell the the backstories of these classics, each entirely unique unto itself. For example, Jim Valvano taking his impossible dream of a national title and making it come true for the 1983 North Carolina State Wolfpack; Rollie Massimino turning spaghetti and clam sauce into inspiration for his underachieving 1985 Villanova team; and Magic Johnson and Larry Bird, breaking down in tears while taking a Broadway curtain call in front of a wildly-applauding audience who two hours earlier didn't know who these two guys were decades after their head-to-head matchup in 1979. Some of these stories also resonate far beyond the basketball court, including the 1966 triumph by the Texas Western Miners, which helped chisel away the college basketball color line and stamped their victory as "Glory Road." Over sixty years of college basketball history is brought to life in this must-have for all basketball fans.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 11, 2017
      In this enjoyable guide, journalists Mehler and Paikert select what they consider to be the NCAA basketball tournament’s top-10 final games. The authors interview players and coaches and explore the tournament’s history and how it has evolved. For example, Loyola’s march to its 1963 championship was racially charged: the all-white Mississippi State team snuck into its game with integrated Loyola against the wishes of Mississippi state politicians. Just over a decade later, the 1979 final featuring Larry Bird, playing for Indiana State, and Magic Johnson, from Michigan State, set the stage for the NBA’s rise in the 1980s. In 2010, millions of TV viewers watched as perennial champions Duke battled upstart Butler, in what “would have been considered by many the greatest upset in NCAA finals history.” Many of the anecdotes may be common knowledge to serious hoops fans, and some of the descriptions are simply unwieldy (“The story was related to us by a reliable Kansas source on the Yucatan Peninsula, where an asteroid wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago, paving the way for the invention of basketball”). Those shortcomings aside, the narrative’s pace is brisk and the stories are entertaining.

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  • English

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