A POWERHOUSE matchup between Duke and Kansas is on the cards after both teams picked up wins, while No. 1 Villanova has continued its impressive stretch.

Here are all of today’s Sweet Sixteen results!

AUSSIES IN ACTION

Duke’s Jack White, out of Victoria, didn’t see the floor in his team’s 69-65 win over Syracuse.

(5) WEST VIRGINIA 78 — 90 (1) VILLANOVA
Top-seeded Villanova beat the press of West Virginia and advanced to the Elite Eight of the NCAA Tournament.

Jalen Brunson scored 27 points to lead the Wildcats to a 90-78 victory over fifth-seeded West Virginia. Villanova will play the winner of the regional semifinal later Friday night between No. 2 seed Purdue and third-seeded Texas Tech for a spot in the Final Four.

Villanova trailed by 6 before scoring 11 straight points to take a 65-60 lead with 9:03 remaining. The 2016 national champions led 68-64 before scoring 10 of the next 14 points to pull away.

(5) CLEMSON 76 — 80 (1) KANSAS
Kansas made it through the Sweet 16 for the third year in a row as a No. 1 seed after surviving a late scare and beating fifth-seeded Clemson 80-76 in a Midwest Region semifinal.

Now the Jayhawks will try to get through the Elite Eight for the first time since 2012, when they lost the national title to Kentucky. They’ll play Sunday against the winner of Friday night’s second semifinal between No. 2 seed Duke and 11-seed Syracuse.

Clemson, in a regional semifinal for the first time since 1997, had a six-minute field goal drought and shot 36 percent in the first half. The Tigers trailed by 20 early in the second half.

But a 26-12 run fueled by Gabe DeVoe got Clemson within 74-68. DeVoe’s two free throws pulled the Tigers to 78-74 with 14 seconds left, but the Jayhawks were able to hang on.

Malik Newman scored 17 points to lead Kansas, Devonte Graham added 16 and Udoka Azubuike had 14 points and 11 rebounds before fouling out with 2:30 left. DeVoe finished with a career-high 31 points.

(11) SYRACUSE 65 — 69 (2) DUKE
Duke is back in the Elite Eight for the first time since its 2015 team won it all after holding off a late charge from rival Syracuse 69-65 on Friday night in the Midwest Region semifinals.

Marvin Bagley scored 22 points and Wendell Carter Jr had 14 with 12 rebounds for the Blue Devils (29-7), who will face top-seeded Kansas -a rare matchup of bluebloods in a tournament defined by chaos- on Sunday in Omaha. But Duke couldn’t shake the Orange (23-14) until the final buzzer sounded. Sharp-shooting Grayson Allen missed the front end of a one-and-one with 12 seconds left and Duke up 67-64. The Blue Devils fouled rather than let Syracuse go for a game-tying 3, and Tyus Battle only made one of two from the line. Gary Trent Jr. then made two free throws with 6.3 seconds to go to seal a closer-than-expected win that was similar to the Jayhawks’ 80-76 win over Clemson - a game Kansas led by 20 at one point.

Battle had 19 points to lead the Orange. Allen had 15 for Duke, but he was just 3 of 14 on 3s.

(3) TEXAS TECH 78 — 65 (2) PURDUE

Texas Tech is headed to the Elite Eight for the first time in program history. Keenan Evans had 16 points and the third-seeded Red Raiders overcame an early first half hole and dominated second-seeded Purdue down the stretch to earn a 78-65 victory in the Sweet 16 on Friday night.

Texas Tech will play top seed Villanova in the East regional final Sunday. Zach Smith added 14 points and five rebounds.

Texas Tech trailed by as many as 7 points in the first half. But it closed the period on a 10-0 run to take a 30-25 halftime advantage. Purdue got it down to 1 early in the second but the Red Raiders never surrendered the lead. Carsen Edwards led Purdue with 30 points, including four 3-pointers. The Boilermakers (30-7) were playing in their second straight regional semifinal. They were denied what would have been their first Elite Eight berth since 2000.

Purdue came in ranked second nationally in 3-point percentage and connected on 7 of 18 for the game. But the Boilermakers allowed the Red Raiders 17 second chance points.

Texas Tech (27-9) also got 33 points from its bench, compared to just 6 for Purdue.