The Kansas Jayhawks (5) can do a lot to help secure a Big Ten title and a one seed in the tournament with a win Monday over the Oklahoma Sooners.

Oklahoma is one of the three teams tied in second behind Kansas and the Sooners, as well as Iowa State and Texas are three games back. All four teams have four games remaining, so Kansas could theoretically clinch the conference by the end of the week.

CLICK HERE to watch a live stream of the game.

They Jayhawks will try to start with a win Monday, after which their schedule gets easier when they play Oklahoma State, Texas Tech and West Virginia.

"That was our first goal to start the year off -- to win a 10th straight Big 12 championship," freshman guard Frank Mason told reporters after Saturday's 85-54 win over Texas, according to ESPN. "That's still our goal. Right now we are taking it one game at a time so we can reach that goal and keep making history."

Andrew Wiggins was held to seven points when the Jayhawks lost to Texas on Feb. 1. Against Oklahoma Jan. 8, Kansas won thanks to big games from Perry Ellis and Wayne Selden Jr., but Wiggins was stifled with nine points.

"We wanted to come out aggressive," Wiggins, the team's leading scorer with 16.4 points, said of the win over Texas. "Last time we got embarrassed at their place. We wanted to do the same thing to them, win every minute of every possession."

Oklahoma is a long-shot for the Big 12 title and will have to play Texas (24) after Kansas. But back-to-back wins will do wonders for the Sooners as they bid for the NCAA Tournament.

"It's the nature of Big 12 play. All year long -- we have played 14 now -- and it seems like every time we have finished a game we are looking at another real good team a few days later," Oklahoma coach Lon Kruger told reporters, according to ESPN. "This time is a little quicker than that and it's against a really good team. Kansas, I think clearly is one of the best teams in the country. Allen Fieldhouse is a great place to play and a great atmosphere. Our guys have a ton of respect for Kansas, but athletes look forward to those types of challenges."