Maryland’s second straight trip to the Players Era opens with a heavyweight right out of the gate.
The Terps will face Tennessee on Tuesday, November 26 at 3:00 PM in their first game of the 2026 event, a matchup that immediately puts Buzz Williams’ group on a national stage. Maryland is guaranteed three games in the tournament, but everything starts with this opener.
A victory would send the Terps into a meeting with the winner of Iowa State vs. San Diego State, while a loss would push them into a consolation game against the loser of that matchup.
For Maryland, the return to Las Vegas comes with plenty on the line after a rough 12-21 season in Williams’ first year. The Terps had some of their toughest moments at this same event last year, when they beat UNLV by seven but were blown out by Gonzaga and Alabama by a combined 72 points. This time around, the program gets another chance to reset the tone and show real progress.
Tennessee brings the kind of challenge that makes the opening game matter even more. The Volunteers reached the Elite Eight, though they’ve since lost much of their star power, including former Maryland standout Ja’Kobi Gillespie. Maryland, meanwhile, will lean on a top-10 high school recruiting class and a six-man transfer haul that has remade the roster.
The field around them is loaded. The 2026 Players Era bracket includes Alabama, Baylor, Creighton, Gonzaga, Iowa State, Kansas State, Louisville, Miami, Michigan, Oregon, San Diego State, St. John’s, TCU, Tennessee and Texas Tech, giving the Thanksgiving-week event a national-contender feel from top to bottom.
Players Era itself has grown fast since launching in 2024 as a subsidiary of EverWonder Studio. The idea was built around putting athletes at the center of the model while creating bigger opportunities for college basketball on a global stage. Its first festival set the tone, blending high-profile games with NIL opportunities, and the event has only expanded from there.
In 2025, the festival became the 18-team Players Era Men’s Championship and added the inaugural Players Era Women’s Championship, both of which featured the eventual national title winners. Now the men’s side is expanding again in 2026, with 24 teams split across two tournaments in Las Vegas and a new multi-year broadcast partnership with ESPN.
The company is also taking its first step onto the international stage with the Eternal City Tip-Off in Rome, featuring Notre Dame and Villanova.
One of the biggest changes for this year’s Players Era is structural. Last season’s pool-play format drew criticism because scoring margin helped determine advancement and payouts, creating incentives to run up the score. The 2026 version moves to a traditional bracket, giving the event clearer stakes and making Maryland’s opener against Tennessee even more important.
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Maryland Finally Has Clarity On A November Stretch Fans Feared
The November picture for Maryland mens basketball is finally coming into focus, and it starts with a tricky one. The Terps will open the Players Era 16 tournament against Tennessee on Nov. 24, giving Kevin Willards team an early measuring-stick game before the holiday stretch settles in. Marylands path after that is already mapped out by result, with the next round of games set for Nov. 26 and Nov. 27, so the opener will decide whether the Terps are playing for a better lane or trying to salvage the trip.
That matters because last years tournament did not go especially well for Maryland, which dropped two of three games and came away empty in both of its matchups against ranked opponents. The broader schedule news also brought some clarity on the Big Ten slate, with conference opponents now set and the Terps getting twice-dates with Indiana, Michigan State and Rutgers, along with the rest of the home-and-away mix. For a team trying to build some early-season momentum, it is a useful roadmap, even if the first checkpoint is a demanding one. [Read more 🡒]
