Mark Gilroy

Bringing Books to Life!

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • Home
  • MK Gilroy Novels
    • Cold As Ice
    • Cuts Like a Knife
    • Every Breath You Take
    • Just Before Midnight
    • The Patmos Conspiracy
  • Projects
    • Devotionals
      • A Daybook of Grace
      • God’s Help for Your Every Need: 101 Life-Changing Prayers
      • How Great Is Our God
      • Inspired Faith 365
    • Inspiration
      • God’s Way
      • Soul Matters
    • Gift Books
      • Crazy About You Series
      • Loving the Love of Your Life
      • Smiles
      • What a Wonderful Life Series
    • Christmas
      • A Classic Christmas
      • Just Before Midnight
      • The Simple Blessings of Christmas
    • Nightstand Reader Series
    • Publisher Highlights
  • Blog
    • All
    • Books
      • Author Issues
      • Book Publishing Q&A
    • Life Observations
      • America
      • Culture
      • Economy
      • History
      • Media
        • Movies & TV
        • Social Media
      • Motivation
      • Personal
      • Political
      • Sports
      • The World
    • Faith
      • Christmas
      • Inspiration
      • Prayers
    • Presentations
  • Reviews
  • About
    • Contact

Mark Gilroy March 18, 2008

March Madness


In Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, a seer warns Julius to beware the Ides of March. On his way to the Theatre Pompey, Caesar sees the same seer and calls jokingly to him, “see the Ides of March has come.”

“Aye, but not gone,” the seer whispers back to him as Julius strides to his death at the hands of the “Liberators,” a group of senators who stabbed him to death in an act of “tyrannicide.”

The Ides of March has truly come and gone in 2008, but we are in the middle of an annual American ritual where the warning to “beware” is particularly relevant. That’s right, we are at the halfway point of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament, better known as March Madness. This is a time when even marginally interested basketball fans live up to the full expression of the abbreviated nickname “fan” and become … fanatics.

This particular tournament seems to deliver the “madness” each and every year as a David or two slays a Goliath or three. Just this year, San Diego toppled mighty Connecticut; West Virginia dispatched perennial power Duke–after Belmont, still fairly new to this Division I game missed a last second shot that would have knocked the Dukies out in the first round; and Davidson, led by a sophomore guard, Stephen Curry, who looks all of 16 years of age, stunned behemoth Georgetown.

So a note of simple caution to colossal Kansas, unbeatable UCLA, notorious North Carolina, mammoth Memphis, terrifying Texas, and any other “favorites” still playing in the tournament: beware March Madness. It has come. But it has not gone.

Who knows what liberators are out and about with tyrannicide on their minds?

Share this:

  • Tweet
  • Share on Tumblr
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Print (Opens in new window) Print

Related

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Comments

  1. SBC says

    April 8, 2008 at 9:31 am

    The Ides of March have now come AND gone. In support of your Kansas sibling, I respectfully request an update to your March Madness blog with suitable words for a remarkable Kansas Jayhawk team and victory last night.

    Rock Chalk Jayhawk GO KU!

    SBC

Mark is a publisher, author, consultant, blogger, positive thinker, believer, encourager, and family guy. A resident of Brentwood, Tennessee, he has six kids, with one in college and five out in the "real world." Read More…

Stay connected!


Featured Posts

Write Drunk, Edit Sober

“Write drunk, edit sober,” was the advice to aspiring authors from novelist, Peter De Vries. (The quote is often erroneously attributed to Ernest … [Read More...]

Do I Need to Reinvent Myself?

Feel stuck in a rut? Is it time to mix things up in order to grow and regain enthusiasm in your life? Ready to try to accomplish something new? Is it … [Read More...]

My Dangerous Life

Some know me as an author. Some know me as a publisher. Some know me as a marketer. Some know me as a family man. Some know me as a neighbor. But few … [Read More...]

More Posts from this Category

Facebook Author Page

Facebook Author Page
Detective Kristen Conner Interview

Detective Kristen Conner

Follow me on Twitter

My Tweets

Copyright © 2026 · Streamline Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in