Tag Archives: college-basketball

The Origin Story of Saying “March Madness”

Every March, office pools explode, brackets bust, and underdogs become legends. The phrase “March Madness” now feels inseparable from the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) men’s basketball tournament—but its roots stretch back further than most fans realize. Long before billion-dollar TV deals and wall-to-wall coverage, March Madness belonged to high school basketball.

In 1939, Illinois high school official Henry V. Porter used the term in an essay to describe the emotional frenzy surrounding the annual state basketball tournament. Porter, who worked with the Illinois High School Association, wrote about the electricity in small-town gyms, the packed crowds, and the statewide obsession that peaked every March. To him, “March Madness” captured the chaos, passion, and community pride of tournament time.

At the time, the college game was still growing. That same year—1939—the first NCAA men’s basketball tournament was held, won by the Oregon Ducks men’s basketball team. But the phrase hadn’t yet attached itself to the college bracket. Fast forward to the 1980s. College basketball had become a television spectacle. As the tournament expanded and Cinderella stories multiplied, broadcasters searched for language big enough to match the moment.

Enter Brent Musburger.

While calling NCAA tournament games for CBS in the early 1980s, Musburger began using the term “March Madness” on national broadcasts. His booming delivery and prime-time platform cemented the phrase in the American sports vocabulary. What had once described Illinois high school gyms now echoed across the country.

The NCAA eventually trademarked “March Madness,” formally tying it to the Division I basketball tournament held every year. The phrase fits perfectly considering the structure of the NCAA tournament demands drama. Unlike professional playoffs that stretch over series, the college game offers no safety net. Survive and advance—or vanish. Add in buzzer-beaters, 15-seeds toppling 2-seeds, and brackets shredded before the Sweet 16 and it’s hard to deny this emotional whiplash packed into three weeks.

Today, “March Madness” represents more than just college basketball games being played. It means office bracket pools, billion-dollar TV contracts, Cinderella stories, alumni pride, and three weeks when productivity mysteriously declines nationwide What began as poetic wording in a 1939 essay evolved into one of the most powerful brands in American sports.

And that’s fitting. Because every year, when the ball tips in mid-March and dreams hang on every possession, madness doesn’t feel like exaggeration. It feels accurate.

A Quick History of the First Slam Dunk Contest(s)

Did you know there were two “first-ever” slam dunk contests in the history of professional basketball?

The first first-ever NBA Slam Dunk Contest took place during the 1976 ABA All-Star Game, not in the NBA itself. It was held in Denver, Colorado, as a way to showcase the flashier style of play that the ABA was known for before it merged with the NBA. The NBA then officially introduced their first-ever contest in 1984 during All-Star Weekend, also in the city in Denver. Both contests played a huge role in making dunking an essential part of basketball culture.

Julius “Dr. J” Erving’s free-throw line dunk in the 1976 ABA Slam Dunk Contest is one of the most iconic and influential dunks in basketball history. It was a defining moment that cemented dunking as an art form and set the stage for future high-flyers like Michael Jordan, Vince Carter, and Zach LaVine. For that reason alone, the ABA’s first-ever dunk contest is more significant than the NBA’s first effort (even though a 34-year-old Dr. J performed the same dunk in that one as well). However, it’s unquestionable that once Michael Jordan started participating, the NBA took dunk contests to a whole other level.  

Key Moments of the 1976 ABA Slam Dunk Contest:

  • Julius “Dr. J” Erving won the contest with his iconic free-throw line dunk, which later inspired future dunkers like Michael Jordan.
  • Other participants included David Thompson, Artis Gilmore, George Gervin, and Larry Kenon.
  • The contest was not a head-to-head elimination format, but rather a point-based system where each player attempted five dunks.
  • Dr. J’s free-throw line dunk was the highlight, as it was the first time a player had attempted such a dunk in a major event.

Key Moments of the NBA Slam Dunk Contest (1984)

  • Larry Nance won, defeating Julius Erving in the final round.
  • Nance introduced the two-ball dunk, where he dunked two basketballs in one leap.
  • The contest was structured as a head-to-head elimination tournament.

Now, go forth and conquer (slam dunk videos on YouTube.com we mean).

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