How a VPN helps sports fans
Wherever you are, a VPN is essential for sports streaming.
If you’re traveling, whether overseas or just to a different TV market, connect to a VPN to access your favorite sports channels securely on any network. ExpressVPN sends your traffic through a private and encrypted tunnel, allowing you to watch and keeping your data safe from prying eyes while abroad.
If you’re watching at home, use a VPN to bypass ISP throttling. ExpressVPN makes your internet traffic more anonymous, so your ISP can’t identify and slow down your streams.
Whether you’re looking to stream football, tennis, boxing, or any other event, you can catch every second of the action with a VPN. Score!
Can I use a VPN to watch live sports on streaming services from another country?
ExpressVPN is a privacy and security service and should not be used as a means of copyright circumvention. We cannot see or control what you do while connected to our VPN, so you are responsible for complying with our Terms of Service, your content provider’s terms, and any applicable laws.
Top sports to stream
ExpressVPN has you covered with the top sports to stream each week! Here’s what events have caught our eye for the week of June 3:
Tennis: French Open (June 3-9, times vary, 9Now / France TV / YouTube TV / Peacock / TSN+ / Eurosport): So much for Rafael Nadal holding off Father Time to win the French Open yet again. Alexander Zverev defeated the 14-time champion in straight sets early last week. Carlos Alcaraz and Novak Djokovic headline the surviving men’s bracket stars, while Iga Świątek and Coco Gauff continue pushing for greatness on the women’s side.
Cricket: 2024 ICC Men’s T20 World Cup (June 3-9, times vary, NOW / Willow TV / Sky Sports): The United States, West Indies, and Namibia opened the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup‘s first weekend with victories over the weekend. Which nations will join them in the win column over the coming days? Keep your eyes on the New Zealand Black Caps, who battle Afghanistan on Friday in Guyana.
Basketball: NBA Finals (June 6, June 9, times vary, NBA League Pass International / YouTube TV / TSN): Jayson Tatum and the Boston Celtics have returned to the NBA Finals for the second time in three years. The club’s latest chapter in their quest for a record 18th Larry O’Brien Trophy begins at home against Luka Dončić‘s Dallas Mavericks, who held off Anthony Edwards and the upstart Minnesota Timberwolves in the Western Conference Finals.
Formula 1: Canadian GP (June 9, 2 p.m. ET / 7 p.m. BST, ORF / RTBF / YouTube TV / F1 TV Pro): It turns out Max Verstappen is human after all! MVS has lost two of the Formula 1 season’s last three races after an unsurprising 5-1 start. Charles Leclerc, fresh off his victory in Monaco, has his eyes set on a triumph at the Canadian Grand Prix. Outside of Verstappen, no F1 driver has won consecutive races since Lewis Hamilton recorded three straight victories in 2021.