How to Watch NCAA Selection Sunday2023 Live Stream Online: Time and Channels

How to Watch NCAA Selection Sunday2023 Live Stream Online: Time and Channels

It's time to watch the Selection Sunday live stream. Because you can see the bracket in its pristine condition right before it gets tainted by the 2023 March Madness NCAA Tournament. Currently, we are all making predictions about who will go where and when.

As always, we head into Selection Sunday with a few top seeds in mind. This year, the teams most likely to be the #1 seed are Alabama, Houston, Kansas, and ...... Well, that's the tricky part.

Many put Purdue there, others put UCLA there, and UCLA is missing Jaylen Clark and could drop to a 3 seed. Speaking of second seeds, Arizona, Texas, Gonazaga, and Marquette are expected to get the second seed.

UAB's chances of moving up were put off by FAU, while Vanderbilt's win percentage dropped after a loss to Texas A&M. Ohio State's loss to Purdue was also seen as a factor in their move lower.

Here's everything you need to know to watch Selection Sunday online.

Hoops fans, if you can't find a CBS station on your travels, you can still watch a live stream of Selection Sunday. Using a virtual private network, or VPN, you can pretend you are surfing the web from your hometown (or anywhere else that doesn't experience power outages) and access the same streaming service you have already paid for.

Not sure which VPN is right for you? We tested a variety of services and chose ExpressVPN as the best VPN overall (opens in new tab).ExpressVPN offers excellent speed, great customer service, and a 30-day money-back guarantee if you are not satisfied.

In the US, Selection Sunday airs on CBS and is available on Hulu with Live TV and YouTube TV, but these are not on our list of best streaming services. They are expensive at $70 and $65, respectively.

So here's another gameplay on how to watch March Madness and Selection Sunday. You can watch CBS by subscribing to Paramount Plus Premium ($9.99/month (opens in new tab)), and the other March Madness channels (TBS, TNT, truTV) are available on the more affordable Sling.

Sling TV Blue costs $40 per month (opens in a new tab) (unless you are in a region where ABC is available and charged $45), which is $10 to $25 less than using Hulu or YouTube TV.

Basketball fans across the pond can follow the tournament live on BT Sport (opens in new tab).

Prices vary widely depending on whether you already have a BT TV and BT broadband subscription. Currently, you can watch BT Sport for £18 per month, which includes each of the channels included in BT Sport, plus Eurosport and Discovery Plus.

Another option for those who do not subscribe to BT is the BT Sport Monthly Pass (open in new tab) (£29.99).

All of these are great. But if you're not in the UK, you can still follow the March Madness live stream with services such as ExpressVPN (opens in new tab).

I'm not sure how many of the March Madness games will be broadcast on TSN (TSN2 airs an NCAA Bracketology special on Selection Sunday, for example), but I do know that some NCAA games.

Perfectionists who have no way to watch the games, however - like people in the UK - will have to take a VPN service like ExpressVPN (opens in new tab) for a spin.

As for Aussie streaming services offering live streams of March Madness, the best bet (as in previous years) seems to be Kayo Sports (opens in new tab) Kayo offers a 14-day free trial on both its basic and premium plans. Kayo One is $25/month and Kayo Basic is $30/month.

The Premium Kayo plan, at $35/month, offers all the same things as the regular plan, but with three simultaneous streams. The basic plan allows two streams at the same time.

If you want to watch full US channel broadcasts, we recommend trying ExpressVPN (opens in new tab).

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