How To Watch The Matches For FreeFIFA Women’s World Cup 2023 Quarterfinal Games.
"The FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023 started July 20 in Australia and New Zealand. This is the first year that the competition has had two host nations, which means unless you got really good travel deals to watch the teams go head-to-head live, you’ll need to rely on streaming options in order to watch the soccer matches online.Our suggestion: Use DirecTV’s five-day free trial here, which lets you live stream the Women’s World Cup online.DirecTV Free TrialBUY NOW1This year, the tournament will be held until Aug. 20, when the final two teams face off. We’re already at the quarter-finals as the Round of 16 comes to a fierce close.Thursday (Aug. 9) will commence the quarter-finals, which features the remaining eight teams who survived the Round of 16. Teams who’ve qualified include France, Spain, Japan, the Netherlands, Sweden, England, Australia and Colombia.Sadly, the United States were knocked out of the competition during their game against Sweden on Sunday (Aug. 6), which went to penalty kicks. While the game ended in a 0-0 tie, Sweden scored five penalty shots and the U.S. lost with only four.Kicking off the quarter-finals will be Spain vs. the Netherlands on Aug. 9 at 9 p.m. ET. Other matches taking place for the rest of the week include Japan vs. Sweden, England vs. Colombia and Australia vs. France.This will all lead up to the semi-finals, which will take place next week starting Tuesday (Aug. 15) at 4 a.m. ET.To check out the entire FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023 schedule, click here.Keep reading to learn how to watch the competition for free.How to Watch FIFA Women’s World Cup 2023.Fox Sports is the official English-language broadcast partner in the U.S., which means you’ll need to tune in to Fox Sports or any of its affiliated channels, such as Fox and FS1. Since it’s airing live on network television, cable viewers can tune in for free. Just be sure to check with your provider’s channel guide to find out what channel Fox Sports is on. You’ll also be able to view it through FoxSports.com or the Fox Sports app (you’ll just need to log in with your provider’s info).Don’t have cable? You might be able to watch the Women’s World Cup on TV using an HD antenna like one of these on Amazon.If you don’t want to spend hundreds of dollars on cable, there are some free and affordable streaming options such as DirecTV Stream, which offers a five-day free trial. Use the free trial to watch the Women’s World Cup online free.After your free trial is up, you can take advantage of DirecTV’s limited-time promo, giving you $10 off its plans; after that you’ll pay as low as $74.99/month.Want another affordable streaming option? Fubo offers a free trial, which means you can watch the Women’s World Cup for free without cable.fuboTV Free TrialBUY NOW1SlingTV is also offering a promo right now where you can get the first month for $20 (regularly $40). The subscription includes at least 31 network channels, including Fox, so you can use Sling to get a livestream of the Women’s World Cup online.Sling also offers DVR access, so you can record the soccer matches to watch the Women’s World Cup on demand. And Sling has an additional promo where you get 30 days free of premium channels including Showtime, Starz, MGM+ and AMC+ when you sign up. Choose between the blue package, the orange package or combine both and get access to over 60 channels, DVR and the ability to stream on up to three devices at once. With the promo, both channels combined is only $30 for the first month (regularly $60).Sling TV$20$4050% off% OFFBUY NOW1You can also subscribe to Hulu + Live TV, which gives you access to the entire Hulu library including Hulu Originals and FX shows as well as a ton of network TV channels. If you like bundles, you can add on ESPN+ and Disney+ to expand your program offerings.Viewing outside of the United States? Make sure to use ExpressVPN which lets you watch the Women’s World Cup from Mexico, England, Canada and other countries around the world. ExpressVPN gets you a World Cup live feed in Spanish, French and dozens of local languages." - Billboard.com
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