When March Went Mad (Hardcover)

Author: Seth Davis
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Product Summary
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 9780805088106
Publisher: Times Books
Publish Date: 3/3/2009
Buy.com Sku: 208667502
Item#:
Buy.com Sales Rank: 13099
Dimensions (in Inches) 9.5H x 6.5L x 1.25T
Pages: 336
 
Davis recounts the dramatic story of how two legendary players--Earvin Magic Johnson and Larry Bird--burst on the scene in a 1979 NCAA championship that gave birth to modern basketball.
 
Annotation:
Sportswriter Seth Davis presents a convincing case that the NCAA tournament emerged into the multi-billion dollar showcase event that it is today due to a single memorable game in 1979. That season's championship game pitted the Indiana State Sycamores against the Michigan State Spartans, but it is essentially remembered as a showdown between two of the greatest players of all-time, Larry Bird and Earvin "Magic" Johnson. Davis provides in-depth coverage of each team's magical season, chronicles the various storylines that developed as the tension built, and documents the compelling dichotomy between the two star players. While Magic was a consummate performer with a showman's talents, on and off the court, Bird was an introverted workaholic, who honed his shooting skills tossing trash bags as a garbage man in his hometown of French Lick, Indiana.

 

Praise
"A fascinating, carefully researched, and entertaining look back at a tipping point in sports history." (starred review) - Wes Lukowsky 02/15/2009

"Mr. Davis's fine, fair book is a vivid portrait of a time when we knew a lot less about the sport and, because of that, loved it in a different way.....[He] captures an age before ESPN was the colossus of sports media, when much that was wonderful and distinctive about college basketball was witnessed only by those in attendance at the madhouse arenas on far-flung college campuses." - Michael MacCambridge 03/20/2009


 
 
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PROLOGUE

On Sunday evening, March 25, 1979, the NBC Sports production team gathered in a conference room at the Hotel Utah in Salt Lake City to go over the game plan for the following night’s NCAA men’s basketball championship game. George Finkel, the game producer, spoke first. He laid out the manner in which he and his broadcasting team of Dick Enberg, Al McGuire, and Billy Packer would be presenting the contest between Michigan State and Indiana State.

The next person to speak was Don McGuire (no relation to Al), who produced the pregame, halftime, and postgame segments that were hosted by Bryant Gumbel. Before beginning a career in television, McGuire had worked as the sports information director at the University of New Mexico, where the associate athletic director was a man named Bob King. King had since moved on to become head basketball coach at Indiana State University, but before the start of the 1978–79 season, he developed an aneury

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