Nick Gillespie | March 17, 2008
Let the bitching and moaning, and obsessive viewing, begin.
No. 1 seeds include three predictables (North Carolina, Kansas, and UCLA) and one less-so (Memphis, though ranked No. 1 for a good chunk of the season).
Printable bracket diagram here.
Women's bracket to come.
And let me make a salient point, regarding reason's general philosophy: All these athletes should be getting paid something approaching their market value (which in many cases wouldn't be much more than a scholarship). And as much as I really love college sports and will be glued to the tube from here on out (rooting against at least three of the four No. 1 seeds), I agree with Milton Friedman that there's something fundamentally retarded about the whole concept of mixing higher learning with essentially pro-level sports. (And I should say that there's a similar problem at the K-12 level too, where sports always takes away from more clearly educational programming and culture; and I say that as a multiple letter-winner, not a sports-hater).
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Who beat G-Town?
Pitt = the most underrated NCAA team, 8 years running...
Who cares? THE Ohio State University has the #1 seed in the NIT, which this year is the only tournament that matters. Kiss my ass, Pro Lib, Florida is going down!
I used to agree with what Nick is saying. I used to live in Columbus, Ohio and grew to HATE the Buckeyes and their fans. But now that I have stepped away from that and can look at it more objectively their is a value to having ports teams attached to an educational institution. For one thing it provides an outlet for physical activity at an age when that can be powerful and (if not directed) dangerous. It allows the institution to grow BOTH the mind and the body. It can also help to generate revenue for the institution. That being said, some institutions take it WAY too seriously (particularly at Ohio State.)
The Eagles are in the tournament for the first time in the 82-year history of the basketball program.
If I ever have to bury my libertarian credentials, it'll be for
college athletics. It may seem crazy, but it's all voluntary
association, and it's a great way to hold an alumni base.
Professional sports leagues have decided that they want their
players to mature for some time before handing them millions of
dollars, and athletes don't sacrifice as much if they decide to
spend four years studying.
Rock Chalk, Jayhawk
Go KU
Did I just find myself in agreement with John?
Frightening!
Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, KU
Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, KU
Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, KU; Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, KU; Rock Chalk,
Jayhawk; KU
Oh, please. Ohio State win a national competition? As a top
seed? That's the kiss of death for the Buckeyes, my dear
fellow.
It would be neat, in a slightly sad, bizarro kind of way, to kick
your asses back Columbus one last time.
Yeah, I agree with John and Yahoo on this one. In many ways, athletes get paid more than what they generally would be playing for without college sports. And its all technically apart of the market, though in many ways they are publicly funded.
Since most college sports programs lose money, can we get these kids to give back their tuition waivers?
I agree with Milton Friedman that there's something fundamentally retarded about the whole concept of mixing higher learning with essentially pro-level sports. (And I should say that there's a similar problem at the K-12 level too, where sports always takes away from more clearly educational programming and culture;
Walter Olson explained the reason for it: tax advantages. It bugs
me that varsity sports crowd out what could be a thriving culture
of minor league amateur & semi-pro sports that would be much
more flexible without being tied down to schools and the
requirements of academics.
GO KU! KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU KU North Carolina is ok. Tenesses's style of playing is good.
John i read ur comment and it's not cause ur from KU, it made sense. Plus I think we all agree it's good clean fun.
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