Nebraska
What do tickets cost for 2026 March Madness games? See Missouri, Nebraska
Say hello to the belles of the ball (and Cinderellas).
On Sunday, March 15, the NCAA announced the sprawling 68-team field that will compete at arenas all over the country in the 2026 Men’s Basketball Tournament, aka March Madness.
This year’s No. 1 seeds are Cameron Boozer’s Duke Blue Devils, Thomas Haugh’s Florida Gators, Jaden Bradley’s Arizona Wildcats and Yaxel Lendeborg’s Michigan Wolverines.
They’ll be joined by buzzy upstarts like Mark Mitchell’s Missouri Tigers, Pryce Sandfort’s Nebraska Cornhuskers and Peter Suder’s Miami Ohio Redhawks who are battling in the “First Four.”
As for New York, it’ll be represented by not one, not two, not three but four (!) squads in the Big Dance. They are Zuby Ejiofor’s No. 5-ranked St. John’s Red Storm as well as Cruz Davis’ No. 13 Hofstra Pride along with as No. 16 seeds Gavin Doty’s Siena Saints and Jamal Fuller’s Long Island University Sharks.
Early-round games are scheduled to go down at:
University of Dayton Arena
Dayton, OH
Moda Center
Portland, OR
Paycom Center
Oklahoma City, OK
Bon Secours Wellness Arena
Greenville, SC
KeyBank Center
Buffalo, NY
Other first- and second-round contests are scheduled for Philadelphia, Tampa, St. Louis and San Diego before the games relocate for the Sweet 16.
If you’d like to root on the squad of your choosing, see future NBA stars and/or witness an earth-shattering bracket-busting upset, last-minute tickets are available for all 67 games leading up to the April 6 Championship at Indianapolis’ Lucas Oil Stadium.
At the time of publication, the lowest price we could find for any pair of contests was $17 including fees on StubHub.
Multi-game session passes for the first two rounds that get you into six games over three days start at $343 including fees (that’s for Philadelphia).
Not bad considering that The Post’s Ryan Dunleavy dubbed this year’s crop as “Arguably the greatest — and deepest — freshman class in the sport’s history.”
Want to catch a game or three?
We’re here to help, hardwood fanatics.
Our team has everything you need to know and more about the 2026 NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament below.
NCAA Men’s Basketball March Madness tickets 2025
A complete breakdown of all upcoming games separated by venues — including game dates, teams and ticket prices — can be found here:
University of Dayton Arena in Dayton, OH
| Teams and dates | StubHub prices start at |
|---|---|
| All sessions (March 17-18) UMBC vs. Howard Texas vs. NC State Prairie View A&M vs. Lehigh Miami (OH) vs. SMU |
$253 (including fees) |
| First Four Session 1 (Tuesday, March 17) UMBC vs. Howard Texas vs. NC State |
$17 (including fees) |
| First Four Session 2 (Wednesday, March 18) Prairie View A&M vs. Lehigh Miami (OH) vs. SMU |
$93 (including fees) |
Moda Center in Portland, OR
| Teams and dates | Ticket prices start at |
|---|---|
| All Sessions (March 19 and 21) High Point vs. Wisconsin Hawaii vs. Arkansas TBD vs. BYU Kennesaw State vs. Gonzaga |
$412 (fees included) |
| Session 1 (Thursday, March 19 at 10:50 a.m.) High Point vs. Wisconsin Hawaii vs. Arkansas |
$27 (fees included) |
| Session 2 (Thursday, March 19 at 4:25 p.m.) TBD vs. BYU Kennesaw State vs. Gonzaga |
$66 (fees included) |
| All Session 3 games (Saturday, March 21) | $282 (fees included) |
Bon Secours Wellness Arena in Greenville, SC
| Teams and dates | Ticket prices start at |
|---|---|
| All Sessions (March 19 and 21) TCU vs. Ohio State Siena vs. Duke VCU vs. North Carolina Penn vs. Illinois |
$595 (including fees) |
| Session 1 (Thursday, March 19 at 12:15 p.m.) TCU vs. Ohio State Siena vs. Duke |
$75 (including fees) |
| Session 2 (Thursday, March 19 at 6:50 p.m.) VCU vs. North Carolina Penn vs. Illinois |
$105 (including fees) |
| All Session 3 games (Saturday, March 21) | $242 (including fees) |
Paycom Center in Oklahoma City, OK
| Teams and dates | Ticket prices start at |
|---|---|
| All Sessions (March 19 and 21) Troy vs. Nebraska McNeese vs. Vanderbilt Texas A&M vs. St. Mary’s Idaho vs. Houston |
$563 (including fees) |
| Session 1 (Thursday, March 19 at 11:40 p.m.) Troy vs. Nebraska McNeese vs. Vanderbilt |
$112 (including fees) |
| Session 2 (Thursday, March 19 at 6:35 p.m.) Texas A&M vs. St. Mary’s Idaho vs. Houston |
$24 (including fees) |
| All Session 3 games (Saturday, March 21) | $213 (including fees) |
KeyBank Center in Buffalo, NY
| Teams and dates | Ticket prices start at |
|---|---|
| All Sessions (March 19 and 21) South Florida vs. Louisville North Dakota State vs. Michigan State TBD vs. Michigan Saint Louis vs. Georgia |
$443 (including fees) |
| Session 1 (Thursday, March 19 at 1:30 p.m.) South Florida vs. Louisville North Dakota State vs. Michigan State |
$77 (including fees) |
| Session 2 (Thursday, March 19 at 4:25 p.m.) TBD vs. Michigan Saint Louis vs. Georgia |
$51 (including fees) |
| All Session 3 games (Saturday, March 21) | $223 (including fees) |
Viejas Arena in San Diego, CA
| Teams and dates | Ticket prices start at |
|---|---|
| All Sessions (March 20 and 22) Arizona vs. LIU Villanova vs. Utah State St. John’s vs. Northern Iowa Kansas vs. Cal Baptist |
$526 (including fees) |
| Session 1 (Friday, March 20 at 10:35 a.m.) Arizona vs. LIU Villanova vs. Utah State |
$201 (including fees) |
| Session 2 (Friday, March 20 at 4:10 p.m.) St. John’s vs. Northern Iowa Kansas vs. Cal Baptist |
$159 (including fees) |
| All Session 3 games (Sunday, March 22) | $309 (including fees) |
Enterprise Center in St. Louis, MO
| Teams and dates | Ticket prices start at |
|---|---|
| All Sessions (March 20 and 22) Kentucky vs. Santa Clara Iowa State vs. Tennessee State Purdue vs. Queens Miami vs. Missouri |
$597 (including fees) |
| Session 1 (Friday, March 20 at 11:15 a.m.) Kentucky vs. Santa Clara Iowa State vs. Tennessee State |
$123 (including fees) |
| Session 2 (Friday, March 20 at 6:35 p.m.) Purdue vs. Queens Miami vs. Missouri |
$188 (including fees) |
| All Session 3 games (Sunday, March 22) | $227 (including fees) |
Benchmark International Arena in Tampa, FL
| Teams and dates | Ticket prices start at |
|---|---|
| All Sessions (March 20 and 22) Texas Tech vs. Akron Alabama vs. Hofstra Clemson vs. Iowa Florida vs. TBD |
$499 (including fees) |
| Session 1 (Friday, March 20 at 12:40 p.m.) Texas Tech vs. Akron Alabama vs. Hofstra |
$49 (including fees) |
| Session 2 (Friday, March 20 at 6:50 p.m.) Clemson vs. Iowa Florida vs. TBD |
$128 (including fees) |
| All Session 3 games (Sunday, March 22) | $239 (including fees) |
Xfinity Mobile Arena in Philadelphia, PA
| Teams and dates | Ticket prices start at |
|---|---|
| All Sessions (March 20 and 22) Virginia vs. Wright State Tennessee vs. TBD UCLA vs. UCF UConn vs. Furman |
$343 (including fees) |
| Session 1 (Friday, March 20 at 12:40 p.m.) Virginia vs. Wright State Tennessee vs. Miami |
$66 (including fees) |
| Session 2 (Friday, March 20 at 7:25 p.m.) UCLA vs. UCF UConn vs. Furman |
$77 (including fees) |
| All Session 3 games (Sunday, March 22) | $186 (including fees) |
Final Four tickets 2026
The Big Dance will come to a close this year in Indianapolis.
On Saturday, April 4, the Final Four goes down at the Lucas Oil Stadium, aka the home of the Indianapolis Colts.
Two days later, March Madness ’26 wraps things up with the National Championship game at the same venue on Monday, April 6.
You can find tickets for all three high-stakes games here.
Sweet 16 tickets 2026
Before the playoff picture fully sorts itself out, the Sweet 16 and Elite 8 will take place in four major cities.
To make sure you’re in the loop, here’s how to grab tickets for all sessions at each of the four venues hosting the middle of the tourney.
March Madness 2026 bracket
Want to start making predictions ASAP?
You can get to it right now with our printable bracket below.
For all things March Madness, check out The Post’s bracket coverage and top storylines.
How to watch March Madness on TV
If you’re looking to scream at the TV enjoy the games from the comfort of your own home, we’re happy to report that that should be a cinch this year.
Most games can be found on CBS, TNT, TBS or truTV; all of these channels are available with a free trial of DIRECTV’s choice plan.
As always, be sure to check your local listings ahead of time to find the game you’re looking for ahead of time.
Huge 2026 concerts
Love March Madness …and music?
If that’s the case, here are just five shows you won’t want to miss live these next few months.
• J. Cole
• A$AP Rocky
• Kid Cudi
• Don Toliver
• Earth Wind and Fire with Lionel Richie
Who else is on the road? Take a look at our list of all the biggest concert tours in 2026 to find the show for you.
This article was written by Matt Levy, New York Post live events reporter. Levy stays up-to-date on all the latest tour announcements from your favorite musical artists and comedians, as well as Broadway openings, sporting events and more live shows – and finds great ticket prices online. Since he started his tenure at the Post in 2022, Levy has reviewed a Bruce Springsteen concert and interviewed Melissa Villaseñor of SNL fame, to name a few. Please note that deals can expire, and all prices are subject to change.
Nebraska
‘Trump Barn’ regains its sign, thanks to anonymous donor and installation help
ASHLAND, Neb. (Nebraska Examiner) – Online trolls had a field day in March when Nebraskans got wind that a stiff breeze had taken a political sign that named a red barn along Interstate 80 in eastern Nebraska.
Much of the social media discourse centered on a combination of higher gas prices, tariffs, war, political fatigue and polling headwinds during the second term for President Donald Trump.
The barn’s owner, farmer Alan Volger, told the Nebraska Examiner at the time he probably couldn’t afford another red-letter “TRUMP” sign, nor could he physically put a new sign up.
“I gotta have somebody else put signs up,” he said. “I don’t care how high it goes, I gotta keep one foot on the ground.”
Volger said the timing seemed OK since the president is term-limited and cannot run again. He still had his signs up supporting property tax reform and opposing abortion.
But this week, Dr. Pat Castle of LIFE Runners, an anti-abortion group from Lincoln, and a friend of Castle’s who owns a lift, posted a new “TRUMP” sign on the “Trump Barn.”
They had funding help from a supporter of Nebraska Secretary of State candidate Scott Petersen, who paid for the sign and let his preferred candidate for Nebraska’s top election official take the credit.
Petersen and fellow Republican Secretary of State Bob Evnen have been in a pitched primary race over the future of counting votes in Nebraska elections. Both have expressed support for Trump.
So this week a different set of online trolls had a good day, punching back against the Nebraskans who had said they were ready to see something else driving from Omaha to Lincoln.
One said, “He made his barn great again.”
Critics also clapped back. One said, “Surprised they could afford to drive it there with the price of diesel.”
Volger, on Friday, said he had heard from a number of people who wanted the sign back up, and he said a bunch of people driving on I-80 when it went back up on Wednesday honked at them.
He said even the Nebraska State Patrol has used his barn as a landmark, recalling a lost man he saw wandering on his property that troopers said the barn helped them locate.
His goal for this year is to get the barn repainted so it looks a little nicer in the pictures people share online. He said his painter agreed to take the signs down and put them back up.
“I’m sure not doing it,” Volger said, laughing.
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Copyright 2026 KOLN. All rights reserved.
Nebraska
South Dakota State Center Damon Wilkinson Commits to Nebraska Basketball
Nebrasketball is one step closer to finishing off its roster construction for next season.
On Thursday, South Dakota State center Damon Wilkinson committed to the Huskers. He has two seasons of eligibility remaining.
Career Experience
The 6-foot-10, 245-pound Wilkinson spent the last three seasons at South Dakota State, developing into an All-Summit League-level player. Most recently, as a sophomore, the De Smet (SD) native averaged 13.9 points, 6.4 rebounds, and 1.3 assists for the Jackrabbits.
In total, he’s appeared in 59 games, including 19 starts. During the 2025–26 season, Wilkinson averaged 23.9 minutes per game while shooting 58.9% from the field and 72.0% from the free-throw line.
Nebraska is getting a player who scored in double figures in each of his final eight games, including a 19-point outing and three games with 18 points during that stretch. His career high, 24 points, came against UNO.
Where Wilkinson Slots in for the Big Red
Wilkinson has the potential to start for the Huskers next season. Regardless, he gives Fred Hoiberg some much-needed depth in the frontcourt. Nebraska has already signed Boston College transfer Boden Kapke, who stands 6-foot-11 and 255 pounds, but adding another experienced big man would help bolster the rotation for another potential NCAA Tournament run.
After establishing himself as one of the better bigs in the Summit League a season ago, Wilkinson’s production is well known. However, the jump to the Big Ten, widely regarded as the best conference in college basketball last year, will be a significant step up.
Still, his size and length would help replace what NU lost. Rebounding and interior scoring were two areas the Big Red struggled with despite all the success they saw. Wilkinson could provide an answer to both, helping Hoiberg stay more competitive against the top teams in the conference, like Michigan, Illinois, and Purdue.
NU’s Roster (With Wilkinson and Current High School Commits) Moving Forward
|
2026-27 |
2027-28 |
2028-29 |
2029-30 |
|---|---|---|---|
|
Cale Jacobsen- Sr. |
Will Cooper- Sr. |
Leo Curtis- Sr. |
Jacob Lanier- Sr. |
|
Henry Burt- Sr. |
Taj DeGourville- Sr. |
Braden Frager- Sr. |
Colin Rice- Sr. |
|
Pryce Sandfort- Sr. |
Damon Wilkinson- Sr. |
Jacob Lanier- Jr. |
Ty Schlagel- Jr. |
|
Connor Essegian- Sr. |
Leo Curtis- Jr. |
Colin Rice- Jr. |
|
|
Boden Kapke- Sr. |
Braden Frager- Jr. |
Ty Schlagel- So. |
|
|
Trevan Leonhardt- Sr. |
Jacob Lanier- So. |
||
|
Kadyn Betts- Sr. |
Colin Rice- So. |
||
|
Will Cooper- Jr. |
Ty Schlagel- Fr. |
||
|
Taj DeGourville- Jr. |
|||
|
Damon Wilkinson- Jr. |
|||
|
Sam Orme- Jr. |
|||
|
Leo Curtis- So. |
|||
|
Braden Frager- So. |
|||
|
Jacob Lanier- Fr. |
|||
|
Colin Rice- Fr. |
Husker Potential Starting Lineup
The window to enter the transfer portal closed April 21, but Nebraska is still not done adding to its roster. Even so, the foundation of next year’s lineup has already largely taken place.
Pryce Sandfort and Braden Frager are set to return, and the Big Red added Sam Orme, Kapke, Kadyn Betts, Trevan Leonhardt, and Taj DeGourville as well. That gives the Huskers multiple starting-caliber pieces to replace those that were lost from a season ago.
Frager and Sandfort are expected to start as off-ball guards, with Leonhardt likely taking over primary ball-handling duties. Orme and Kapke appear to be the leading candidates at the four and five spots, though both will still need to earn their roles. Either way, Nebraska has depth, and adding Wilkinson only strengthens it further.
Why Nebraska Makes Sense for Wilkinson
Even if he doesn’t fit into a starting role in 2026–27, the former Jackrabbit still has multiple years of eligibility remaining to develop in the Big Ten. And at the very least, he will factor into Nebraska’s rotation.
NU doesn’t have an abundance of players listed near the 7-foot range, so Wilkinson’s ability to score and rebound made him a clear priority on his visit this week. Besides those mentioned, Nebraska’s top – and only – returning frontcourt player is the 7-foot-2 Leo Curtis.
After leading Nebraska to a Sweet 16 appearance with an underfunded roster just over a month ago, the coaching staff has proven it can develop players at a high level. For a player like Wilkinson, with multiple years of eligibility remaining, Lincoln presents a strong opportunity to grow within a rising program.
The addition of Wilkinson leaves Hoiberg with one remaining roster spot for the 2026-27 campaign.
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Nebraska
$1M Powerball winning tickets sold in Nebraska
LINCOLN, Neb. (KSNB) – Nebraska has some new millionaires, so check your tickets to see if you are one of them.
Two lucky players who bought Powerball tickets for the Wednesday, April 29, drawing are holding tickets worth $1 million.
The Nebraska Lottery has confirmed that two tickets sold for Wednesday’s $143 million Powerball drawing matched the first five numbers, but not the Powerball number itself.
- Trotter’s Whoa & Go Express IV, 1111 S. 2nd St. in Ord.
- Mega Saver, 4725 S. 77th Ave. in Omaha.
The winning numbers from Wednesday’s Powerball drawing were 3, 19, 35, 51, 67; the Powerball was 15.
Thirty-four $1 million Powerball winning tickets have been sold in Nebraska since the $1 million prize was added to the game in January 2012.
Winning Nebraska Lottery Lotto tickets expire 180 days after the drawing.
If your prize is $20,000 or more, you must claim it in person at Lottery headquarters in Lincoln. Additional information about claiming prizes can be found at the Nebraska Lottery website, nelottery.com, or by calling 800-587-5200.
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Copyright 2026 KSNB. All rights reserved.
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