Texas Tech’s non-conference basketball slate is starting to take shape, and the Red Raiders are lining up a mix of early tests, familiar opponents and a trip to Las Vegas.
The biggest spotlight game on the board is Louisville in the Players Era 16. Texas Tech is scheduled to face the Cardinals on Nov. 24 in a night game in Las Vegas, opening bracket play in the event.
From there, the Red Raiders will move into a second-round matchup against either Oregon or St. John’s on Thanksgiving Day, Thursday, Nov.
If Texas Tech keeps rolling through the bracket, the path gets even busier. The Red Raiders would then play again on Friday, Nov. 27, against one of four possible opponents from the other side of the bracket: Tennessee, Maryland, Iowa State or San Diego State. A 3-0 run in bracket play would send Texas Tech into the championship game on Saturday, Nov. 28, at T-Mobile Arena.
Before the Las Vegas trip, Texas Tech opens the 2026-27 season at home on Nov. 2 against Jackson State in Lubbock. Jackson State went 12-21 last season and finished 10-8 in SWAC play. Kendrick Perkins, the former NBA player and current ESPN analyst, recently became JSU men’s basketball GM.
The Red Raiders also have a return date with Illinois on the schedule. Texas Tech will host the Fighting Illini on Nov. 10 at United Supermarkets Arena in Lubbock, completing a home-and-home series.
The Red Raiders lost by four at Illinois last season and will get the chance to answer on their own floor. Illinois, though, is coming off a Final Four appearance, and some media outlets and experts are picking the Fighting Illini to win the Big Ten next season.
Later in November, Texas Tech will host New Orleans on Wednesday, Nov. 18.
The guarantee for that game is $105,000. The Privateers are back on the schedule after Texas Tech beat them by 32 points last November.
Another home date is set for Wednesday, Dec. 9, when Omaha visits Lubbock. The Mavericks went 16-17 last season and come from the Summit League.
On the conference side, Texas Tech already knows its home-and-away Big 12 opponents for the upcoming season. The Red Raiders will play Houston, UCF and Cincinnati both at home and on the road.
Overall, the men’s basketball schedule is shaping up as a tougher non-conference road than the football team’s, which has two home games against Sam Houston State and Abilene Christian and a road trip to Oregon State.
In Other News...
Texas Tech Just Got Pulled Deeper Into The Sorsby Fallout
Texas Techs handling of the Brendan Sorsby eligibility dispute has now picked up an off-field layer that goes well beyond the Big 12s usual conference business. Cody Campbell, the schools Board of Regents chairman, donated $274,300 to a fundraising committee supporting Texas Attorney General Ken Paxtons U.S. Senate campaign one day before Paxtons office sent a letter to the Big 12 defending Texas Tech in the case, according to the facts at hand. The timing puts the Red Raiders in the middle of a mess that already involves wagering violations, conference discipline and legal maneuvering.
Sorsbys ineligibility stems from sports betting issues that have already drawn serious attention, and the broader fight has now become a test of how far the conference can go without inviting more legal trouble. Paxtons office warned the Big 12 against sanctioning Texas Tech, while the underlying dispute continues to sit at the intersection of school governance, conference authority and a player case that has not gone away quietly. [Read more 🡒]
Former Texas Tech Star Is Chasing A Rare NFL Legacy Moment
Jordyn Brooks keeps finding ways to stay relevant in a league that usually chews up linebackers before they can build much of a rsum. The former Texas Tech standout enters his seventh NFL season with the Dolphins, still carrying the kind of production that gets noticed nationally, including a No. 67 spot in the NFL Top 100 Players of 2026 after another standout year in Miami.
Brooks led the league in combined tackles last season even as the Dolphins stumbled to a 7-10 finish, and his individual consistency has become one of the few constants around a roster that looks different in a lot of places. Miami has a new general manager in Jon-Eric Sullivan, a new defensive coordinator in Jeff Hafley and plenty of fresh faces on both sides of the ball, but Brooks remains the kind of player who can anchor a defense while the rest of the picture keeps shifting. [Read more 🡒]
