How To Watch Arkansas Razorbacks Vs Hawaii Rainbow Warriors

Arkansas and Hawai’i meet in the first round of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament on March 19, and the game will be available nationally on TV and through major streaming services carrying the tournament broadcast.
The matchup features the Arkansas Razorbacks against the Hawai’i Rainbow Warriors. Multiple outlets, including USA Today, IndyStar, The New York Times and Saturday Down South, published viewing guides for the game ahead of tipoff, detailing the time, TV channel and streaming options.
Viewers can watch the game on the designated NCAA Tournament television channel assigned to the Arkansas-Hawai’i first-round contest. For fans who will not be in front of a TV, the game can also be streamed through live TV streaming platforms that include that channel in their lineup. Several previews and listings also point fans to live coverage that includes game updates, statistics and play-by-play.
For Arkansas, the game marks the start of its postseason run, with the program’s official site publishing a first-round preview for the meeting with Hawai’i. For Hawai’i, it is a chance to advance in the tournament bracket against an SEC opponent on a national stage.
This development matters because the NCAA Tournament draws one of the largest national audiences in American sports, and the first round is often the most congested viewing window of the event. Fans frequently need clear, accurate information on where to find the correct broadcast amid simultaneous games and shifting channel assignments across the tournament schedule.
It also matters for alumni bases and local markets. Arkansas supporters across the state and the broader Razorbacks fan network typically follow the team through the tournament regardless of where games are played, while Hawai’i fans often rely on national cable and streaming options due to distance and time-zone differences. Clear viewing information ensures those audiences can watch live rather than track only highlights and final scores.
What happens next is straightforward: the game will tip on March 19 at the scheduled time listed by the tournament’s broadcast partners, with coverage beginning on the assigned channel and continuing through postgame analysis on the same network family. Fans looking to stream should confirm ahead of time that their service carries the game’s channel and that they are logged in and ready before tip, as tournament windows can overlap and switching between games is common.
For those following on mobile or at work, live game trackers will provide real-time scoring, possession-by-possession play-by-play and updated team and player statistics as the contest unfolds.
By the end of the night, one team will move on in the bracket and the other will see its season end, and the quickest way to catch every possession is knowing the correct TV channel or streaming home before the ball goes up.
