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Result 1 - 4 of 4 found
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1.
SportsFanfare.com - Bringing the Game Home!
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If you are wild about your favorite teams and are proud to sport items with your team's logo, then SportsFanfare.com is THE place for you to find what you want! With over 9,000 AUTHENTIC items, you can't go wrong by visiting today! They offer the best products, the best prices and unbelievably fast shipping. |
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http://www.sportsfanfare.com
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2.
EveryTicket.com - Sporting Event Tickets
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Don't miss the game! You will be happy that you found EveryTicket. Now you have access to one of the most extensive inventories of premium seating and sold out event tickets nationwide. Choose from over 400,000 tickets to sports, concerts, theater and NASCAR events and experience top customer service at EveryTicket.com. EveryTicket.com is a licensed, bonded and insured broker of event tickets. They are not affiliated with any venue or box office. |
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http://www.everyticket.com
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3.
GigaGolf
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GigaGolf enables golfers to customize their golf club selection then build the clubs to the tightest manufacturing guidelines and ship them directly to your door. They don't hire celebrity golfers to use and endorse their equipment in order to keep their prices the lowest. |
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http://www.gigagolf.com
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4.
Steeped in Tradition- A History of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament
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A comprehensive and in-depth history of the NCAA men's basketball Tournament offers a genuine look at individual and collective adversities and strengths. It is a looking glass for human hope, excellence and positive social change. It is, in short, a microcosm of the human existence, with all of its exuberance, tragedy and triumph.
The excitement and tradition of "March Madness" as we know it today has been shaped by many significant events in NCAA tournament history: The first NCAA men’s basketball tournament was held in 1939 with the first championship game held at Northwestern on March 27, 1939. Only eight teams competed in two regions. Oregon defeated Ohio State in the championship, and the West region held a third-place game.
Although the NCAA tournament now determines the national champion, that was not always the case. Until the 1950's, the NIT was considered a more prestigious tournament than the NCAA, and teams often chose to enter the NIT and bypass the NCAA tourney. Because of this dichotomy, two of the best centers of the 1940's never met in an NCAA tourney. George Mikan's DePaul team traditionally entered the NIT, while Bob Kurland's Oklahoma A&M (now Oklahoma State) won two NCAA titles. Several schools entered both tournaments. One such team, City College of New York (CCNY) led by Irwin Dambrot, won both in 1950. Ironically, CCNY defeated Bradley University in the finals of both tournaments. Another school, Utah in 1944, entered the NIT, lost in the first round, and then went on to win the NCAA title. Kentucky pulled off a similar accomplishment in 1949, losing in the second round of the NIT and then going on to win the NCAA Tournament.
In 1941, the East region added a third-place game into the schedule, and in 1946, a national third-place game was held for the first time; the game would be a fixture until 1980. In 1951, the tournament expanded to 16 teams, and in 1952, Seattle was the site of the first true |
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http://www.stubhub.com
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