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Posted by admin on November 4, 2007

2007 March Madness Celebration Reunions

Posted under March Madness History

During the final session each weekend, players on the state championship teams celebrating their 10th, 20th and 30th anniversary years will have a reunion at Redbird Arena.

Players and coaches from the reunion teams will be introduced to fans attending the final session during halftime of the third place game on the Redbird Arena floor.  Each will receive a special remembrance provided by the Bloomington-Normal Area Convention & Visitors Bureau and Sports Commission.

Class A reunion teams for 2007 will be:  1997 Carlyle and 1987 Teutopolis.

Class AA reunion teams for 2007 will be:  1997-1987-1977 Lincolnshire (Stevenson) and Peoria (Manual).

Posted by admin on November 4, 2007

2007 March Madness Celebration Team Banquet

Posted under March Madness History

Teams participating in the 2007 IHSA State Final tournament will be honored with a banquet at the Double Tree Hotel and Conference Center on each Thursday evening prior to the games.  Both banquets are sponsored by State Farm Insurance, which has its headquarters in Bloomington.  The banquets will begin at 6:30 p.m. 

The Class A March Madness Celebration Team Banquet is Thursday, February 22.  The Class AA March Madness Celebration Team Banquet is Thursday, March 1. 

The State Farm March Madness Celebration Team Banquets will feature a video highlight of the teams participating in the IHSA State Final.  The video highlight is being produced by Jim Mattson of WHOI TV.  The program for each banquet also includes recognition of the coaches and players from each of the competing teams.

Banquet Time Schedule
6:30 - Welcome
6:45 – Meal
7:15 – Introduction of Teams
7:30 – Video Highlight
8:00 - Conclusion

Posted by admin on November 4, 2007

Making March Madness® Memories

Posted under March Madness History

Several special souvenirs of the 2007 March Madness Experience™ will be created for fans throughout the state.

The IHSA Store will be open in the Exhibit Hall both weekends. It also is open 24 hours a day on the IHSA Web Site. Among the unique items offered this year will be:

  • the 2007 official commemorative Experience March Madness™ Playing in Peoria t-shirt (adult white, price varies for youth sizes and ash color);
  • special mini and regulation size Wilson March Madness and/or March Madness Experience basketballs;
  • five great pieces in the IHSA’s Bean A. Tude Collection of Add A. Tudes This year these are available: “Cager” (basketball), “Stripe” (official), “Que Bee” (football), “Digger” (volleyball) and the Orange and Blue version of the original “Add A. Tude”.
Posted by admin on November 4, 2007

What is the Experience?

Posted under March Madness History

The March Madness Experience™ is an interactive basketball playground for children of all ages housed in the 68,000 square foot Exhibit Hall of the Peoria Civic Center. It includes a variety of basketball skill events, historical displays and educational venues. There is a media area where radio and television stations covering March Madness® originate their shows. Fans without tickets to the games can watch them in the Exhibit Hall on big screen televisions. Fans in need of hotel/motel rooms in the greater Peoria area can make reservations at the Information Booth just outside the entrance to the Exhibit Hall. Throughout the time it is open to the public, numerous special activities are conducted on the three full-sized Center Courts at the March Madness Experience™, including the hugely popular Peoria Journal Star Jump Ball Jamboree. More than 2,000 volunteers, not only from the Greater Peoria Area but from throughout Illinois, are needed to keep the March Madness Experience™ operating during both weekends of 2007. It will be open Thursday through Saturday each weekend on the following time schedule:

Class A (March 8-10)
Thursday: 6:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Friday: 10:00 a.m. - 10:00 p.m.
Saturday: 9:00 a.m.-6:30 p.m.

Class AA (March 15-17)
Thursday: 6:00 - 9:00 p.m.
Friday: 10:00 a.m. - 10:00 p.m.
Saturday: 10:30 a.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Any person interested in becoming a volunteer should contact the Volunteer Hotline at 309-676-0303.The state tournament games will be played in the Carver Arena. On the Class AA weekend, the Scholastic Bowl State Final Tournament will be conducted Saturday (March 17) in the meeting rooms of the Civic Center. The March Madness Experience™ is in the Exhibit Hall. All of these venues are under one Peoria Civic Center roof.

Posted by admin on November 4, 2007

Happening 2007 On Both Weekends

Posted under March Madness History

The annual COUNTRY Insurance & Financial Services Three-Point Showdown competition will be held in Class A and Class AA on the same weekend as the respective state final tournament, except for the Queen of The Hill, which remains on Saturday night of the Class AA state final.

A total of 64 shooters will compete in the preliminaries on the Redbird Arena floor each Thursday night, beginning at 5:00 p.m. Fans can watch the shooters for free each Thursday evening. The class finals will be held between semifinal games on Saturday each weekend. Queen of the Hill will be crowned Saturday night of the Class AA weekend between the third place and championship game.

Posted by admin on November 4, 2007

Making March Madness® Memories

Posted under March Madness History

Several special souvenirs of the 2007 March Madness Experience™ will be created for fans throughout the state.

The IHSA Store will be open in the Exhibit Hall both weekends. It also is open 24 hours a day on the IHSA Web Site. Among the unique items offered this year will be:

  • the 2007 official commemorative Experience March Madness™ Playing in Peoria t-shirt (adult white, price varies for youth sizes and ash color);
  • special mini and regulation size Wilson March Madness and/or March Madness Experience basketballs;
  • five great pieces in the IHSA’s Bean A. Tude Collection of Add A. Tudes This year these are available: “Cager” (basketball), “Stripe” (official), “Que Bee” (football), “Digger” (volleyball) and the Orange and Blue version of the original “Add A. Tude”.
Posted by admin on November 4, 2007

The Origin of the Term “March Madness”

Posted under March Madness History

“March Madness,” the term used to describe the excitement surrounding the Illinois state high school basketball tournaments, first appeared in print almost sixty years ago. It was coined by Henry V. Porter, who started his career as a teacher and coach at Athens High School in central Illinois. In 1924, Porter led the Athens boys basketball team to a second-place finish in the state tournament. He later served as assistant executive secretary of the Illinois High School Athletic Association (from 1929 to 1940) and executive secretary of the National Federation of State High School Associations (from 1940 to 1958).

Porter, who edited the IHSA’s journal, coined “March Madness” in an essay that appeared in the Illinois High School Athlete in March of 1939. Soon thereafter the nation was plunged into World War II. The drama of March Madness provided a unifying force that brought the entire state together, and Porter again commemorated the event, this time with a poem, “Basketball Ides of March,” which appeared in the Illinois Interscholastic in March of 1942.

March Madness

Homo of the Hardwood Court is a hardy specie. There are millions of him. He exists through summer and fall, shows signs of animation through the winter and lives to the utmost during March when a hundred thousand pairs of rubber soled shoes slap the hardwood in a whirlwind of stops and pivots and dashes on the trail to the state basketball championships. He is a glutton for punishment. When the March madness is on him, midnight jaunts of a hundred miles on successive nights make him even more alert the next day.

He will polish his pants on sixteen inches of bleacher seat through two games or three and take offense if asked to leave during the intermission between sessions. He is happy only when the floor shimmers with reflections of fast moving streaks of color, when the players swarm at each end and the air is full of leather. For the duration of the endemic he is a statistical expert who knows the record of each contender, a game strategist who spots the weak points in a given system of offense or defense, a rules technician who instructs the officials without cost or request. Every canine has his day and this is Homo’s month.

He is a doodler who, while conversing, scribbles free throw lanes with a hundred radiating alleys. In May the three symbols of the New York Fair will take on their intended meaning but in March the helicline is a ramp to the balcony, the trylon is the pyramid of hundreds of teams being narrowed down to the one at the state championship pinnacle and the perisphere has the traditional four panel basketball markings.

In everyday life he is a sane and serious individual trying to earn enough to pay his taxes. But he does a Jekyll-Hyde act when the spell is on him. He likes his coffee black and his basketball highly spiced. He despises the stall — unless his team is ahead. It is a major crime for the official to call a foul on the dribbler — unless the opponent was dribbling. His moods are as changeable as the March wind. He flies into a frenzy at some trivial happening on the court and before his vocal expression of disapproval is half completed he howls in delight at the humorous twist of a comment from a bleacher wit. He is part of the mass mind and is subject to its whims. He berates the center for attempting a long shot and lauds him when it goes in the basket. He is consistent only in his inconsistencies.

The thud of the ball on the floor, the slap of hands on leather, the swish of the net are music in his ears. He is a connoisseur in matters pertaining to team coordination and artistry in action. The shifting zone, the screen and the spot pass are an open book to him. He speaks the language.

He is biased, noisy, fidgety, boastful and unreasonable — but we love him for his imperfections. His lack of inhibitions adds a spontaneity that colors the tournaments. Without darkness there would be no light. A little March madness may complement and contribute to sanity and help keep society on an even keel.

The writer’s temperature is rising. The thing is catching. It’s got me! Gimme that playing schedule!

Basketball Ides of March

The gym lights gleam like a beacon beam
And a million motors hum
In a good will flight on a Friday night;
For basketball beckons, “Come!”
A sharp-shooting mite is king tonight.
The Madness of March is running.
The winged feet fly, the ball sails high
And field goal hunters are gunning.

 

The colors clash as silk suits flash
And race on a shimmering floor.
Repressions die, and partisans vie
In a goal acclaiming roar.
On a Championship Trail toward a holy grail,
All fans are birds of a feather.
It’s fiesta night and cares lie light
When the air is full of leather.
Since time began, the instincts of man

 

Prove cave and current men kin.
On tournament night the sage and the wight
Are relatives under the skin.
It’s festival time, sans reason or rhyme.
But with nation-wide appeal.
In a cyclone of hate, our ship of state
Rides high on an even keel.
With war nerves tense, the final defense
Is the courage, strength and will
In a million lives where freedom thrives
And liberty lingers still.
Now eagles fly and heroes die
Beneath some foreign arch
Let their sons tread where hate is dead
In a happy Madness of March.

Posted by admin on November 4, 2007

The Origin of the Term “March Madness”

Posted under March Madness History

“March Madness,” the term used to describe the excitement surrounding the Illinois state high school basketball tournaments, first appeared in print almost sixty years ago. It was coined by Henry V. Porter, who started his career as a teacher and coach at Athens High School in central Illinois. In 1924, Porter led the Athens boys basketball team to a second-place finish in the state tournament. He later served as assistant executive secretary of the Illinois High School Athletic Association (from 1929 to 1940) and executive secretary of the National Federation of State High School Associations (from 1940 to 1958).

Porter, who edited the IHSA’s journal, coined “March Madness” in an essay that appeared in the Illinois High School Athlete in March of 1939. Soon thereafter the nation was plunged into World War II. The drama of March Madness provided a unifying force that brought the entire state together, and Porter again commemorated the event, this time with a poem, “Basketball Ides of March,” which appeared in the Illinois Interscholastic in March of 1942.

Homo of the Hardwood Court is a hardy specie. There are millions of him. He exists through summer and fall, shows signs of animation through the winter and lives to the utmost during March when a hundred thousand pairs of rubber soled shoes slap the hardwood in a whirlwind of stops and pivots and dashes on the trail to the state basketball championships. He is a glutton for punishment. When the March madness is on him, midnight jaunts of a hundred miles on successive nights make him even more alert the next day. He will polish his pants on sixteen inches of bleacher seat through two games or three and take offense if asked to leave during the intermission between sessions. He is happy only when the floor shimmers with reflections of fast moving streaks of color, when the players swarm at each end and the air is full of leather. For the duration of the endemic he is a statistical expert who knows the record of each contender, a game strategist who spots the weak points in a given system of offense or defense, a rules technician who instructs the officials without cost or request. Every canine has his day and this is Homo’s month.

 

He is a doodler who, while conversing, scribbles free throw lanes with a hundred radiating alleys. In May the three symbols of the New York Fair will take on their intended meaning but in March the helicline is a ramp to the balcony, the trylon is the pyramid of hundreds of teams being narrowed down to the one at the state championship pinnacle and the perisphere has the traditional four panel basketball markings.

 

In everyday life he is a sane and serious individual trying to earn enough to pay his taxes. But he does a Jekyll-Hyde act when the spell is on him. He likes his coffee black and his basketball highly spiced. He despises the stall — unless his team is ahead. It is a major crime for the official to call a foul on the dribbler — unless the opponent was dribbling. His moods are as changeable as the March wind. He flies into a frenzy at some trivial happening on the court and before his vocal expression of disapproval is half completed he howls in delight at the humorous twist of a comment from a bleacher wit. He is part of the mass mind and is subject to its whims. He berates the center for attempting a long shot and lauds him when it goes in the basket. He is consistent only in his inconsistencies.

 

The thud of the ball on the floor, the slap of hands on leather, the swish of the net are music in his ears. He is a connoisseur in matters pertaining to team coordination and artistry in action. The shifting zone, the screen and the spot pass are an open book to him. He speaks the language.

 

He is biased, noisy, fidgety, boastful and unreasonable — but we love him for his imperfections. His lack of inhibitions adds a spontaneity that colors the tournaments. Without darkness there would be no light. A little March madness may complement and contribute to sanity and help keep society on an even keel.

 

The writer’s temperature is rising. The thing is catching. It’s got me! Gimme that playing schedule!

 

 Basketball Ides of March

 

The gym lights gleam like a beacon beam
And a million motors hum
In a good will flight on a Friday night;
For basketball beckons, “Come!”
A sharp-shooting mite is king tonight.
The Madness of March is running.
The winged feet fly, the ball sails high
And field goal hunters are gunning.

 

The colors clash as silk suits flash
And race on a shimmering floor.
Repressions die, and partisans vie
In a goal acclaiming roar.
On a Championship Trail toward a holy grail,
All fans are birds of a feather.
It’s fiesta night and cares lie light
When the air is full of leather.

 

Since time began, the instincts of man
Prove cave and current men kin.
On tournament night the sage and the wight
Are relatives under the skin.
It’s festival time, sans reason or rhyme
But with nation-wide appeal.
In a cyclone of hate, our ship of state
Rides high on an even keel.

 

With war nerves tense, the final defense
Is the courage, strength and will
In a million lives where freedom thrives
And liberty lingers still.
Now eagles fly and heroes die
Beneath some foreign arch
Let their sons tread where hate is dead
In a happy Madness of March.

Posted by admin on November 4, 2007

March Madness History

Posted under March Madness History

“March Madness” was born in Illinois. The annual tournament of high school boys basketball teams, sponsored by the Illinois High School Association, grew from a small invitational affair in 1908 to a statewide institution with over 900 schools competing by the late 1930’s. A field of teams known as the “Sweet Sixteen” routinely drew sellout crowds to the University of Illinois’ Huff Gymnasium. In a time before television, before the college game became popular with the average fan, before professional leagues had established a foothold in the nation’s large cities, basketball fever had already reached epidemic proportions in the Land of Lincoln. 

Today’s March Madness is different from the original version. Nowadays an “Elite Eight” of teams advances to the state finals, but there are four tournaments — a Class A (small school) and Class AA (large school) version for both boys and girls, played in Peoria and Normal. “The Happening,” a thrilling contest featuring the state’s best three-point shooters and dunkers, is now a part of these tournaments as well. And starting in 1996, the “March Madness Experience,” an exhibition hall full of fun, games, and good times, has allowed fans of Illinois high school basketball to join in the action.

The popularity of these events now allows the IHSA to provide more than just good entertainment for its fans. A significant portion of the fees generated from the licensing of the unified marks “March Madness” and “America’s Original March Madness” are used to fund college scholarships for Illinois high school boys and girls.

Posted by admin on November 4, 2007

Making It Official

Posted under March Madness History

The IHSA tournaments continued to grow and develop. In 1963, the tournament moved to the huge new Assembly Hall on the campus of the University of Illinois and fans witnessed the most famous finish in history, when Chicago Carver beat Centralia on a last-second shot by a substitute named Anthony Smedley. “March Madness” grew as well. Beginning in 1973, the IHSA began using the term officially in its programs and on its merchandise. In 1977, the organization enlisted veteran Chicago sportswriter and Big Ten basketball referee Jim Enright to write the official history of the boys basketball tournament. The result was March Madness: The Story of High School Basketball in Illinois. As media technology advanced, the IHSA and KOST Broadcast Sales of Chicago produced March Madness: The Official Video History of the IHSA Basketball Tournament in 1989. Both the book and video were sold nationwide. During this period, the Illinois High School Association received trademark status for the term “March Madness” and registered the trademark “America’s Original March Madness.” The spirit of March Madness has subsequently spread from coast to coast, as other companies and organizations, including state high school associations and manufacturers, have been licensed by the IHSA to use these trademarks.