Big Ten Baseball Tournament Central: Schedule, Results, Bracket

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The Big Ten Conference Baseball Tournament is here, and that means a new format to follow.
UCLA earned the top seed by running away with the regular season. That gives the Bruins an automatic bid in the quarterfinals, which begin on Friday. They're joined by 2-seed Nebraska, 3-seed Oregon, and 4-seed USC.
Seeds 5-12 must make it through a pair of double-elimination brackets to advance to the quarterfinals. All qualifiers from the double-elimination brackets need two wins to advance.
Once the quarterfinals begin on Friday, a single-elimination format is followed to determine the Big Ten Conference Tournament champion. Nebraska is the two-time reigning tournament champion.

Follow along below for all the results. Every game will be broadcast on the Big Ten Network.
All times central.
Double Elimination Bracket 1
Tuesday, May 19
- Game 1: #5 Purdue vs. #12 Michigan State at 9 a.m.
- Game 2: #8 Iowa vs. #9 Illinois at 1 p.m.
Wednesday, May 20
- Game 5: G1 loser vs. G2 loser at 9 a.m.
- Game 7: G1 winner vs. G2 winner at 5 p.m.
Thursday, May 21
- Game 9: G5 winner vs. G7 loser at 2 p.m.
Double Elimination Bracket 2
Tuesday, May 19
- Game 3: #7 Michigan vs. #10 Rutgers at 5 p.m.
- Game 4: #6 Ohio State vs. #11 Washington at 9 p.m.
Wednesday, May 20
- Game 6: G3 loser vs. G4 loser at 1 p.m.
- Game 8: G3 winner vs. G4 winner at 9 p.m.
Thursday, May 21
- Game 10: G6 winner vs. G8 loser at 6 p.m.
Single Elimination Bracket
Friday, May 22 (Quarterfinals)
- Game 11: #4 USC vs. G7 winner at 9 a.m.
- Game 12: #1 UCLA vs. G9 winner at 1 p.m.
- Game 13: #2 Nebraska vs. G10 winner at 5 p.m.
- Game 14: #3 Oregon vs. G8 winner at 9 p.m.
Saturday, May 23 (Semifinals)
- Game 15: G11 winner vs. G12 winner at 2 p.m.
- Game 16: G13 winner vs. G14 winner at 6 p.m.
Sunday, May 24 (Championship)
- Game 17: G15 winner vs. G16 winner at 2 p.m.

Big Ten Baseball Tournament History
The Big Ten Baseball Tournament has been played nearly every year since 1981, taking off just 2020 and 2021 due to the COVID-19 Pandemic. Host sites have included Ann Arbor, Minneapolis, Columbus, Champaign, State College, Iowa City, Bloomington, and Omaha.
From 1981 to 1999, the tournament used a double-elimination format with four teams. For the first seven years, qualifying teams were from the East and West divisions. The field expanded to six teams in 2000, before moving to eight teams in 2014 and 12 teams in 2025.

With the latest conference realignment bringing in Oregon, UCLA, USC, and Washington, the regular double-elimination format was dropped in 2025. Instead, pool play determined who advanced to the single-elimination quarterfinals. That format was dropped after just one run, with this year's use of two double-elimination brackets to determine the second half of the single-elimination field for the weekend.
Michigan, Minnesota, and Ohio State are tied for the most conference tournament titles at 10 each. Nebraska is the reigning tournament champion, having won each of the last two editions going into 2026.
Below are the champions from each year.
- 1981 Michigan
- 1982 Minnesota
- 1983 Michigan
- 1984 Michigan
- 1985 Minnesota
- 1986 Michigan
- 1987 Michigan
- 1988 Minnesota
- 1989 Illinois
- 1990 Illinois
- 1991 Ohio State
- 1992 Minnesota
- 1993 Minnesota
- 1994 Ohio State
- 1995 Ohio State
- 1996 Indiana
- 1997 Ohio State
- 1998 Minnesota
- 1999 Michigan
- 2000 Illinois
- 2001 Minnesota
- 2002 Ohio State
- 2003 Ohio State
- 2004 Minnesota
- 2005 Ohio State
- 2006 Michigan
- 2007 Ohio State
- 2008 Michigan
- 2009 Indiana
- 2010 Minnesota
- 2011 Illinois
- 2012 Purdue
- 2013 Indiana
- 2014 Indiana
- 2015 Michigan
- 2016 Ohio State
- 2017 Iowa
- 2018 Minnesota
- 2019 Ohio State
- 2020 Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
- 2021 Cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
- 2022 Michigan
- 2023 Maryland
- 2024 Nebraska
- 2025 Nebraska
Have a question or comment for Kaleb? Send an email to kalebhenry.huskermax@gmail.com.

Kaleb Henry is an award-winning sports reporter, covering collegiate athletics since 2014 via radio, podcasting, and digital journalism. His experience with Big Ten Conference teams goes back more than a decade, including time covering programs such as the Nebraska Cornhuskers, Oregon Ducks, and USC Trojans. He has contributed to Sports Illustrated since 2021. Kaleb has won multiple awards for his sports coverage from the Nebraska Broadcasters Association and Midwest Broadcast Journalists Association. Prior to working in sports journalism, Kaleb was a Division I athlete on the Southern Illinois University-Edwardsville Track and Field team where he discussed NCAA legislation as SIUE's representative to the Ohio Valley Conference Student-Athlete Advisory Committee.
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