Overtime, I think I've come to realize the main reason: when I'm young, things ending at 12am - 1am seemed super, super late. I'm now used to staying up to that time all the time on weekdays, and usually later on weekends. But back in 2004-2008, that was well past my bedtime - at least at the start of that era. And therein lies the allure - the lateness of it all. My distinct memory, seared into my brain as a never-ending piece of nostalgia, was the 2005 2nd Round game between West Virginia (#7 seed in the West Region) and Wake Forest (#2 seed, featuring Chris Paul). It was a fairly notable double-overtime game that West Virginia won, introducing the world to Mike Gansey and Kevin Pittsnogle (who would go on to bigger and better things with West Virginia the next year). And I watched their dramatic win by not watching it, but listening to it broadcasted on WFAN in my radio-enabled walkman. But still I can just picture it.
So is the mindset of a kid experiencing things past his bedtime before his years. I don't know why but particularly those first few mid-00s years, before I got a laptop, and before they started streaming every game online, many of those memories came with a radio attached. It was a radio I was listening to that same year in 2005 when Bucknell knocked out Kansas. It was a same radio the next when Wichita State beat Tennessee. It was the weirdest way to be capturing the sport. At some point I'll write a whole nostalgia diaries about WFAN as a whole, but it's weird looking back how that radio-enabled walkman, kept under my pillow, mattered in those days.
There was also just the lateness of it all. The weird names, the weird courts (this was the area before they overstylized everything and branded every court. They would just play games through the Elite Eight on normal courts. It all changed I believe around 2007. This is when the next great invention was created, somethign that seems benign now but was incredibly novel at the time - the invention of MarchMadness.com that streamed every game.
It seems quaint now but until TBS/Turner took on part of the NCAA program, you could oinly watch on CBS and while they did rotate games around at times, it largely was you being stuck with what they wanted to show. The one real exception to that was taht old streaming service. The quality was spotty, but damn did it work - allowing you to just flip back and forth from game to game. And more than that, they invented the boss button, that wierd toggle that brought up some static excel-like window. It probably wouldn't hold up to the tiniest bit of scrutiny, but for what was still early Web2.0 at the time, man was it cool.
I probably do like the fact that today you can, in theory, watch every game on TV. You are in control. But honestly, back in the MarchMadness.com days, you were in control too - if anything, having a keen eye and dexterity to switch games all the time was an even more important skill. The true masters (like me) could enjoy the entire tournament when mere mortals were left to the whims of CBS.
But in the end, I think what makes that era the most magical was it was before I really got a true understanding of the strategy of the NBA. What has hurt college basketball for me over the years is just how jarringly bad the play is compared to the NBA. Granted, that disparity is even bigger in college football vs the NFL, but still - as I got more into the strategy of the NBA (the onset of which was the 2010-2014 Spurs), college seemed way too plodding. But in the mid-00s that wasn't an issue (the NBA game was fairly plodding at the time anyway), and the games seemed dramatic. The names rang louder. It all seemed bigger, and that brings me to the last element of this. The first was the fact 1am finishes seemed like stealing candy. The second was the advent of MarchMadness.com. And the third might be the most important: it was the brief window before the one-and-done era.
I forget what year it was, maybe 2014 or something, but someone on Twitter wrote something eye-opening that, with teh possible exception of the 2012 Kentucky team, all the Final Four participants from 2007-2009 would wipe the floor with those of 2010-2014. Now, that's probably a bit hyperbole, but there is some truth. Firstly, that era had some consistency - from the three straight UCLA teams. To the Hansborough / Lawson UNC team from 2006-2009. It had some great Kansas teams, including the upperclass-heavy 2008 Title team. It had Scottie Reynolds who played roughly eleven seasons for Villanova, cresting in 2009. It had of course the back-to-back Florida team. It had names that rang out. That just doesn't happen anymore. Sure, maybe it is because the ringing was more present and persistent given it was coming often out of a grainy radio, but whatever it is, March Madness was never better for me than 16-20 years ago.