The biggest regular-season event in college basketball is going back to Las Vegas.
After initially lofty goals of expanding to a gargantuan 32-team competition for 2026, Players Era organizers have settled on a 24-team mega event featuring separate eight-team and 16-team tournaments in November.
There’s another change in store for this year: ESPN now owns the broadcast rights to Players Era games. TNT was the rights holder for the first two iterations, an eight-team event in 2024 and 18 teams in 2025. ESPN and Players Era jointly revealed their multi-year media rights agreement on Wednesday.
Among the most prominent teams in the field: Reigning national champion Michigan (which won last year’s Players Era Tournament in historic fashion), 2025 national champion Florida, Gonzaga, Iowa State, Houston, Louisville, Tennessee, St. John’s, Alabama, Miami and Kansas — all of which are ranked in CBS Sports’ offseason Top 25 And 1. The Big 12 will have eight of the 24 teams thanks to a bold joint business venture that Players Era and Big 12 commissioner Brett Yormark agreed to in 2025 and extended to 2030.
For now, the two brackets are titled the “Players Era Eight” and “Players Era Sixteen.” The Eight will be staged the week before Thanksgiving, featuring these teams:
| School |
Conference |
2025-26 record |
| Auburn |
SEC |
22-16 |
| Florida |
SEC |
27-8 |
| Houston |
Big 12 |
30-7 |
| Kansas |
Big 12 |
24-11 |
| Notre Dame |
ACC |
13-18 |
| Rutgers |
Big Ten |
14-20 |
| West Virginia |
Big 12 |
21-14 |
| UNLV |
Mountain West |
18-17 |
The Sixteen bracket will have these 16 play the week of Thanksgiving:
| School |
Conference |
2025-26 record |
| Alabama |
SEC |
25-10 |
| Baylor |
Big 12 |
17-17 |
| Creighton |
Big East |
16-18 |
| Gonzaga |
Pac-12 |
31-4 |
| Iowa State |
Big 12 |
29-8 |
| Kansas State |
Big 12 |
12-20 |
| Louisville |
ACC |
24-11 |
| Maryland |
Big Ten |
12-21 |
| Miami |
ACC |
26-9 |
| Michigan |
Big Ten |
37-3 |
| Oregon |
Big Ten |
12-20 |
| San Diego State |
Pac-12 |
22-11 |
| St. John’s |
Big East |
30-7 |
| TCU |
Big 12 |
23-12 |
| Tennessee |
SEC |
25-12 |
| Texas Tech |
Big 12 |
23-11 |
PREVIOUSLY: How Players Era upended the nonconference scheduling model in college basketball
Specific matchups, the overall schedule and ticket information will be made public later this month, according to a source. Thirteen of the 24 teams going were in the 2026 NCAA Tournament. The smaller women’s event will return in 2026 as well, per sources, with an announcement on those details coming at a later date.
“College basketball is the hottest and one of the fastest-growing sports properties in the country,” Players Era co-founder Seth Berger stated in a statement. “The players have never been better, and record ratings for early-season college basketball reflect that. Led by top programs from multiple conferences across the sport, the teams in our field are stronger than ever.”
The 2024 Players Era Festival (as it was then dubbed) paid out $1 million to every participating team and awarded an additional $1 million to the champion, Oregon. Last season’s 18-team event was more financially burdened by the mandates from the College Sports Commission, which tracked and arbitrated every NIL deal for players that had to comply with CSC guidelines before being paid. The majority of those NIL payments have gone through, but there are still some schools and players waiting on a few more deals to be cleared by NIL Go, sources stated.
For 2026, Players Era will pay some schools more than others to participate. (Kansas, for example, is being paid the most.) The average payout for all 24 schools will be slightly north of $1 million, according to event organizers. In addition to the financial incentives, the Players Era’s increase in teams for 2025, 2026 and beyond has led to negative impact on other nonconference multi-game events, most notably impacting the likes of the Maui Invitational, the Battle 4 Atlantis and the ESPN Events Invitational.