Stream this Match LIVE
In order to watch this match LIVE in your country, please click the streaming option below:
Live Streams & TV channels by region
Find out how to watch live sports in your region including lists of all of the broadcasters who hold official TV and live streaming rights in your country at the moment.
Alternatively, try the live streaming option above if your country is not included in the list below.
If there are no streams available in your country, you can try a stream from a different country. However, geoblocking might apply, preventing you from watching the stream. To avoid geoblocking, you can use ExpressVPN.
A VPN allows you to change your IP address by connecting to servers all around the world. ExpressVPN has servers in 94 countries, including the ones listed below. ExpressVPN comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee, and is currently offering 3 extra months FREE with a 12-month subscription.
- United Kingdom Open Stream
- Sky Sports • TNT Sports • Premier Sports • BBC • ITV • DAZN • Amazon Prime Video
- Ireland Open Stream
- Sky Sports • Virgin Media Sport • Viaplay Sports • RTÉ • TG4 • TNT Sports
- France Open Stream
- beIN Sports • Canal+ • France Télévisions • Eurosport • RMC Sport • M6
- Spain Open Stream
- Movistar LaLiga • Gol • Mediaset • DAZN • Movistar Liga de Campeones • Movistar+
- Italy Open Stream
- DAZN • Sky Sport • Mediaset • RAI • Eleven Sports • Amazon Prime Video
- Germany Open Stream
- DAZN • Sky Sport • ProSieben • Sport1 • Eurosport
- Belgium Open Stream
- Eleven Sports Network • Play Sports • Eurosport • Proximus Sports
- Netherlands Open Stream
- ESPN • Ziggo Sport • Eurosport • FOX • NOS
- United States Open Stream
- CBS • Fox Sports • NBC • ESPN • NFL Network • DirecTV
- Portugal Open Stream
- SportTV • TVI • Canal 11 • Eleven Sports
- Sweden Open Stream
- SVT • Viasport • Eurosport • dplay • TV6
- Greece Open Stream
- ERT • Cosmote Sport • Nova Sports • Eurosport
- Denmark Open Stream
- TV2 Sport • TV3+, TV3 Sport 1, TV3 Sport 2, Viaplay • Eurosport 2, Canal 9
- Australia Open Stream
- Paramount+ Sports • Network 10 • Fox Sports • Optus Sport • beIN Sports • ESPN
- New Zealand Open Stream
- Sky-beIN • Sky Sport • Spark Sport • beIN Sports • ESPN
- India Open Stream
- Star Sports Network India • Sony India • DD Sports • Amazon Prime Video • FanCode App • Eurosport India • 1Sports
- Canada Open Stream
- CTV • TSN • DAZN • CBS • ESPN
- South America Open Stream
- ESPN • DIRECTV Sports • GolTV • Fox Sports
- Kenya Open Stream
- K24 • Bamba Sport • 365Sports
- South Africa Open Stream
- e.tv News & Sports • SABC Sport • Super Sport • TellyTrack • ESPN
- Turkey Open Stream
- beIN Sports
- Switzerland Open Stream
- Teleclub Sports • SRF • Sky Sport
- Norway Open Stream
- NENT • TV Sport
- Poland Open Stream
- Canal+ • ESPN • Eurosport • NSport+ • Orange Sport • PolSat
- Nigeria Open Stream
- Kwese Free Sports • Supersport Nigeria • StarTimes Sports
- Malaysia Open Stream
- Astro • BeIN Sports • Fox Sports • Unifi Sports • Sukan RTM
- Bangladesh Open Stream
- T Sports • GTV • Sony SIX • Star Sports • Sony TEN
- Pakistan Open Stream
- Geo Super • PTV Sports • TEN Sports Pakistan • A Sports
- Last updated:
- 13/01/2026 03:39:58
What is Geo-blocking and How Does it Work?
Geo-blocking is the reason why some sports streams are available at home but suddenly unavailable when you travel. It works by using your device’s IP address to detect your location, allowing broadcasters to decide whether or not you can access their content. The main driver behind this is broadcasting rights, which are sold on a country-by-country basis; for example, the Premier League has different rights-holders in the UK, the US and Australia, each with their own agreements. Because of this, a broadcaster who owns the rights in one territory cannot legally stream those matches elsewhere. While this can be frustrating for fans trying to watch abroad, services like VPNs can sometimes help by masking your IP address and letting you connect as though you were still at home. However, not every provider allows this, so it’s always best to check the terms of the streaming service you want to use.
Why Broadcasting Rights Differ by Country
Broadcasting rights for live sport are rarely sold on a global scale. Instead, leagues and tournament organisers negotiate separate deals with broadcasters in different territories, allowing them to maximise revenue and ensure that the sport reaches as many fans as possible around the world. This is why the same competition can be shown on completely different platforms depending on where you live. For example, the Premier League is carried by Sky Sports and TNT Sports in the UK, while viewers in the US follow it on NBC or Peacock, and fans in Germany watch through DAZN.
These agreements often vary not just by country but also by competition and format. A broadcaster might own the rights to show league matches but not cup competitions, or only have permission to stream highlights rather than live coverage. Sometimes, rights are even split between multiple broadcasters within the same country, with one company showing Saturday games and another covering midweek fixtures. While this system can feel confusing for supporters, it’s a central part of how modern sport is financed. The money generated from selling rights is a major revenue stream for leagues, clubs and governing bodies, helping to fund everything from grassroots development to elite player wages.
Tips for Watching Sport Abroad
Travelling doesn’t have to mean missing your favourite matches, but it does pay to plan ahead. Always check who has the broadcasting rights in the country you’re visiting, as many tournaments are shown worldwide, and be mindful of time zone differences so you don’t get caught out by an early morning or late-night kick-off. In some places, major events are even shown on free-to-air channels, so it’s worth checking before signing up for a subscription. WheresTheMatch makes things easier by showing you exactly which broadcasters have the rights in each country, with dedicated sport streaming pages for countries such as Germany and Brazil. If all else fails, look out for legitimate local services such as DAZN, ESPN+ or Kayo Sports, which often show the same competitions.
What If I Can’t Find an Official Broadcaster in My Country?
Not every country has official coverage for every sporting competition, and in some regions broadcasting rights simply aren’t sold at all. If you can’t find a broadcaster in your country, there are still a few options to explore. Some international networks, such as DAZN or beIN Sports, operate across multiple territories and may carry the competition you want to follow. In certain cases, free-to-air channels will also pick up selected matches, particularly for major international tournaments. Another option is to look at broadcasters in nearby countries, as some of them extend their coverage to wider regions. If no local broadcaster is available, keeping up with live text updates, radio coverage, or highlight packages can still help you stay connected to the action.