Evil Geniuses announced their Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare team on Monday.

Multi-game esports organization Evil Geniuses will form its first Call of Duty team since it left the esport in late 2014 and intends to sign former Luminosity Gaming players Anthony "NAMELESS" Wheeler and Jeremy "StuDyy" Astacio, former compLexity Gaming Colt "Havok" McLendon and Elevate's Jared "Nagafen" Harrell, sources close to the players and team tell ESPN.

Nagafen is the only player in the lineup who is still under contract, and his rights would need to be sold to Evil Geniuses for him to compete with EG. Nagafen has been competing with free agents NAMELESS, StuDyy and Havok online since the release of Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare.

"At this time, Jared is still under contract with Elevate, so any information regarding his move elsewhere would be speculation," Elevate chief brand officer Collin Ruud tells ESPN. "We are aware of his intended four-man roster and their discussion with other organizations but since nothing is formalized, we cannot comment any further."

Should the deal go through, Evil Geniuses will compete with the lineup at the PlayStation Experience Invitational on Dec. 3-4, which was announced Friday by the Call of Duty World League and PlayStation. The list of attendees include Call of Duty World Championship runner up Splyce, as well as Team Elevate, Rise Nation, FaZe Clan, Luminosity Gaming, Orbit, Renegades and Evil Geniuses. A lineup announcement is expected next week.

The move to acquire a lineup comes during the Call of Duty roster shuffle, which often occurs around the annual release of a new title in the series. NAMELESS and StuDyy were released from the Luminosity Gaming lineup on Oct. 28, after that organization pursued three players formerly of Rise Nation. Meanwhile, Havok's contract expired with compLexity Gaming several weeks ago.

Evil Geniuses' return to Call of Duty competitive comes after the team sat out the entirety of 2015 and 2016, including the launch of the Call of Duty World League earlier this year. In 2017, Activision, the publisher of Call of Duty, plans to launch an offline league which will be organized by its subsidiary company, Major League Gaming, in Columbus, Ohio.