The NCAA Tournament has produced unpredictability and wild upsets at nearly every turn this March, but Sunday's Elite Eight matchup between Duke and Kansas is the result many expected would ultimately determine which team survives the vaunted Midwest Region.

The Blue Devils and Jayhawks will meet Sunday afternoon in the second game of an Elite Eight doubleheader on CBS. Winner advances to San Antonio for the Final Four. The loser goes home.

My sources tell me this will be a highly entertaining game if you're a college basketball fan. So stay tuned.

Below you'll find information on how to watch or stream the game.

Click here to follow updates in our LIVE bracket



About No. 1 seed Kansas



Kansas' run hasn't come without its challenges as the Jayhawks have won two consecutive NCAA Tournament thrillers by a mere four points. After leading by as many as 20 over Clemson on Friday, they nearly fooled around and fumbled it in the final minute. Will Kansas use that late-game lull as motivation to prove a point on Sunday?

About No. 2 seed Duke



Duke cracked the Syracuse zone defense on Friday and dispatched the Orange 69-65, despite putrid shooting from beyond the arc. It's the only game in the NCAA Tournament the Blue Devils have won by fewer than 22 points.

So which team do you need to back? Visit SportsLine now to find out what side of the Duke-Kansas spread you can bank on almost 65 percent of the time, all from the computer model on a blistering 27-15 run on NCAA Tournament picks.

Viewing Information

When : Sunday, March 25 at 5:05 p.m. ET

: Sunday, March 25 at 5:05 p.m. ET Where : CenturyLink Center Omaha in Omaha, Nebraska



: CenturyLink Center Omaha in Omaha, Nebraska TV : CBS



: CBS Stream: March Madness Live

March Madness Live Follow: CBS Sports App

Live updates:

The last two years, SportsLine's computer simulation correctly predicted nine out of 12 double-digit NCAA Tournament upsets in the first round with their computer algorithm. This year they have plenty of upsets again, like one region where you need to pick the 11, 12, AND 13 seeds, and another region with a 4-seed in the Final Four. Click here to see SportsLine's Optimized NCAA Tournament bracket.