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Matt Norlander is on the Vegas Strip and bouncing back and forth between the two arenas hosting this year's Players Era Championship. He'll be providing frequent updates and insider information throughout each day of the event, so check back in regularly. This is his Monday notebook.


LAS VEGAS — The Players Era Championship has caused more conversation, buzz, criticism and intrigue than anything else so far this season.

Some of that is because it's got some obvious flaws. Let's address the biggest one right now. 

On Tuesday, No. 15 Iowa State beat Creighton with aplomb, 78-60. The Cyclones are 2-0 in the event after winning a riveting battle over No. 14 St. John's on Monday.

But in the immediate hours after this win, they have no idea when they'll play on Wednesday nor who their opponent will be. 

That's because Players Era's 18-team format isn't built upon a bracket. When you don't have bracket play AND you don't have all matchups predetermined, you're left to rely on game scores to settle the rest of the schedule. The primary tiebreaker is average margin of victory (with a cap of 20 points to avoid incentivizing teams heedlessly running up the score). Iowa State's average margin of victory after two games is 9.5. Will that be enough to put the Cyclones in Wednesday's championship game — where the winning team will be awarded $500,000? We don't know yet.

We do know it's already behind 2-0 Kansas, which has a 10.5 MOV after beating Notre Dame and Syracuse by a combined 21 points.

The event's abnormal format isn't lost on some fans who flew out here to take in hoops on the Strip. As final seconds died out Tuesday, an Iowa State backer sitting in Section 220 was shouting to ISU's Milan Momcilovic, "YOU NEED TO MAX IT! SHOOT IT!" He knew one more basket could be the difference between playing for first place or playing in the third-place game. Momcilovic opted not to shoot.

I did a walk-and-talk with Cyclones coach TJ Otzelberger after the win to chat about the unusual (and criticized) tiebreaker scenarios in play. The situation on Tuesday was muddled all the more by the fact that Otzelberger says he owes his career to Creighton coach Greg McDermott, who gave him his first break in 2006 by bringing him on staff at Iowa State (when McDermott was in his first season coaching that program).

"Going into it, you know that point deferential is a part of this," Otzelberger told CBS Sports. "The respect I have for Coach McDermott and his program, we're not going to put the game in position where we're trying to run up the score and get extra points late to win by a greater margin. To me, the relationship and the character of our program is more important than that. The easy solution would have been if we would have been up by [20], then it would have been fine, but that wasn't the case. We want to do the right thing."

College basketball rankings: Players Era needs a bracket, not complicated tiebreakers to determine finalists
Gary Parrish
College basketball rankings: Players Era needs a bracket, not complicated tiebreakers to determine finalists

Players Era's margin-of-victory rule has made it vulnerable to easy criticism. And that noise has also overshadowed a more important element of the entire experience: winning games. Players are already getting paid to play in this event, so the tiebreaker is really about who gets a chance at the most money. But, as Otzelberger told me, the more valuable thing for his team is the Quad 1 wins for the taking.

"You're here to win games, you're here to get better as a team and a program," Otzelberger said. "The main thing is to come out and give it your best to win the game. And I understand there's other factors and variables that go into this event, but we're just gonna focus on being at our best to come out win the game." 

By the way, ISU won without starting point guard Tamin Lipsey, who sat due to a sore groin. His availability for Wednesday is questionable, Otzelberger said. 

The Cyclones are off to their first 6-0 start since 2021-22 and averaging a sizzling 90.5 points. It's looking like a top-10 team in the country.

Will it be enough to play for the championship on Wednesday? Sit tight. There could be as many as five 2-0 teams battling for two spots in the championship game. I'll update this story throughout the night with the latest as we learn more here in Vegas. I'll also have quotes from the events founders, who will answer questions about why they created this format as opposed to doing a 16-team bracket in this year's event.


2025 Players Era scores, schedule

Monday's scores

No. 17 Tennessee 85, Rutgers 60Recap
Baylor 81, Creighton 74 Recap
Kansas 71, Notre Dame 61Recap
No. 15 Iowa State 83, No. 14 St. John's 82Recap
No. 3 Houston 78, Syracuse 74 (OT)Recap
No. 21 Auburn 84, Oregon 73Recap
No. 12 Gonzaga 95, No. 8 Alabama 85Recap
No. 7 Michigan 94, San Diego State 54Recap
Maryland 74, UNLV 67 Recap

Tuesday's scores, schedule

Notre Dame 68, Rutgers 63 Recap
No. 15 Iowa State 78, Creighton 60Recap
Kansas 71, Syracuse 60Recap
No. 14 St. John's vs. Baylor4:30 p.m. (truTV) at Michelob Ultra Arena
No. 3 Houston vs. No. 17 Tennessee6 p.m. (TNT) at Grand Garden Arena
No. 7 Michigan vs. No. 21 Auburn8:30 p.m. (TNT) at Michelob Ultra Arena
No. 13 Gonzaga vs. Maryland9:30 p.m. (truTV) at Grand Garden Arena
Oregon vs. San Diego State11 p.m. (TNT) at Michelob Ultra Arena
UNLV vs. No. 8 Alabama12 a.m. (truTV) at Grand Garden Arena

Wednesday's schedule

Premiere Four (Field determined after Tuesday's games)

Third-place game7 p.m. (TNT) at Grand Garden Arena
Championship9:30 p.m. (TNT) at Grand Garden Arena

Consolation games, TBD

Thursday's schedule

Consolation games, TBD