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Front Page Talking Points

FOR THE WEEK OF MAR. 21, 2011

March Madness, supersized, heads toward 'Sweet 16' games this week

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1.gifLook for reports on a home-state team or other local angles, such as a player or coach from your area.

2.gifThe NCAA tournament has an impact beyond sports. See if March Madness-related coverage is on business, entertainment and lifestyle pages.

3.gifIs sports section coverage clear even for an occasional fan? Are any unfamiliar terms defined? Any improvements to suggest?

College basketball's big show is under way, bigger than ever. The NCAA tournament known as March Madness, which began last week, expanded this year by four teams to a total of 68 schools. Three elimination rounds through this past Sunday have thinned the field to 16 teams for playoffs in Newark, New Orleans, San Antonio and Anaheim, Calif., from March 24-27.

Fans can watch at CBS and three Turner Broadcasting cable networks (TBS, TNT, truTV), which allows live telecasts of every game in full for the first time. Another new twist is the presence of outspoken former NBA star Charles Barkley as a CBS commentator. He has used airtime to emphasize the need for academic support so athletes earn diplomas as well as cheers. "You can't just give them basket-weaving degrees. You can't just put them in classes to keep them eligible," he said at a media preview. "They need to be in real classes. . . . At the end of this season, only 50 of these kids are going to make it to the NBA."

After this week's games, the tournament moves to Houston on April 2 with the Final Four teams and the April 4 championship game. Along the way, excitement is generated by rooting for local or home state teams, or schools attended by friends or family members. There's also the drama of freshman heroes and surprise outcomes -- "Cinderella stories" of scrappy underdogs and tight finishes, such as last week's upset of Louisville by Morehead State and of Georgetown by Virginia Commonwealth.
Excitement also came from four buzzer-beating victory baskets in the first five games. In last year's championship game, Duke University beat Butler by 61-59 with a half-court shot at the final buzzer.

Editor says: "This year, starting today, this newspaper will print each team's graduation rate in our tournament bracket, right next to the team's won-loss record. . . . I challenge other media outlets to do the same. The University of Arizona should be publicly shamed for its 20 percent graduation rate, just as Villanova should be widely praised for its rate of 100 percent." -- Larry Platt, Philadelphia Daily News editor

Charles Barkley says: "They've got to make some of these kids go to school. . . . They all think they're going to play in the NBA, but 99.9 percent of them are going out into the real world. . . . These kids aren't thinking about getting an education. They only think they can play sports. They don't think about becoming doctors, lawyers, firefighters, policemen."

Blogger says: "The NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament is the most exciting American sporting event, period. It is because of the upsets." -- Jon Gilbert at bleacherreport.com

Front Page Talking Points is written by Felix Grabowski and Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2024

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Common Core State Standard
SL.CCS.1/2/3/4 Grades 6-12: An essay of a current news event is provided for discussion to encourage participation, but also inspire the use of evidence to support logical claims using the main ideas of the article. Students must analyze background information provided about a current event within the news, draw out the main ideas and key details, and review different opinions on the issue. Then, students should present their own claims using facts and analysis for support.

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