As if you needed any more evidence that March Madness brackets are a practice akin to throwing darts while blindfolded, here’s this rather amusing anecdote.
Yes, sixth-grader Sam Holtz almost assuredly put together a more accurate bracket than you, I and every other person who wasted precious minutes trying to predict the near-unpredictable.
[You May Also Enjoy: Here Are The 2015 Masters Tee Times, Including Tiger Woods]
Now, Sam did fill out ten brackets (the winning bracket was the fourth one that he filled out) and he had some help but one can’t hate on the boy too much considering that he shares the top spot of the ESPN Tournament Leaderboard.
[Related: Bubba Watson’s Masters Dinner Included Mac N Cheese, Because of Course It Did]
Because Sam is under the age of eighteen, he used his dad’s email to enter ESPN’s bracket challenge (after getting permission from his father, or course). If he does win the whole thing, Sam will receive a trip to the 2015 Maui Invitational and a $20,000 Best Buy gift card.
Not bad for five minutes of work.
“I didn’t even think I’d get in the top 100,000 when I first made a bracket. I just make ’em for fun. I didn’t think I’d make it this far, so it’s incredible,” Sam said.
[abc7] via [SB Nation]


About Ryan Wong
Recent Posts
Gus Malzahn retires after 35 years
"There are so many people to thank."
Vikings move on from general manager
“These decisions are never easy."
Baker Mayfield on Mike Evans: ‘more in the tank’
“Mike’s too much of a competitor."
Kevin Stefanski waiting on Falcons to hire GM to name starter
“I think we have to hire a general manager first."
Zac Robinson thrilled to get to work with Baker
"Baker was the number-one pick in the draft for a reason."
Mike Vrabel brushes off disrespect
“It doesn’t matter."