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Alex Lodise Wins Dick Howser Trophy as National Player of the Year

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Florida State baseball junior shortstop Alex Lodise has been named the 2025 recipient of the Dick Howser Trophy as the national player of the year.   Lodise is the third player in program history to win the Dick Howser Trophy, along with outfielder J.D. Drew in 1997 and catcher Buster Posey in […]

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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Florida State baseball junior shortstop Alex Lodise has been named the 2025 recipient of the Dick Howser Trophy as the national player of the year.
 
Lodise is the third player in program history to win the Dick Howser Trophy, along with outfielder J.D. Drew in 1997 and catcher Buster Posey in 2008. The prestigious award, presented annually since 1987 to college baseball’s best player by the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (NCBWA), is named after FSU All-American shortstop (1955-58) and head coach Dick Howser (1979).
 
A shortstop from St. Augustine, Florida, Lodise already is a two-time First Team All-American, by the NCBWA and Perfect Game. He also is a finalist for two other national player of the year accolades, the Golden Spikes Award, which recognizes the best amateur player in the country, and the Brooks Wallace Award, which is presented to the nation’s top shortstop.
 
One of the nation’s most prolific hitters and best defenders, Lodise had a breakout 2025 campaign. He ranked No. 9 in the country in hits (95), No 11 in total bases (170) No. 12 in hits per game (1.64) and No. 23 in batting average (.394). Lodise was third in the ACC in RBI (68), fourth in slugging percentage (.705) and fifth in triples (3). He hit 17 home runs, had 18 doubles, scored 62 runs with 27 walks and was a perfect 6-of-6 in stolen base attempts. With a .977 fielding percentage, Lodise was part of 34 double plays and committed just five errors in 216 total fielding chances.
 
While starting all 58 of FSU’s games at shortstop, Lodise had at least one hit in 48 of those 58 games played, with 31 multi-hit games. He notched three or more hits in 13 games, which is more than the number of times he was held hitless (10) and almost as many games as he had just one hit (17). Additionally, Lodise is believed to be the first player in major college or professional baseball history to complete the cycle with a walk-off grand slam. The historic performance to beat rival Florida in his hometown of Jacksonville on March 25 was one of seven game-winning hits for Lodise in 2025.
 
The ACC Player of the Year and ACC Defensive Player of the Year, Lodise also was named the NCBWA District 3 Player of the Year. An NCBWA and Perfect Game First Team All-American and named to the Southeast All-Region First Team by the ABCA, Lodise was recognized as the midseason National Player of the Year and the country’s No. 1-ranked shortstop late in the season. He was selected as a team captain in 2025 for the Seminoles.
 
His two All-America honors this week come after he was named to one Freshman All-America team in 2023 at North Florida.
 
Lodise helped the Seminoles to a second consecutive NCAA Super Regional appearance in 2025 with a 42-16 record. As they both earned All-ACC honors, FSU went 17-10 in the conference and finished in second place with a .630 winning percentage. The ACC runner-up finish and No. 2 seed at the conference tournament were the team’s best since 2014.
 
For more information on Florida State baseball, check Seminoles.com for the latest news and scheduling information, and keep up with the team on social media through Twitter/X and Facebook (@FSUBaseball) & Instagram (@NoleBaseball).
 





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Syracuse replaces ACC Kickoff participants, still sending Rickie Collins Jr.

Syracuse, N.Y. — Fran Brown is calling an audible on which players will join him next week at ACC football media day. Quarterback Rickie Collins Jr. will still join Brown in Charlotte, but defensive back Duce Chestnut, linebacker Derek McDonald and defensive lineman Dion “Tank” Wilson Jr. are being replaced by defensive back Berry Buxton […]

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Syracuse, N.Y. — Fran Brown is calling an audible on which players will join him next week at ACC football media day.

Quarterback Rickie Collins Jr. will still join Brown in Charlotte, but defensive back Duce Chestnut, linebacker Derek McDonald and defensive lineman Dion “Tank” Wilson Jr. are being replaced by defensive back Berry Buxton III, punter Jack Stonehouse and tight end Dan Villari.

The ACC asked schools to notify the conference which players would be in Charlotte months ago. At the time, Brown chose McDonald, Chestnut and Wilson.

Brown has since changed his mind and submitted the new list over the weekend, a team spokesperson said Monday.

The change up is not a punitive action, the spokesperson said, and none of the original players opted out of the trip. Brown opted to bring Syracuse’s most experienced leaders, the spokesperson said.

Villari, Buxton and Stonehouse are all redshirt seniors.

The ACC also requested teams bring a quarterback, explaining why Collins will make the trip. Stanford, Pitt, Wake Forest and Boston College are the only teams that aren’t sending a quarterback to ACC Kickoff.

This year’s ACC Kickoff runs from July 22-24. Brown and his players will take the podium on July 23 live from the Hilton hotel in Uptown Charlotte.

The ACC Kickoff will stream live on the ACC Network and syracuse.com will deliver on-the-ground coverage.

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adidas, St. John’s partner thanks to men’s college basketball’s revival

St. John’s meteoric return to national prominence in college basketball under coach Rick Pitino has made it a very desirable investment. It’s the reason the sneaker and apparel giant adidas sought to make the Red Storm its first college partner that doesn’t have a Bowl Championship Subdivision football program. They unveiled their new partnership on […]

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St. John’s meteoric return to national prominence in college basketball under coach Rick Pitino has made it a very desirable investment. It’s the reason the sneaker and apparel giant adidas sought to make the Red Storm its first college partner that doesn’t have a Bowl Championship Subdivision football program.

They unveiled their new partnership on Monday through a video posted on social media platforms that featured Pitino, as well as several Storm players, in adidas gear sitting on a bench and each opening a newspaper with the front page headline “ADIDAS EYES RED STORM.”

As part of the partnership, St. John’s will receive a major investment in their athletics department and student-athletes will have an avenue to a company program that will give them opportunities to earn NIL money doing endorsements. Two players — Ian Jackson and Joson Sanon — already are part of the program.

“This is a period of time where it’s all about revenue generation for college athletics and all about NIL and adidas gets it,” St. John’s AD Ed Kull told Newsday. “[It] has a whole program that’s focused around NIL and giving dollars for endorsement deals to student-athletes. And they understand for the school the challenges of revenue sharing and generating money and they really stepped up. And . . . want to be all in.”

Nike, the previous outfitter for St. John’s, has reduced its portfolio for outfitting college programs and, though it had the opportunity to counter adidas’ offer to St. John’s, chose not to, Kull said.

“I know we’ve changed brands over the years — from Jordan Brand to Nike Elite to Under Armour to Nike now this — but it’s truly in our best interest we have a partner that is investing in us and building with us. Nike was not doing that.”

The appeal of St. John’s playing in the New York market  made the partnership even more appealing to the shoe giant. The Red Storm will play at least a dozen games next season at Madison Square Garden. 

“Partnering with a renowned institution in St. John’s University represents an exciting moment for adidas,” adidas Vice President of Sports Marketing Chris McGuire said in a school-issued statement. “As a powerhouse with deep roots and big ambition, they match our drive to push limits and shape the future of sport.”

The flagship men’s and women’s basketball programs will have game-day uniforms, footwear, apparel and equipment for training and competition designed by adidas.

St. John’s fans can buy Red Storm merchandise from adidas online already and the men’s basketball program will be part of an event on Wednesday at 4 p.m. at the recently relaunched adidas Brand store at 610 Broadway in Manhattan.

“This move to adidas was the worst-kept secret, but the holdup in the launch was making sure that we launched and you could buy [gear] right away,” Kull said.

Kull also said that fans who were frustrated about the lack of availability of the various official Nike uniforms will be offered a wider variety, including alternate uniforms, though he couldn’t give details yet on the Felipe Lopez-era throwbacks.

Kull said fans will eventually see a one-stop shop where they will be able to purchase one of the uniforms that are personalized with their favorite players’ names and numbers. 





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NCAA Tournament expansion is ‘right direction to at least explore,’ SEC commissioner Greg Sankey says

Imagn Images SEC commissioner Greg Sankey reiterated his interest in expansion of the NCAA basketball tournaments expansion Monday, saying “we think there are enough quality teams to make this growth appropriate.” “Nothing in college basketball is static,” Sankey said from the 2025 SEC Kickoff event in Atlanta. “So tournament expansion is certainly worth exploring.” The […]

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NCAA Football: SEC Media Day
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SEC commissioner Greg Sankey reiterated his interest in expansion of the NCAA basketball tournaments expansion Monday, saying “we think there are enough quality teams to make this growth appropriate.”

“Nothing in college basketball is static,” Sankey said from the 2025 SEC Kickoff event in Atlanta. “So tournament expansion is certainly worth exploring.”

The NCAA Division I men’s and women’s basketball committees debated expansion at their respective meetings last week but made no recommendation on whether to expand or remain at 68 for 2026 and beyond.

NCAA tables tournament expansion, delaying March Madness decision with 72, 76-team options still possible

Bryan DeArdo

NCAA tables tournament expansion, delaying March Madness decision with 72, 76-team options still possible

Though not a part of either committee, Sankey is arguably the most influential figure in college sports, and he made it clear that — over the long-haul — he favors growth from the current 68-team bracket configuration to one including 72 or 76 teams.

“To be clear, we support expansion,” Sankey said. “But you just don’t jump into it. So, if there are reasons from a broadcast point, a financial point, logistics point or competitive realities that don’t support expansion, again, we’re going to be fine. But in general, think this is the right direction to at least explore.”

Sankey’s bullishness on expansion suggests the matter won’t be receding from view anytime soon, and it’s still possible that expansion could be approved for as early as the 2025-26 season. 

However, Sankey noted that the SEC “is going to be fine whether the bracket expands or not.” The SEC placed a record 14 teams in the 2025 men’s NCAA Tournament and landed 10 teams in the women’s tournament. 

Amid the dawn of revenue-sharing in college athletics, leaders are looking for new opportunities to drive revenue. BUT NCAA leaders have yet to clearly articulate if or how expanding the men’s and women’s basketball tournaments would increase payout to NCAA schools.





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Ruling on NIL collectives may reshape college sports scene

Valid businesses would only be allowed to make payments to student athletes Boise State fullback Tyler Crowe (33) celebrates his touchdown against Penn State during the first half of the Fiesta Bowl NCAA college football CFP quarterfinal game, Dec. 31 in Glendale, Arizona. (Ross D. Franklin/The Associated Press) ALBUQUERQUE – A new enforcement agency in […]

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Valid businesses would only be allowed to make payments to student athletes

Boise State fullback Tyler Crowe (33) celebrates his touchdown against Penn State during the first half of the Fiesta Bowl NCAA college football CFP quarterfinal game, Dec. 31 in Glendale, Arizona. (Ross D. Franklin/The Associated Press)

ALBUQUERQUE – A new enforcement agency in college sports has drawn a firm line regarding the regulation of name, image, and likeness (NIL) payments to athletes – a move that could dismantle how many school-affiliated collectives currently operate.

Last week, the College Sports Commission issued new guidance that significantly narrows what qualifies as a “valid business purpose” for NIL deals. The announcement came just days after the $2.8 billion House v. NCAA settlement took effect on July 1, establishing a clearinghouse called NIL Go to review third-party deals exceeding $600.

The goal is to prevent schools from circumventing the new $20.5 million revenue-sharing cap by routing funds through booster-backed collectives.

According to the CSC, any entity whose primary function is paying athletes – rather than offering legitimate goods or services to the public – fails to meet NIL Go’s standards. This includes collectives that host events or sell merchandise primarily to fund player payments. Even if these events are open to the public or involve promotional efforts, the CSC says they still don’t qualify.

The ruling has sent shock waves through the NIL ecosystem. In the four years since NIL deals became legal, school-affiliated collectives have funneled hundreds of millions of dollars into athlete compensation – often functioning as unofficial arms of athletic departments. These groups have paid athletes for appearances, endorsements, and social media promotions. But with the CSC now rejecting most of these deals, that model appears to be collapsing.

A memo sent to Division I athletic directors clarified the new standard: agreements with collectives primarily created to pay athletes or benefit specific schools will no longer be approved. While external NIL deals are still allowed, they must be with companies offering real products or services to the general public and must reflect fair market value.

The backlash was immediate. The Collective Association, which represents NIL collectives nationwide, called the CSC’s interpretation “misguided,” arguing it ignores both legal precedent and the economic realities of college athletics. The group claimed collectives are essential to athlete support and are being unfairly targeted.

Adding to the frustration, collective leaders like Dalton K. Forsythe of Utah State’s Blue A Collective reported widespread rejections of submitted NIL deals. “Nearly 100% of collective-backed NIL deals are being denied,” Forsythe posted on X, citing inconsistent standards and poor communication from NIL Go.

Mountain West Conference emblem is attached to a field marker along with the emblem of Colorado State during an NCAA college football game between Colorado and Colorado State, Saturday, Sept. 14, 2024, in Fort Collins, Colorado (AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)

Despite the chaos, NIL Go has approved over 1,500 deals since launching in June, ranging in value from hundreds to millions of dollars. More than 12,000 athletes and 1,100 institutions are already registered. However, most approved transactions have involved athletes and legitimate businesses – not donor collectives.

Ultimately, the CSC has made clear that the future of NIL lies in traditional sponsorships and commercial endorsements, not donor-funded payouts. Whether courts will uphold these rules – or whether athletes will challenge them on antitrust grounds – remains to be seen. For now, though, the days of collectives writing large checks behind the scenes may be coming to an end.

The College Sports Commission’s new enforcement guidance is expected to significantly impact the Mountain West Conference (MWC), where many schools have relied on donor-driven collectives to remain competitive in a rapidly evolving landscape.

Potential Fallout for Mountain West Schools

This shift could hit programs like Boise State, Fresno State, San Diego State, and Utah State particularly hard. These schools have developed strong football reputations but lack the deep financial backing of Big Ten or SEC institutions.

Boise State running back Ashton Jeanty celebrates after winning the offensive player of the game for the Mountain West Championship NCAA college football game against UNLV, Friday, Dec. 6, 2024, in Boise, Idaho. (AP Photo/Steve Conner)

Boise State has relied on a passionate fan base and collective support to maintain its status as a Group of Five powerhouse. Without that funding source, Boise could fall behind in the NIL arms race.

Utah State’s Blue A Collective is already feeling the pressure. Director Dalton Forsythe reports that nearly all of their NIL submissions are being rejected under the new rules, calling the standards “unclear and unrealistic.”

Fresno State and San Diego State have used competitive NIL offers to retain local talent, but that ability may diminish without collective-based funding, making it harder to keep players from transferring out.

As the NIL landscape undergoes its most dramatic shift yet, the Mountain West Conference finds itself at a crossroads.

The new rules may level the playing field in theory, but in practice, they risk sidelining programs that have used creativity and community support to stay relevant.

With traditional collectives on the chopping block and commercial partnerships harder to come by in smaller markets, MWC schools must now adapt quickly – or risk falling further behind in a system increasingly tilted toward the power conferences.

The next chapter in college athletics will be defined not just by talent on the field, but by who can navigate the off-field rules best.

Roger Holien is a contributor for SB Nation.com and Mountain West Connection





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Players Era 2025: Schedule announced for NIL-driven Players Era Men’s Championship

Las Vegas will once again be the place to be during Feast Week this college basketball season. Coined “November Mania,” the Players Era Men’s Championship announced its schedule for the newly expanded 18-team men’s basketball NIL multi-team event in November in Las Vegas on July 14, and to no surprise, it’s quite loaded. Advertisement Then […]

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Las Vegas will once again be the place to be during Feast Week this college basketball season.

Coined “November Mania,” the Players Era Men’s Championship announced its schedule for the newly expanded 18-team men’s basketball NIL multi-team event in November in Las Vegas on July 14, and to no surprise, it’s quite loaded.

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Then called the Players Era Festival, the NIL-driven event by storm last season and has quickly become a must-play event with NCAA Tournament caliber teams, so much so that teams paid their way out of already scheduled multi-team events to participate in it last season.

Headlining the first two days of competition in Las Vegas is Gonzaga vs. Alabama on Wednesday, Nov. 25. Preceding the Bulldogs and Crimson Tide on Nov. 25 is St. John’s vs. Iowa State, two teams that are notoriously known for their defense under Rick Pitino and T.J. Otzelberger.

REQURIED READING: College basketball too-early Top 25 rankings after transfer portal, NBA draft

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Day 2 of the 2025 Players Era Men’s Championship field is headlined by an Elite Eight rematch of Houston vs. Tennessee and then Iowa State vs. Creighton, two teams that were already scheduled to meet in October for an exhibition.

The 2025 Players Era Men’s Championship field includes 14 teams that made the NCAA Tournament last season, and nine teams — Auburn, Houston, St. John’s, Alabama, Iowa State, Maryland, Oregon and Michigan — that were seeded at least a five seed or higher in the field of 68. Eleven teams that appear in the USA TODAY Sports too-early top 25 poll will also compete in Las Vegas.

The four-day multi-team event will take place in Las Vegas at MGM Grand Garden Arena and Michelob Ultra Arena from Monday, Nov. 24 through Thursday, Nov. 27 with the championship game taking place on Wednesday, Nov. 26.

There will also be a four-team Players Era Women’s Championship featuring South Carolina, UCLA, Texas and Duke that will take place Wednesday, Nov. 26 and Thursday, Nov. 27 in Las Vegas.

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Here’s what to know from the July 14 announcement of the 2025 Players Era Men’s Championship:

Players Era Championship bracket 2025

The returning teams to the Players Era Festival include Alabama, Houston, Rutgers, Notre Dame, Oregon, San Diego State and Creighton. The only team that isn’t returning to the Players Era Championship from last year’s field, which Oregon won, is Texas A&M. The Aggies were replaced in the field by Maryland, which hired away Buzz Williams from Texas A&M this offseason.

Here’s a full breakdown of who is competing in the 2025 Players Era Men’s Championship:

Players Era Festival 2025 schedule

Here’s a look at schedule for the 2025 Players Era Men’s Championship, which will take place MGM Grand Garden Arena and Michelob Ultra Arena in Las Vegas:

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Monday, Nov. 24

  • Rutgers vs. Tennessee | 1 p.m. ET

  • Creighton vs. Baylor | 2 p.m. ET

  • Kansas vs. Notre Dame | 3:30 p.m. ET

  • St. John’s vs. Iowa State | 4:30 p.m. ET

  • Houston vs. Syracuse | 6 p.m. ET

  • Auburn vs. Oregon | 8 p.m. ET

  • Gonzaga vs. Alabama | 9:30 p.m. ET

  • Michigan vs. San Diego State | 10:30 p.m. ET

  • UNLV vs. Maryland | Midnight ET

Tuesday, Nov. 25

  • Rutgers vs. Notre Dame | 1 p.m. ET

  • Iowa State vs. Creighton | 2 p.m. ET

  • Kansas vs. Syracuse | 3:30 p.m. ET

  • St. John’s vs. Baylor | 4:30 p.m. ET

  • Houston vs. Tennessee | 6 p.m. ET

  • Michigan vs. Auburn | 8:30 p.m. ET

  • Gonzaga vs. Maryland | 9:30 p.m. ET

  • Oregon vs. San Diego State | 11 p.m. ET

  • UNLV vs. Alabama | Midnight ET

Wednesday, Nov. 26

  • Third Place Game: 7 p.m. ET

  • Championship Game: 9:30 p.m. ET

Note: For those that didn’t make the championship or third place game on Wednesday, November 26, they will play in consolation games across Wednesday, November 26 and Thursday, November 27 in Las Vegas

What is the Players Era Championshop?

The Players Era Championship is a one-of-a-kind multi-team event that takes place during “Feast Week” of the college basketball season in November, during Thanksgiving week. Debuted during the 2024-25 season with an eight-team field, The Players Era Championship is a NIL-driven multi-team event with some of the best college basketball teams in the country.

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Each team will receive $1 million for participating in the event, while players and teams will have the opportunity to earn more NIL while in Las Vegas. The champion of the Players Era Championship will win an additional $1 million in NIL earnings as well. Noted by CBS Sports’ Matt Norlander, the total pot for the 2025 Players Era Championship will be north of $20 million in NIL-related earnings — quite the expensive multi-team event and regular season showcase event.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Players Era Men’s Championship full field, schedule announced



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Tip times, matchups for NIL-driven college basketball tournament revealed

The Players Era Festival, an NIL-driven college basketball multi-team event set to feature Gonzaga and 17 other programs in its field this fall, has released the 20-game schedule for the 2025 edition from Las Vegas. The Players Era debuted this past November with eight teams competing in the Thanksgiving week tournament: Houston, Alabama, Rutgers, Notre […]

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The Players Era Festival, an NIL-driven college basketball multi-team event set to feature Gonzaga and 17 other programs in its field this fall, has released the 20-game schedule for the 2025 edition from Las Vegas.

The Players Era debuted this past November with eight teams competing in the Thanksgiving week tournament: Houston, Alabama, Rutgers, Notre Dame, Creighton, Oregon, Texas A&M and San Diego State (Oregon beat Alabama in the championship round). In addition to those eight, the following 10 teams join the 2025 field: Auburn, Baylor, Gonzaga, Iowa State, Kansas, Michigan, St. John’s, Syracuse, Tennessee and UNLV.

The Bulldogs drew Alabama for their first-round matchup, which has been set for Nov. 24 at 6:30 p.m. PST on TNT. The Zags will take on Maryland the next day at the same time, while being broadcast on TruTV. CBS Sports’ Matt Norlander first reported the matchups earlier this month.

Though the exact locations weren’t disclosed, each contest has been confirmed for either Michelob Ultra Arena or MGM Grand Garden Arena. If the Zags win both matchups out of the gate, they’ll advance to the championship round set for Nov. 26 at 6:30 p.m. In the likely event that more than two teams go 2-0 to start, point differential, total points scored and points allowed will serve as tiebreakers. The third-place game is the same day at 4 p.m. PST.

Every participating team is assured $1 million, with an additional $1 million awarded to the winner of Players Era. The pay structure is expected to work in a similar manner this year, with each school directly receiving compensation from event organizers, though how the teams divvy up the money to their players will be case-by-case.

With the House v. NCAA settlement reaching final approval, schools will be allowed to share up to $20.5 million per year in revenue with their student-athletes. Many schools won’t be able to reach that number, and some are planning to put portions of Players Era money into their overall rev-share cap, per Norlander.

According to The Field of 68, the team that finishes in second place will receive $500,000; third place will earn $300,000 and fourth will net $200,000.

Gonzaga’s nonconference schedule includes seven opponents that qualified for the 2025 NCAA Tournament: Oklahoma (Nov. 8 at Spokane Arena), Creighton (Nov. 11 at the Kennel), Kentucky (Dec. 5 in Nashville, Tennessee), UCLA (Dec. 13 in Seattle), Baylor (TBD), Alabama (Nov. 24) and Maryland (Nov. 25). Additionally, those seven teams makeJon Rothstein’s top 45 rankings of the offseason.

All times PST

Monday, Nov. 24
Tennessee vs. Rutgers, 10 a.m.
Baylor vs. Creighton, 11 a.m. 
Kansas vs. Notre Dame, 12:30 p.m. 
St. John’s vs. Iowa State, 1:30 p.m. 
Houston vs. Syracuse, 3 p.m. 
Oregon vs. Auburn, 5 p.m. 
Alabama vs. Gonzaga, 6:30 p.m. 
Michigan vs. San Diego State, 7:30 p.m. 
Maryland vs. UNLV, 9 p.m.

Tuesday, Nov. 25
Rutgers vs. Notre Dame, 10 a.m.
Iowa State vs. Creighton, 11:30 a.m. 
Kansas vs. Syracuse, 12:30 p.m 
St. John’s vs. Baylor, 2 p.m. 
Houston vs. Tennessee, 3 p.m. 
Michigan vs. Auburn, 5:30 p.m. 
Gonzaga vs. Maryland, 6:30 p.m. 
Oregon vs. San Diego State, 8 p.m. 
Alabama vs. UNLV, 9 p.m. 

Wednesday, Nov. 26
Third-place game, 4 p.m. PST
Championship game, 6:30 p.m. PST

MORE GONZAGA NEWS & ANALYSIS





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