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On Saturday, July 11, Argentina and Switzerland will go head to head in the final quarterfinal matchup, culminating the 2026 FIFA World Cup‘s third knockout stage. Broadcast live at 6 p.m. PT/9 p.m. ET on Fox, the game can also be livestreamed on any streaming service that carries the network, namely DirecTV (with a five-day free trial), Fubo (with a one-day free trial), Sling and Hulu + Live TV.
As with every game in this year’s tournament, the Argentina vs. Switzerland match will also stream live on Fox One, the official 2026 World Cup streamer. Following the service’s three-day free trial, a Fox One subscription costs $19.99 per month. For Spanish-language coverage, Peacock is the official World Cup streamer.
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At a Glance: How to Watch Argentina vs. Switzerland World Cup Quarterfinal Soccer Match
Where to Watch Argentina vs. Switzerland World Cup Match: Air Date, Time
The Switzerland vs. Argentina quarterfinal match will be broadcast live from Kansas City Stadium on July 11, at 6 p.m. PT/9 p.m. ET, on Fox. It will also air live on Telemundo in Spanish.
Where to Stream Argentina vs. Switzerland World Cup Match Online Free
Since the match airs on Fox, it will also be available to watch live on any streaming service that carries said network, including DirecTV (with a five-day free trial), Fubo (with a one-day free trial), Sling and Hulu + Live TV.
All matches will also stream live on Fox One, the official World Cup streamer. Following Fox One’s three-day free trial, the service costs $19.99 per month. For Spanish-language coverage, Peacock is the official World Cup streamer.
Related: The Best Peacock Subscription Deals and Free Trial Hacks
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Facts Only

* The match is between Argentina and Switzerland.
* The event is in the final quarterfinal matchup of the 2026 FIFA World Cup's third knockout stage.
* The game date is Saturday, July 11th.
* The broadcast time is 6 p.m. PT/9 p.m. ET.
* The match will be broadcast live on Fox and Fox One.
* Spanish-language coverage will be provided by Telemundo and Peacock.
* Streaming options include DirecTV, Fubo, Sling, and Hulu + Live TV.
* Fox One requires a $19.99 monthly subscription following a three-day free trial.
* Peacock is the official World Cup streamer for Spanish-language coverage.

Executive Summary

The Argentina versus Switzerland match, part of the 2026 FIFA World Cup third knockout stage, is scheduled for Saturday, July 11th. The game will be broadcast live on Fox at 6 p.m. PT or 9 p.m. ET and will also be shown on Fox One, the official World Cup streamer. Live coverage in Spanish will be provided by Telemundo and Peacock, which serves as the official World Cup streamer for Spanish-language broadcasts. For online streaming access, viewers can watch via DirecTV (with a five-day free trial), Fubo (with a one-day free trial), Sling, and Hulu + Live TV. Fox One requires a monthly subscription of $19.99 after a three-day free trial.

Full Take

The structure of media consumption around major global events reveals a tiered access system, simultaneously leveraging traditional broadcast monopolies and digital streaming fragmentation. The simultaneous availability across terrestrial broadcast (Fox), dedicated streaming platforms (Fox One/Peacock), and aggregator services (DirecTV, Fubo) illustrates how content dissemination is managed through overlapping contractual rights and subscription gating. The separation of English-language coverage on Fox from Spanish-language coverage on Peacock highlights a deliberate segmentation based on regional market control for the event. This arrangement forces viewers into navigating multiple access points, where the primary cost or barrier to entry shifts depending on linguistic preference or desired platform integration. The pattern observed is an optimization of audience capture by layering availability—providing free trial access via digital partners while reserving premium paid access for the core network entities. This setup reflects a tension between universal access and proprietary monetization strategies. What determines which access point is prioritized often reflects underlying economic relationships rather than pure viewer convenience, raising questions about the true cost of "free" viewing versus bundled service dependency. What platforms are currently excluded from this layered access structure, and what do those exclusions reveal about the desired control over narrative distribution?

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

The text functions primarily as logistical information detailing broadcast schedules, streaming options, and subscription costs for a sporting event.

Signals Detected
low severity: Slightly uniform sentence structure typical of sports/broadcast scheduling announcements.
low severity: Highly factual and directive tone, typical of promotional or logistical reporting.
low severity: High density of specific names (teams, networks, dates, prices) linking disparate facts efficiently. No obvious template matching detected.
low severity: The structure strongly resembles a broadcast guide or promotional snippet rather than deep analytical journalism.
Human Indicators
Presence of specific affiliate disclosures and direct, practical viewing instructions suggests an editorial function.
The flow is purely organizational (logistics of a broadcast) rather than argumentative.
Argentina vs. Switzerland: Where to Watch the World Cup Quarterfinal Match Online — Arc Codex