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It’s the final day of quarterfinals as Norway and England match up at Hard Rock Stadium — known as Miami Stadium during the 2026 FIFA World Cup — on Saturday, July 11. Broadcast live at 2 p.m. PT/5 p.m. ET on Fox, the game can be livestreamed on any streaming service that carries said network, namely DirecTV (with a five-day free trial), Fubo (with a one-day free trial), Sling along with Hulu + Live TV.
As with every game in this year’s tournament, the England vs. Norway 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 Norway vs. England World Cup Quarterfinal Match
Where to Watch Norway vs. England World Cup Match: Air Date, Time
The soccer match will be broadcast live on Saturday, July 11, at 2 p.m. PT/5 p.m. ET on Fox. It will also air live on Telemundo in Spanish.
Where to Stream Norway vs. England World Cup Match Online Free
Since the Norway vs. England match airs on Fox, it will also be available to watch live on any streaming service that carries the 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

* Event: Norway vs. England match.
* Date: Saturday, July 11.
* Time: 2 p.m. PT/5 p.m. ET.
* Broadcast: Fox.
* Spanish broadcast: Telemundo and Peacock (official World Cup streamer).
* Streaming options include DirecTV (with a five-day trial), Fubo (with a one-day trial), Sling, and Hulu + Live TV.
* Fox One is the official 2026 World Cup streamer; subscription costs $19.99 per month after a three-day trial.

Executive Summary

The Norway vs. England World Cup quarterfinal match is scheduled for Saturday, July 11th, at 2 p.m. PT/5 p.m. ET, broadcast on Fox. The game will also stream live on Fox One, the official 2026 World Cup streamer. Spanish-language coverage will be available on Telemundo and Peacock, which is the official World Cup streamer for that language. Online streaming options include DirecTV (with a five-day free trial), Fubo (with a one-day free trial), Sling, and Hulu + Live TV. A Fox One subscription costs $19.99 per month following a three-day free trial.

Full Take

The structure of access to a major live event reveals a tiered system built around proprietary streaming rights and various subscription gatekeepers. Access is deliberately fragmented, offering simultaneous options via traditional broadcast networks (Fox) and multi-platform aggregators (DirecTV, Fubo, Sling). The official streamer, Fox One, establishes a premium tier ($19.99/month), suggesting a clear commercial hierarchy for in-depth viewing versus free access. Furthermore, the segregation of language streams—English on Fox One and Spanish via Peacock—reinforces a pattern where content delivery is segmented by market and monetization strategy. This setup prompts reflection on whether providing immediate, broad accessibility serves the public interest or reinforces existing commercial infrastructure. What are the implicit costs to the audience when options are presented through successive free trials leading into paid subscriptions? Does this fragmentation inadvertently obscure the central event for those unwilling or unable to navigate the choice architecture?

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

The text functions primarily as a logistics summary for a sporting event broadcast, exhibiting the structural predictability common in news aggregation rather than deep analytical writing.

Signals Detected
low severity: Moderately varied sentence structure, typical of promotional or informational copy.
low severity: High flow in presenting logistical details; focus is purely on scheduling and access information.
medium severity: Repetitive listing of viewing options (DirecTV, Fubo, Sling, Hulu + Live TV) across multiple sections suggests a standardized content delivery template.
low severity: Specific dates, channel names (Fox, Peacock), and subscription costs appear concrete, suggesting reliance on verifiable scheduling data rather than pure fabrication.
Human Indicators
The inclusion of affiliate disclosure and links to 'Related Stories' points toward standard journalistic or promotional framing.
Norway vs. England: Where to Watch the World Cup Quarterfinal Match Online — Arc Codex