It’s funny, if you think about it. We’ve been welcoming normalcy back in starts and stops for well over a year now. We’ve been receiving sports back into our lives in small-bite increments — games in front of no fans, games in front of some fans, games in front of more fans — since June, when the Belmont Stakes started to fill the calendar up again.
And yet this was the moment when so many of us who care so deeply about sports could actually exhale again, with a simple sentence from the CBS television broadcaster Greg Gumbel:
“These are first- and second-round games on Saturday and Monday and the overall No. 1 seed is Gonzaga …”
And with that, the NCAA Tournament was back.
With that, it was time, at last, to close the door on one of the most difficult aspects of the early part of these past 12 months, when the 2020 Tournament was slowly chopped up, in pieces: first reduced fans. Then no fans. Then postponed games. Then canceled games.
Bing. Bang. Bop. Boom.
They never even made it to Selection Sunday last year, never bothered to fill out the brackets because there was no way to pull a tournament off in those early days of the shutdown. I remember setting up shop in front of my television on what would have been the first day of the tournament, the First Thursday, always one of the best and busiest days of the sporting calendar, and toggling between the usual suspects: TNT and TBS, CBS and TruTV.
No hoops. A “Friends” rerun. A “Supernatural” rerun. An “Impractical Jokers” rerun. And “Young and the Restless,” followed by the “The Bold and the Beautiful.” But no hoops.
Strictly from a sporting standpoint that was the most depressing day of these past 53 weeks. Baseball would come back, in abbreviated fashion. The NBA and NHL would come back in a bubble. Most of the major golf and tennis tournaments would be played, and the NFL started and finished on time. We got all three Triple Crown races, in unique order.
But the 2020 college hoops season just sort of dissolved, like a cookie tossed into a bowl of battery acid. It vanished without a trace. In some places — notably Dayton, Ohio, where the hometown Flyers had a season for the ages — it meant the end of what to that moment had been a dream ride that had lasted four months. Done. Gone. Over.
The Link LonkMarch 15, 2021 at 11:34AM
https://nypost.com/2021/03/15/march-madness-2021-ends-chapter-fans-will-gladly-forget/
Return of March Madness ends chapter fans will gladly forget - New York Post
https://news.google.com/search?q=forget&hl=en-US&gl=US&ceid=US:en
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