logo
How to watch New York Liberty vs Indiana Fever: TV/stream info, preview, tip off time

How to watch New York Liberty vs Indiana Fever: TV/stream info, preview, tip off time

NBC Sports21 hours ago

The undefeated New York Liberty — the reigning WNBA champions — face off against the Indiana Fever in a Commissioner's Cup matchup this Saturday, June 14, at 3:00 PM ET. New York won its last contest against the Fever, 90-88, on May 24.
The New York Liberty improved to 9-0 — its best start in franchise history — after defeating the Chicago Sky 85-66 on Tuesday at home. Sabrina Ionescu finished with 23 points, 7 assists, and 4 steals in the win, while Breanna Stewart added 18 points, 7 rebounds, and 5 assists.
Kennedy Burke became just the fifth player in WNBA history to shoot 100% from three-point range on more than three attempts in back-to-back games. She finished with 15 points, three of which were three-pointers. Burke is in her second season with the Liberty.
Tonight, Kennedy Burke became one of only 5 players in @WNBA history to shoot 100% from beyond the arc on more than three attempts in consecutive games, joining Catherine Kraayeveld (as the only other NYL player to do so), Jennifer Azzi, Briann January, and Alysha Clark.
'I had a great conversation with Kennedy in the offseason about what her role would look like, and this is exactly what I imagined. We have confidence in her,' said Liberty head coach Sandy Brondello. 'She's looking good, feeling good, and knowing that her players trust her out there.'
Sabrina Ionescu with the no-look DIME to Kennedy Burke, and the Liberty lead by 20 PTS! 🔥
CHI-NYL on ESPN | WNBA Commissioner's Cup presented by @coinbase pic.twitter.com/6VRyMy8Kv9
The Indiana Fever fell 77-58 to the Atlanta Dream on Tuesday night on the road. Natasha Howard finished with a team-high 15 points and 10 rebounds in the loss.
It was the team's fifth straight game without Caitlin Clark, who is out with a left quadriceps strain. Her last appearance was on May 24 against the Liberty. However, the 2024 WNBA Rookie of the Year could return soon.
'We're ready to start ramping back up … It's completely different when you're just doing one-on-one workouts than when you're out there in five-on-five, getting up and down the floor and moving laterally,' said Indiana head coach Stephanie White. "[Clark's] been allowed to do some practicing, not everything. We're going to be smart and we're going to be cautious and we're going to play the long game and work her back in, very intentionally.'
RELATED: WNBA Futures 2025 - Betting, odds, expert picks, best bets including Clark, Collier, Wilson, and More
Natalie Esquire,
How to watch NY Liberty vs Indiana Fever:
When: Saturday, June 14
Where: Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana
Time: 3:00 PM ET
TV Channel: ABC
Live Stream: ESPN+
Jackie Powell,
How can I watch WNBA games?
Over 175 regular season WNBA games will be available across the following networks and streaming platforms: ABC, ESPN, CBS, CBS Sports Network, ION, NBA TV, Prime Video, WNBA League Pass.
Click here for the full 2025 WNBA Season Schedule.
2025 WNBA Season Key Dates:
June 1-17: Commissioner's Cup Tournament
July 1: Commissioner's Cup Championship
July 17-21: WNBA All-Star Break
July 19: WNBA All-Star Game
September 11: Regular Season Ends
September 14: Playoffs Begin
October 17: Last Possible Finals Date
RELATED: WNBA Preview - Lynx try to stay undefeated, Caitlin Clark nears return from quad injury

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Falcons training camp schedule: 11 open practice dates announced
Falcons training camp schedule: 11 open practice dates announced

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Falcons training camp schedule: 11 open practice dates announced

The Atlanta Falcons have released their 2025 training camp schedule, including 11 open practices. The team wrapped up its mandatory minicamp on Wednesday and will pick things back up starting late in July. Fans can get their first look at this year's squad on July 24 at IBM Performance Field . According to the Falcons' official website, fans will get the chance to hear from head coach Raheem Morris and general manager Terry Fontenot at the team's second practice on July 26. Atlanta will also hold two joint practices with the Tennessee Titans on August 12 and 13. On July 26, as part of the NFL's Back Together Weekend, fans in attendance for the open practice will have the opportunity to hear from Falcons head coach Raheem Morris and general manager Terry Fontenot. They will also enjoy appearances from Freddie Falcon, Falcons cheerleaders and former Falcons players. -- Terrin Waack, Falcons training camp: 11 open practice dates July 24: 9:30 a.m. ET July 26: 9:30 a.m. ET (Morris, Fontenot) July 27: 9:30 a.m. ET July 29: 9:30 a.m. ET July 31: 9:30 a.m. ET August 4: 9:30 a.m. ET August 5: 9:30 a.m. ET August 6: 9:30 a.m. ET August 11: 9:30 a.m. ET August 12: 9:40 a.m. ET (joint practice) August 13: 9:40 a.m. ET (joint practice) This article originally appeared on Falcons Wire: Atlanta Falcons training camp schedule: 11 open practice dates

Canadian Grand Prix 2025: How to watch this weekend's F1 race, channel, time and more
Canadian Grand Prix 2025: How to watch this weekend's F1 race, channel, time and more

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Canadian Grand Prix 2025: How to watch this weekend's F1 race, channel, time and more

If you buy something through a link in this article, we may earn commission. Pricing and availability are subject to change. The Canadian Grand Prix at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve is this weekend, here's how to tune in. (Eric Bolte-USA TODAY Sports) Formula One heads to Montreal, Canada, for the Canadian Grand Prix this Sunday afternoon. The Pirelli Canadian Grand Prix takes place at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve and consists of 68 laps around the 4.36 km hybrid street circuit that occasionally features more groundhogs than cars on the track. You can catch this weekend's racing action on F1 TV Pro and ESPN+; here's everything you need to know about F1 this season, including how to watch this weekend's race, along with the full 2025 F1 grand prix schedule. How to watch the 2025 Canadian Grand Prix: Date: Sunday, June 15, 2025 Advertisement Time: Coverage begins at 12:30 p.m. ET, Race begins at 2 p.m. ET TV channel: ESPN Deportes Streaming: ESPN+, F1 TV Pro, Hulu + Live TV, DirecTV, or with a VPN When is the Canadian Grand Prix? Coverage of the 2025 Canadian Grand Prix on Sunday, June 15 begins at 12:30 p.m. ET, with the race itself starting at 2 p.m. You can also tune in to practices and qualifying races on Friday and Saturday. What channel is the Canadian Grand Prix on? You can tune into Sunday's race on ESPN+ and ESPN Deportes, which will broadcast the race live in Spanish. Practices and qualifying races will air across ESPN2, ESPN3, ESPNU and ESPN Deportes. Advertisement This season, ESPN+ will also offer alternate viewing options of the main event, including an Onboard Cameras Channel, which gives fans a look at the race from select drivers' perspectives, plus a Driver Tracker that plots every driver's location on the course in real time. For super fans who don't want to miss a single race, all the action is streamable through an F1 TV Pro subscription. Schedule of events at the 2025 Canadian Prix: All times Eastern Friday, June 13 Free Practice 1, 1:30 p.m. (ESPN3, ESPN Deportes, ESPNU, F1 TV) Free Practice 2, 5 p.m. (ESPN3, ESPN Deportes, ESPNU, F1 TV) Saturday, June 14 Free Practice 3, 12:30 p.m. (ESPN2, ESPN3, ESPN Deportes, F1 TV) Advertisement Qualifying, 4 p.m. (ESPN2, ESPN3, F1 TV) Sunday, June 15 Canadian Grand Prix, 2 p.m. (ESPN Deportes, ESPN+, F1 TV) How to watch the 2025 F1 season: Stream F1 races and practices F1 TV Pro An F1 TV Pro subscription lets you stream every F1 race live, plus all the practices, qualifying races and pre-race shows. F1 TV is also home to F1's post-race live shows, analysis, Tech Talks, documentaries and the official F1 archive. You can subscribe to F1 TV Pro for $11.99/month or pay $85 for the entire season. $84.99/year at F1 TV Stream alternate action at the Canadian Grand Prix on ESPN+ ESPN+ This weekend you can catch alternate camera views of the Canadian Grand Prix on ESPN+, including the Onboard Cameras Channel, which gives fans a look at the race from select drivers' perspectives, plus a Driver Tracker that plots every driver's location on the course in real time. If you're a general sports lover and want to occasionally tune into F1 coverage, an ESPN+ subscription is a great option. ESPN+ grants you access to exclusive ESPN+ content including live events, fantasy sports tools and premium ESPN+ articles. You can stream ESPN+ through an app on your smart TV, phone, tablet, computer and on $11.99/month at ESPN Watch the Canadian Grand Prix with the help of a VPN Looking for a way to stream F1 coverage from anywhere in the world without ESPN? One way to catch this weekend's coverage of the Canadian Grand Prix is with the help of a VPN. With a VPN, you can change your location to one in Austria and watch free coverage of the race on ServusTV. A VPN (virtual private network) helps protect your data, can mask your IP address and is perhaps most popular for being especially useful in the age of streaming. Whether you're looking to watch Friends on Netflix (which left the U.S. version of the streamer back in 2019) or tune in to the F1 race this weekend without a cable package, a VPN can help you out. Stream F1 coverage from anywhere ExpressVPN ExpressVPN offers 'internet without borders,' meaning you can tune into a Belgian or Austrian livestream of the race for free as opposed to paying for ESPN or ESPN+ for US coverage of F1. All you'll need to do is sign up for ExpressVPN, change your server location to one in Belgium and then find the F1 livestream on RTBF, or change your location to Austria to watch free coverage on ServusTV. ExpressVPN's added protection, speed and range of location options make it an excellent choice for first-time VPN users looking to stretch their streaming abilities, plus, it's Engadget's top pick for the best streaming VPN. Plus, the service offers a 30-day money-back guarantee, in case you're nervous about trying a VPN. From $4.99/month at ExpressVPN F1 2025 grand prix schedule: Sunday, June 15: Canadian Grand Prix, Circuit Gilles Villeneuve (12:30 p.m. ET, ESPN+) Advertisement Sunday, June 29: Austrian Grand Prix, Red Bull Ring (9 a.m. ET, ESPN) Sunday, July 6: British Grand Prix, Silverstone Circuit (10 a.m. ET, ESPN) Sunday, July 27: Belgian Grand Prix, Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps (9 a.m. ET, ESPN) Sunday, August 3: Hungarian Grand Prix, Hangaroring (9 a.m. ET, ESPN) Sunday, August 31: Dutch Grand Prix, Circuit Zandvoort (9 a.m. ET, ESPN) Sunday, September 7: Italian Grand Prix, Monza Circuit (9 a.m. ET, ESPN) Sunday, September 21: Azerbaijan Grand Prix, Baku City Circuit (7 a.m. ET, ESPN) Sunday, October 5: Singapore Grand Prix, Marina Bay Street Circuit (8 a.m. ET, ESPN) Sunday, October 19: United States Grand Prix, Circuit of the Americas (3 p.m. ET, ESPN, ABC) Advertisement Sunday, October 26: Mexico City Grand Prix, Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez (4 p.m. ET, ESPN) Sunday, November 9: Sau Paulo Grand Prix, Interlagos Circuit (12 p.m. ET, ESPN) Saturday, November 22: Las Vegas Grand Prix, Las Vegas Strip Circuit (11 p.m. ET, ESPN, ABC) Sunday, November 30: Qatar Grand Prix, Lusail International Circuit (11 a.m. ET, ESPN) Sunday, December 7: Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Yas Marina Circuit (8 a.m. ET, ESPN) More ways to watch the 2025 F1 season:

How do you coach a Hall of Fame basketball player? WNBA's Cheryl Reeve has the answers
How do you coach a Hall of Fame basketball player? WNBA's Cheryl Reeve has the answers

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

How do you coach a Hall of Fame basketball player? WNBA's Cheryl Reeve has the answers

The Athletic If you are looking for Hall of Fame basketball players, Cheryl Reeve is a good place to start. The head coach and president of basketball operations for the WNBA's Minnesota Lynx has coached four members of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame (Seimone Augustus, Sylvia Fowles, Maya Moore and Lindsay Whalen) and her current star (Napheesa Collier) is destined for enshrinement in the future. The list grows if you include all the members of the 2024 U.S. Olympic women's basketball team that Reeve coached. Advertisement Think about this: After this year's induction ceremony, four starters from Minnesota's 2015 and 2017 championship teams will be enshrined in the Hall of Fame. In an effort to gain insight into how to coach greatness, I spoke to Reeve about what she has learned about leadership during her four-decade coaching career. You have coached multiple Hall of Famers. What have you learned that you need to do as a coach when it comes to coaching Hall of Fame-caliber players? Hold them accountable to standards even beyond their wildest imagination for their own abilities. Great players want to be coached and great players never think that they're good enough. We have the Minnesota Hall of Famers, but I've also been around other Hall of Famers, and that is the common thread. They never think that they've arrived. There is always something else that they think they're not quite good enough at. It drives them. I think accountability is the greatest thing that a leader can do for that level of player. We would be doing them a disservice if we just let their own belief and drive in themselves be the only thing that they have. That's how I've approached coaching the Hall of Famers that we've had in Minnesota. Did you always demand accountability as a coach from the beginning, or did you have to learn how to demand accountability out of great players? I don't know the reason for it, but that's something that I've innately had. Jim Peterson was a longtime assistant for the Lynx, played in the NBA, played at the (University of Minnesota) and is now a full-time broadcaster for the Timberwolves. One of the things he said to me was, 'Cheryl, I can't believe your level of accountability.' It struck me as, this isn't normal. He said how non-existent it was in men's sports, in the NBA, the communication part of it. That was probably the first time my eyes were open to maybe that wasn't the norm. So I thought, well, how else do you do it? I don't know of any other way. Advertisement It's not for everybody. I do know that. I do well with those that are accountable to themselves, have high standards and are high achieving. I relate to that the best. I'm not going to hold anybody more accountable than I hold myself. Can you give me a specific example of one of your Hall of Famers really defining accountability to you when you asked and demanded accountability? Our local beat writer after a game once said, 'Cheryl, why do you get on Maya so much?' I said, 'Do you realize how much she's doing wrong? She's an incredible player, but I need her to do this and this and this and for her to be even greater.' I have this thing where it has to look perfect. Take a DIY project. Someone will walk in and say, 'Oh, my gosh, that's amazing.' But I'm going, 'No, you don't know what it was supposed to look like.' Well, that, to me, is practices and games. The practices is where we are trying to hone our skills so that the game is the work of art. I am pretty critical of myself and of others. Again, that's me being Virgo or that's what I hide behind. I am a driver. The good, the bad, the ugly, I'm a driver. But I've learned how to drive a little more gracefully through the years than maybe my beginning days. I think the Hall of Famers now look at me and go, 'You weren't like that with us.' But times have changed, and there's an evolution there. Advertisement When you are coaching someone who is a Hall of Famer or Hall of Famer-to-be that you don't know as well, which would be the Olympic team, do you coach them the same way as you would the Hall of Famers who you coached every day and knew intimately? Reeve: Bill Laimbeer was the one who brought this out of me, which was being able to be comfortable in your skin, to be yourself. That is the most important thing that you can be in any space, especially a leadership space. People allowing you to be able to be yourself is also important. In the national team space, I went into it having worked for and with Geno (Auriemma) on his staff and Dawn (Staley) on her staff. One of my biggest takeaways from that was if I get this (head coaching) opportunity, being myself is the most important thing that I could do even in that space, even though there's not those relationships that you described. Sue Bird described this best about the national team experience and it is 1000 percent true: It's an uncomfortable space for everybody. Which is a really strange thing to say, but the national team experience is everyone not being able to fully be yourself. It's a fragmented version. So I tried to keep that component of leadership the same, which was holding them to the highest standards possible in the way that I felt like I best could do. What is one thing that you learned from Maya Moore that helped you coaching someone who is not Maya Moore? Patience. We all had to have patience with Maya. I remember playing the Phoenix Mercury at a time when they were launching 3s so the number one part of our game plan was controlling the tempo, making sure that we weren't fueling their ability to light us up. I'm a big shot-selection person. But Maya taught me that the shot selection for Maya Moore is different than shot selection for others. Advertisement Now, that made some others not as happy, but that's the way it goes. So off the jump ball, Maya launches a 3 and misses. Phoenix comes back down the court, boom, they splash a 3. We come up the floor again. Maya has another bad shot. Next thing you know, we are down double figures. Time out. Maya came off the court saying, 'Oh, so that's what you meant by shot selection thing and controlling the tempo.' Maya did things that no one else in the league did, and that is a blessing and a curse at times. There had to be some give and take. It's just like Caitlin Clark. When she sprints up and shoots a 3, you gotta live with it most times. I think we all learned from Maya because she could take over a game. She could do things that nobody else could do. You might have to live through some tough times, but she was certainly going to make up for it in other ways. Maya was not just a scorer. Maya led our team in deflections and things like that. So I think what Maya taught was, I use the word patience, but it's more being open-minded about what a shot selection should be for a player like that. If you could swipe a couple of leadership attributes or traits from some of the coaches that you've either worked with or that you have seen from afar, what comes to mind? My college coach, John Miller, and (former WNBA coach) Dan Hughes were similar. They made me want to a better person. They were so patient and graceful in their criticism of a player. What we call coaching is what players call criticism. I only worked for Dan Hughes for one season, in 2003, but I felt like I worked for him for 10 years. I learned so much in a year. He would tell a player that didn't do something the way they needed to do it, and we would walk away from the conversation, and I'd go, 'I felt like you just complimented them.' He just had an unbelievable way of saying, 'Hey, you didn't do that very well.' Advertisement If I could just get an ounce of that, I would feel like a far better person and a far better coach for our players. It's something I still strive for, to be better and patient and use my words better. It's been a chase for me in my life. This article originally appeared in The Athletic. Minnesota Lynx, WNBA, Sports Business, Peak, Sports Leadership 2025 The Athletic Media Company

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store