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Kansas basketball schedule 2025

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Kansas basketball schedule 2025

Kansas opens the 2025-26 season on Nov. 3 at home against Green Bay before its loaded nonconference slate begins. The Jayhawks have a date with North Carolina on the road to close out the first week of the college basketball season on Nov. 7. Kansas also has matchups with Duke, Notre Dame and Syracuse before the calendar turns to December.

Since coach Bill Self and company defeated North Carolina to win the program’s fourth national title in 2022, the Jayhawks have failed to make it out of the first weekend of the NCAA Tournament the last three seasons. That includes a loss in the first round of the tournament this past spring to John Calipari and Arkansas, which marked the first time Kansas lost in the opening round since 2006.

Expectations for this Kansas squad will stop and start with the play of five-star freshman phenom Darryn Peterson. The No. 1-ranked player in the 2025 recruiting cycle by 247Sports is one of the top candidates to be the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NBA Draft. Self hasn’t been shy about his praise for the star combo-guard, going as far as to say that Peterson is the best player he has recruited at Kansas.

Kansas spent most of this century under Self at the top of the Big 12 standings, but since Houston joined the league in 2023, the Jayhawks have been lackluster in conference play to their standards. Kansas finished 11-9 in conference play last season after going 10-8 during Houston’s first year in the league.

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NCAA to keep 2026 March Madness men's and women's basketball tournaments at 68 teams

With all eyes on Peterson and Kansas this season, here are the top five games to watch involving the Jayhawks this season.


1. Duke (Champions Classic)

When: Nov. 18, 2025 Where: Madison Square Garden (New York)

Anytime blue bloods like Duke and Kansas play, it’s always must-watch TV. This year will be no different. This game in particular is intriguing because it will see Peterson and Duke’s Cameron Boozer — two of the top candidates to go No. 1 next summer in the draft — play against each other in college.

The Cooper Flagg era at Duke may be over, but the Blue Devils will be a team to watch. Duke returns Isaiah Evans, Caleb Foster and Ngongba II to pair with the No. 1-ranked high school recruiting class in the country, headlined by Boozer. This game will be a great measuring stick for both.


2. vs. Houston

When: TBD Where: Allen Fieldhouse (Lawrence, Kansas)

The matchup between Houston and Kansas at Allen Fieldhouse proved to be one of the best (and craziest) games of last season. Houston stunned Kansas after trailing by six at the end of regulation and overtime in the final moments. It was one of the biggest end-of-game collapses from any team last season, which makes the next matchup that much more intriguing. The dates for the Big 12 basketball schedule haven’t been finalized, but we do know that Houston and Kansas will only play each other once during the regular season.

Since Houston arrived to the Big 12 in 2023, the Cougars have taken the league by storm. Houston won back-to-back Big 12 regular season titles and reached the national title game this past spring. The 2025-26 version of Houston may even be better, with blue-chip recruit Chris Cenac Jr. headlining the second-ranked recruiting class in the 2025 cycle by 247Sports. On top of that, Houston returns star guard Milos Uzan. Circle your calendars (when the Big 12 schedule is released) because this will be an epic game.


3. vs. BYU

When: TBD Where: Allen Fieldhouse (Lawrence, Kansas)

Getting a matchup between the projected No. 1 and 2 overall picks from the same draft during the regular season is rare. The last time it happened was in 2021. Duke and Paolo Banchero faced off against Chet Holmgren and Gonzaga, which went on to be one of the best games of the 2021-22 campaign. We could once again get that type of matchup because Peterson and BYU’s AJ Dybantsa are projected to go 1-2 next summer.

The hype around BYU is real. The Cougars not only have aspirations of winning a Big 12 title, but also of making a deep run in the NCAA Tournament. BYU has never reached the Final Four, but this could be the year it happens. Kansas vs. BYU is a game to watch if you’re a fan of either team or a draft sicko doing some early scouting on the 2026 draft class.


When: Dec. 2, 2025 Where: Allen Fieldhouse (Lawrence, Kansas)

By UConn’s standards, last year was a down year. After winning back-to-back national titles in 2023 and 2024, the Huskies were eliminated in the second round of the NCAA Tournament by (eventual) champion Florida.

There is strong reason to believe UConn will bounce back this year. The Huskies return Solo Ball, Tarris Reed, and Alex Karaban. UConn also did work in the transfer portal by adding Georgia’s Silas Demary Jr. and Dayton’s Malachi Smith. UConn coach Dan Hurley and company also welcome five-star guard Braylon Mullins, who projects as a starter for the Huskies this season. The fact that this game is being played at Allen Fieldhouse instead of a neutral site makes it even better.


5. at North Carolina 

When: Nov. 7, 2025 Where: Dean E. Smith Center (Chapel Hill, North Carolina)

Kansas’ first true test of the 2025-26 season will come during the opening week with (likely) a top 25 matchup against North Carolina. Kansas, like North Carolina, also lost in the first round of the NCAA Tournament this past spring, so getting back on track this season will be paramount.

UNC had a busy offseason, to say the least. The Tar Heels added multiple newcomers via the transfer portal, including Alabama’s Jarin Stevenson, Arizona’s Henri Veesaar and Colorado State’s Kyan Evans. All eyes will also be on five-star freshman Caleb Wilson, the No. 8 overall player in the 2025 recruiting cycle by 247Sports. This is an incredible matchup to open the season. It could also prove to be a springboard for the winner, too.


Kansas’ 2025-26 nonconference schedule

Day/Date Opponent Location
Mon., Nov. 3 Green Bay Allen Fieldhouse, Lawrence
Fri., Nov. 7 North Carolina Dean E. Smith Center, Chapel Hill, N.C.
Tue., Nov. 11 Texas A&M – Corpus Christi Allen Fieldhouse, Lawrence
Sat., Nov. 15 Princeton Allen Fieldhouse, Lawrence
Tue., Nov. 18 Duke Madison Square Garden, New York
Mon., Nov. 24 Notre Dame (at Players Era Festival) MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas
Tue., Nov. 25 Syracuse (at Players Era Festival) MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas
Wed.–Thu., Nov. 26–27 TBD (at Players Era Festival) MGM Grand Garden Arena, Las Vegas
Tue., Dec. 2 UConn Allen Fieldhouse, Lawrence
Sun., Dec. 7 Missouri T-Mobile Center, Kansas City
Sat., Dec. 13 North Carolina State Lenovo Center, Raleigh, N.C.
Tue., Dec. 16 Towson Allen Fieldhouse, Lawrence
Mon., Dec. 22 Davidson Allen Fieldhouse, Lawrence

Big 12 Opponents Home Only: Baylor, BYU, Cincinnati, Houston, TCU, Utah
Big 12 Opponents Away Only: Arizona State, UCF, Colorado, Oklahoma State, Texas Tech, West Virginia
Big 12 Opponents Home and Away: Arizona, Iowa State, Kansas State

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Pat McAfee dealt blunt reality check from college football fans

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Pat McAfee remains one of the more polarizing voices in the college football media landscape, and it appears the College GameDay personality is losing some of his base of support among fans, according to a new survey.

McAfee’s approval ratings among college football fans have fallen to an all-time low coming out of the 2025 season, according to a poll taken by The Athletic this week.

How do you feel about Pat McAfee?

Fans were asked a simple question: “How do you feel about Pat McAfee on College GameDay?” And the answers definitely tilted one way.

Nearly half of those who answered the question said they “Don’t like it,” with 49.5 percent of fans who took part saying they didn’t approve of McAfee’s contribution to the weekly College GameDay program.

That contribution has been noteworthy from the beginning, capped off by his bombastic (and often shirtless) game predictions that helped give the program a transition from Lee Corso’s famous headgear picks as a method of closing out each show on Saturday.

The field-goal kicking contest that McAfee hosts on GameDay, which includes him paying out serious money to the winners, is also highly-regarded among fans who watch.

Those who do like what McAfee brings to the table? That number is down to 31.6 percent of those who were surveyed by The Athletic.

Just under 20 percent of those asked, 18.9 percent, said they had no opinion of him.

Previous polls agree on McAfee

This marked the third year that The Athletic polled fans on McAfee, but this edition of the vote saw the highest mark among those who answered negatively about him.

Last year, 42.5 percent of respondents said they didn’t like McAfee, and in 2023, that number swelled to 48.9 percent.

Two seasons ago, the negative conversation around McAfee’s performance on College GameDay even resulted in viral speculation that he considered leaving the program.

Last offseason, it was revealed that McAfee did not have a contract to appear on College GameDay that fall and it was an open question for a time whether or not he would return.

Those rumors were put to bed about a month later, when McAfee revealed that he signed a new deal with ESPN to appear on the show that season.

College GameDay is still very popular

Whatever fans may think of McAfee, they are very clear on the College GameDay program overall: they love it.

The overwhelming majority of those fans polled, 83.6 percent of them, said they prefer College GameDay to the Fox pre-game program Big Noon Kickoff.

That confidence was expressed in the TV ratings this season, as College GameDay established viewership records in the 2025 season averaging 2.7 million viewers per show, up 22 percent from last year.

(Athletic)

Read more from College Football HQ



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Mailbag Call: So…Indiana? | Off Tackle Empire

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Is this the new normal? The new Bloomington? The new Big Ten?

Good afternoon, and happy Monday. Three-quarters of the MNW household are struggling with some form or residuals of the flu, and the other one is me. That, of course, has led to no resentment of the fact that I am healthy other than a little cough, no sir.

Indiana feels inevitable at this point, do they not? The Hoosiers have, through Curt Cignetti’s shrewd use of the transfer portal and quality coaching, turned college football completely on its ear.

Well, a deep-pocketed donor by any other name is…a deep-pocketed donor, still. Add to that Mark Cuban’s money for 2026? We might be dealing with the Hoosiers until Curt Cignetti gets bored.

Of course, there have been flashes in the pan before: the wisconsin Rose Bowls, the Peak Weather Machine years of Michigan State, that one time Minnesota won ten games or whatever—but it’s undeniable that none of those programs ever made a national championship and that none of them did it in the style that Indiana is doing it right now.

Watching Indiana do it—or, indeed, the entire SEC going belly-up in the postseason—is certainly cathartic. It’s better than the usual suspects doing it over and over again, and it’s at least more above-board than the standard SEC model of used car dealers buying themselves a championship. I take little solace in knowing that there’s less program-building, less connection to a campus, less-anything that feels “authentically” college football, but it’s incredibly possible that my feelings of “authenticity” always relied on a lie—the lie that it was possible to square “belonging” or “identity” of a college campus with athletes being fairly treated.

Congratulations, of course, to Indiana on their seemingly inevitable championship. It is truly exciting for the Hoosiers and their fans, as well as those coming back to football to join the thousand or so of their long-suffering brethren. Glad you’ve finally left the tailgate lots and headed in. Enjoy Miami.

Of course, you might have questions or comments about completely different things—basketball, wrestling, the best episode of Magic School Bus, the worst way to cook cod. We in the OTE Hive were recently discussing our careers as Quiz Bowl contestants (MNW, AlmaOtter, LPW), speech wannabes (LPW, Kind of…, Dead Read), or speech titans (BRT, Jesse, et al). Ask us what you’d like, and we’ll answer how we’d like.

This is a Mailbag call, and I hope you’ll treat it as such.



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Hollywood Smothers’ flip to Texas underscores Alabama’s NIL struggles, dwindling mystique

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Elite running back Hollywood Smothers flipped from Alabama to Texas in the 2026 college football transfer portal on Sunday, signaling deeper issues within the Crimson Tide program.

On the field, Alabama has fallen short of sustaining the elite standard set by Nick Saban, losing as many games in two seasons under Kalen DeBoer (eight) as it did across the previous five seasons under the seven-time national championship-winning coach.

Coaching deserves its fair share of blame for Alabama’s slight fall from grace, but deeper issues may lie within the Crimson Tide’s NIL operation, which has lagged behind many of its peers this cycle.

Alabama has lost six players ranked inside Cooper Petagna‘s top 100 of the college football transfer portal rankings this offseason, while adding just one: defensive lineman Devan Thompkins.

National college football and transfer portal analyst Chris Hummer went inside Alabama’s NIL struggles, offering insights into what’s gone wrong in Tuscaloosa and what the future may hold for one of college football’s most storied programs.

“A decade ago, Alabama could land everyone they wanted,” Hummer said on CBS Sports HQ. “They could be like a dragon sitting on a chest of gold. There’s nothing you could do about it.



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VCU’s Phil Martelli Jr. on the state of college sports amid NIL, transfer portal, conversations with dad

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Scarlet Knights Legend Leonte Carroo Sues Rutgers Over NIL Claims

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Rutgers football legend Leonte Carroo is suing Rutgers University over the use of his Name, Image, and Likeness from when he was playing in college, according to an article written by Brian Fonseca of Nj.com/NJAdvancedMedia. Carroo’s lawsuit claims that he is entitled to back payments for the money he generated for the university throughout his college career. The lawsuit values those figures between 2.8 and 3 million dollars.

Carroo and his team originally filed the lawsuit in October. In December, Rutgers countered and tried to have the lawsuit dismissed, arguing that the statute of limitations had long passed and that several courts from around the country had already unanimously denied the type of NIL claim that Carroo’s team is making. On January 9th, Carroo’s legal team filed a brief meant to argue that the university’s dismissal should be denied.

According to the article by Fonseca, Carroo’s team gave Rutgers a formal demand letter in June seeking compensation for the unauthorized use of his NIL. The university did not provide such compensation, which led to the lawsuit.

The House vs. NCAA settlement granted back payment to college athletes who were in school between June 2016 and 2024. Carroo’s playing at Rutgers career falls just outside that, as he played from 2012-2015. Carroo’s legal team is arguing that just because he falls outside the period given, it does not take away from the fact that Rutgers unjustly profited from his time as a player.

Carroo was one of the most well-known players at Rutgers while he was playing. He currently holds the receiving touchdowns record in school history by a wide margin, and he was one of the faces of the team when they first entered the Big Ten. Carroo and his legal team argue that some sort of compensation is in order for his level of stardom.

If the courts side with Carroo in this case, it has the potential to open up a whole can of worms across college athletics. It would lay the groundwork and encourage other former athletes from other schools to sue their own school for the same reason. Similar cases to this, including players from other college programs, have been dismissed or denied already across the board. It remains to be seen what will come of this lawsuit in particular.

A link to the original article by Fonseca can be found here.



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Big Ten vs. SEC: Josh Pate explains where college football supremacy currently sits

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The great debate regarding which conference — the Big Ten or the SEC — reigns over college football might not be much of a debate anymore. Especially given the SEC’s dismal 4-10 bowl record this offseason.

That bowl record looks even worse in games between the SEC and other Power Four teams, with the Southeastern Conference finishing the 2025-26 bowl season a combined 1-8 versus the ACC, Big Ten and Big 12. That includes a winless 0-4 mark against the ACC and a 1-3 record vs. the Big Ten, which has won the last two CFP national championships and will play for a third when No. 1 Indiana takes on No. 10 Miami in next Monday’s College Football Playoff national title game.

In fact, following No. 6 Ole Miss‘ 31-27 loss to the Hurricanes in last Thursday’s Fiesta Bowl CFP semifinal, the SEC — winners of 13 national titles in 17 years between 2006-22 — was shut out of playing for a third consecutive national championship game, something it hasn’t experienced since 2000-02.

Those struggles have led college football fans and pundits alike to effectively dance on the grave of the once-dominant conference. College football analyst Josh Pate joined the fray on Sunday’s episode of Josh Pate’s College Football Show, making it clear he’s been off the SEC gravy train for awhile now.

“The SEC is lagging behind the Big Ten, at the top, (and) I would even venture to suggest the middle-tier now is at least comparable if not slightly lagging behind,” Pate said Sunday night. “That’s probably where my perception has changed of late, moreso than at the top. So I’m not beating that drum.”

Pate then preceeded to break down all the ways the SEC ultimately lost its crown as King of College Football to the Big Ten, including his perception Big Ten “culture” is just more focused on football, as opposed to SEC’s perceived focus on the pomp and circumstance of the sport.

“Maybe the average Big Ten player is wired a little bit differently, maybe they focus a little more on the football aspect, the mean-and-potatoes aspect of football, instead of the more highlight-ish, branding aspect of football,” Pate added. “I think there’s something to that.”

From there, Pate addressed how the advent of NIL and the NCAA Transfer Portal has leveled the playing field from a talent perspective. In fact, Pate suggested the SEC became so spoiled by its multi-decade talent advantage, effectively drunk off its own supply, that it didn’t do what was necessary to maintain it. That ultimately resulted in what Pate described as “lazy practices” like prioritizing recruiting over coaching and player development, including a tendency to fill out their football staffs based on the agency they were associated with rather than the most-qualified candidates.

“If you think that’s ridiculous, it’s because it is,” Pate concluded. “But that’s been standard practice in the SEC for awhile. And I don’t find it to be the case in the Big Ten.”

And while the SEC could certainly return to glory by this time next year, at least for forseable future, college football fans in the South will suffer through more gloating from their neighbors to the North.



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