
The surprisingly poetic origins of the phrase ‘March Madness’
When legendary sportscaster Brent Musberger called the 1982 NCAA basketball tournament “March Madness,” the term stuck and helped popularize the annual event. But he wasn’t the first to use the phrase. This Time magazine article explores the contributions of Henry V. Porter, who originally used “March madness” in a 1939 article about the Illinois State basketball tournament, and later in a 1942 poem called “Basketball Ides of March.”


