Saturday, August 15, 2020

How to watch Wallabies vs All Blacks live

Exeter team: Stuart Hogg; Tom O’Flaherty, Henry Slade, Ollie Devoto, Olly Woodburn; Joe Simmonds (capt), Jack Maunder; Alec Hepburn, Luke Cowan-Dickie, Harry Williams, Jonny Gray, Jonny Hill, Dave Ewers, Jannes Kirsten, Sam Simmonds. Replacements: 16 Jack Yeandle, 17 Ben Moon, 18 Tomas Francis, 19 Sam Skinner, 20 Dom Armand, 21 Sam Hidalgo-Clyne, 22 Gareth Steenson, 23 Ian Whitten. Leicester team: George Worth; David Williams, Jaco Taute, Matt Scott, Jordan Olowofela; George Ford, Ben Youngs; Ellis Genge, Wallabies vs All Blacks   Tom Youngs (capt), Dan Cole, Tomás Lavanini, Calum Green, Harry Wells, Tommy Reffell, Jordan Taufua. Replacements: 16 Jake Kerr, 17 Nephi Leatigaga, 18 Joe Heyes, 19 Hanro Liebenberg, 20 Luke Wallace, 21 Thom Smith, 22 Ben White, 23 Zack Henry. To watch the action unfold and see who has returned from the break in the best shape, here we explain how to find a reliable Exeter v Leicester live stream wherever you are. How to watch Exeter v Leicester from outside your country If you’re abroad, but still want to watch your local Premiership coverage, like Exeter v Leicester this Saturday, you can do so by using a VPN – Virtual Private Network. VPNs allow you to get around any geo-blocking by changing your IP address so you appear in a different location and can watch the same legal Premiership live stream you would at home.Our friends at TechRadar have tested hundreds of VPN and recommend ExpressVPN, which is easy to use, has strong security features and allows you to watch on several devices at once, including smart TVs and phones, iPads, tablets, PCs and Macs.

 Plus, ExpressVPN comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee. You can try it out for a month for free or sign up for an annual plan and get three months free. Check out ExpressVPN Exeter v Leicester live stream: How to watch from the UK Exeter v Leicester, which kicks off at 2pm on Saturday, will be shown live on Channel 5 and BT Sport 1 in the UK. If you want to watch the match on BT but don’t have a contract, you can easily watch it online. That’s because BT Sport has a contract-free monthly pass that allows you to get instant access to all four of their sport channels for just £25. That’s great value given they are showing every Premiership match played behind closed doors live and will also cover the European Champions and Challenge Cup knockout stages in September and October. Plus, you can cancel at any time because there’s no contract. Get a BT Sport Monthly Pass Clubs are also working with BT Sport to allow Wallabies vs All Blacks live  season ticket-holders free access to home games on the channel’s app. If you’re from the UK but are overseas when Exeter v Leicester takes place, you can get your normal live stream but you’ll need a VPN – see the information above. Exeter v Leicester live stream: How to watch from the USA If you live in the States, the official broadcaster of Premiership matches is NBC, with matches streamed on NBC Sports Gold so you can watch them anytime and anywhere. Exeter v Leicester will kick off at 9am EST and 6am on the West Coast. The NBC Sports Gold Pass for rugby is $79.99 and includes coverage of the Gallagher Premiership, European Champions and Challenge Cups, and Guinness Six Nations. Exeter v Leicester stream: How to watch from New Zealand The match isn’t on live in New Zealand but you can catch it at 9.30am on Sunday morning on Sky Sport NZ 1. It costs $31.99 a month to add Sky Sport to your Sky Starter pack ($25.99), but if you sign up for 12 months before 30 September 2020 you’ll get your first month free. Plus, you’ll get Sky Go, which allows you to watch live rugby wherever you are. Sky Sport NZ offer Exeter v Leicester live stream: How to watch from Japan DAZN, which allows you to live stream sport or watch it on demand, is the place to go to watch Exeter v Leicester in Japan (kick-off 10pm on Saturday). The service is compatible with smart TVs and phones, tablets, PCs, streaming sticks, set-top boxes and gaming consoles. Find out more about DAZN here We recommend VPN services in the context of legal recreational uses. For example: Accessing a service from another country (subject to the terms and conditions of that service) Protecting your online security and strengthening your online privacy when abroad We do not support or condone the illegal or malicious use of VPN services.

 Consuming pirated content that is paid-for is neither endorsed nor approved by Future Publishing. Can’t get to the shops? You can download the digital edition of Rugby World straight to your tablet or subscribe to the print edition to get the magazine delivered to your door. LATEST RUGBY WORLD MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTION DEALS Follow Rugby World on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.Nelson Mandela once said, of sport: “Sport has the power to change the world. It has the power to inspire. It has the power to unite people in a way that little else does. It speaks to youth in a language that they understand. Sport can create hope where once there was only despair.” In the good times, rugby in Australia did just that. Yet now, “inspire” is not a word you associate with Australian rugby. Just this week, Rugby Australia unveiled Wallabies vs All Blacks Rugby stream  their 2021 broadcast proposal with great fanfare.identified with the failures of the past? — then followed it up with an ultimatum to New Zealand Rugby. All five Australian teams must be in the trans-Tasman competition or we walk. And, by the way, you have three weeks to agree to our terms. READ MORE:Cornered Kiwis may turn to Pasifika|Rivalries will be on hold for Union clash It’s a funny way to behave when part of the so-called “broadcast offering” includes the Bledisloe Cup. Surely we need a civilised working relationship with the Kiwis for that to work. Maybe the brinkmanship and theatrics are a ploy to take the focus off the new broadcast proposal which, I have to say, looks like a “show bag”. And you know what they say about “show bags”. The first part of the new broadcast proposal includes the Rugby Championship. As you know, the Rugby Championship includes Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Argentina. For a number of reasons, including the COVID-19 situation in South Africa and Argentina, I’m not sure such a competition could take place. And, anyway, South Africa are looking to play all their rugby in their own time zone. Rugby in Argentina is decimated. All their players have bolted to European clubs. Put simply, Rugby Australia can’t guarantee this competition to any broadcaster in the foreseeable future. This is Alice in Wonderland stuff. So, to the next part of the new broadcast proposal, the Bledisloe Cup. To be honest, this will be the only international rugby to be played by the Wallabies for some time. Forget about domestic Test series against any of the big European teams; and forget about any tours to the northern hemisphere. None of this is feasible until COVID-19 is under control in those parts of the world. Of course, this means we are paying our contracted Wallabies big money for not much. Let’s go next to the “show bag”, the State of the Union series, borrowed from rugby league. Rugby League’s State of Origin has 40 years of history. A rugby union version will be such a poor cousin in comparison to that of rugby league that it will only embarrass our game. Cheap knock-offs are cheap knock-offs. A knock-off Rolex looks shabby. Get real Rugby Australia. Start preparing for our own domestic competition. To be honest, it’s probably the best way forward, considering the difference in quality between the Kiwi and Aussie Super Rugby teams. Super Rugby Aotearoa is top-class rugby, much like the NRL. Most of us would rather see Australian Super Rugby teams competing against one another, on their level. The next new proposal, the Super Eight competition between the best two teams in Australia, New Zealand and South Africa, plus a team from South America and Japan, is the dumbest idea in the “show bag”, for the same reason that the Rugby Championship is pie in the sky. The people proposing this rubbish are on another planet. It’s as if there was a brainstorming meeting at Rugby Australia, but someone forgot to throw out the bad ideas. As usual, the clubs and schools are the last item on the agenda. Whatever can be done in this space should be a priority. If we can’t excite the next generation of players and supporters, our support will slowly evaporate. I have said before, structure domestic rugby such that your international players can come back into club rugby and fertilise the game. Rugby Australia needs a Kerry Packer-type visionary to revolutionise our game and make it prime-time. You can’t grow a game that no one can see. The first step would be to pull some people together who actually understand the way forward. It’s clear that those proposing the latest “show bag” would barely qualify for entry into the most remote provincial rural exhibition. Much of what has been proposed to broadcasters by Rugby Australia for 2021 can only be described as “dodgy”. It would have to be a dumb broadcaster to buy into any of it. But there is one sliver of good news. And it concerns an iconic piece of rugby infrastructure. The historic Ballymore in Queensland is owned by the QRU on a Deed of Grant title, the closest you can get to freehold. It is more than 12ha of priceless land, 3km from the CBD, arguably one of the finest rugby assets in the world. At a time of hopeless uncertainty with Australian rugby, it’s encouraging to note that the Palaszczuk government has announced a $15 million grant to match the federal government’s $15 million, which was put on the table 18 months ago. I read only recently a headline story, “Finally, facelift for Ballymore gets green light”. If that’s not good news for rugby, nothing is. The Queensland state ALP and the Premier are to be congratulated for promising to make Ballymore the famous home for Queensland rugby again; and the corollary, restoring it as the money-making venue it once was, to say nothing of honouring and perpetuating its magnificent history. Indeed, in these uncertain times for rugby, Ballymore is the only stadium that belongs to our game and its family. If we can have a new stadium in Townsville for $300 million; and Perth is to get a new stadium for soccer for $42 million; and the AFL has Marvel Stadium, which underpins its finances; Ballymore can add some much-needed grunt to rugby’s balance sheet. The QRU has not made a quid since it moved to Suncorp and started paying rent. Well done Annastacia Palaszczuk. Now, let’s put the money on the table and get going. A magnificent pre-election boost for rugby and for a government exercising.

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How to watch Wallabies vs All Blacks live

Exeter team: Stuart Hogg; Tom O’Flaherty, Henry Slade, Ollie Devoto, Olly Woodburn; Joe Simmonds (capt), Jack Maunder; Alec Hepburn, Luke Co...