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Mar 16, 2021 · The term "March Madness" was first used in 1939 when Illinois high school official Henry V. Porter referred to the original eight-team tournament by that moniker.
Mar 16, 2023 · Porter was a teacher and coach at Athens High School. He helped popularize the phrase in an essay he wrote called "March Madness" in 1939. He also wrote about it in a 1942 poem called "Basketball Ides of March," which appeared in the "Illinois Interscholastic." Below is the last line of that poem: With war nerves tense, the final defense.
Mar 1, 2020 · In March 1939, Henry Porter, an executive assistant secretary with the IHSA, coined the phrase “March Madness” in an essay in the organization’s Illinois High School Athlete publication, aptly titled “March Madness.”. Porter wrote, “a little March madness may complement and contribute to sanity and help keep society on an even keel.”.
Mar 12, 2018 · The term “March Madness” is thought to have first been applied to the world of basketball by Henry V. Porter, assistant executive secretary of the Illinois High School Association (IHSA) and ...
Mar 1, 2024 · Where did the phrase “March Madness” come from? The phrase March Madness was first introduced by Henry V. Porter of the IHSA, with its roots traced back to Illinois in 1939. The term was ...
Mar 15, 2024 · The NCAA increased its branding of the term in 2016 when it replaced the NCAA logo at center court of men’s tournament games with a new “March Madness” one for first round, second round ...
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Mar 16, 2024 · Coincidentally, the first NCAA men’s college basketball tournament was held in 1939, with eight teams competing, but it would be almost another 50 years before it came to be known as March Madness. In the 1940s, March Madness was used for Illinois state basketball tournaments, before spreading elsewhere in the Midwest region.