The Miami Hurricanes and Virginia Tech football teams are scheduled to meet in an Atlantic Coast Conference contest at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida. The game is scheduled to start at 7:30 p.m. ET.
The Miami Hurricanes, ranked No. 7 in The Associated Press poll, enter the matchup 4-0 overall. Most recently, Miami beat South Florida 50-15 on Sept. 21. Virginia Tech comes into the contest 2-2 overall. On Sept. 21, Rutgers defeated Virginia Tech 26-23.
SEE ALSO: How to watch college football without cableMario Cristobal is the Miami Hurricanes football head coach. Brent Pry is the Virginia Tech football head coach.
The Miami Hurricanes and Virginia Tech college football game is scheduled to be broadcast on ESPN at 7:30 p.m. ET on Saturday, Sept. 28. ESPN broadcasters for the game are scheduled to be Anish Shroff (play-by-play), Andrew Ware (analyst), and Paul Carcaterra (sideline reporter).
If you don’t have cable or satellite TV, online live streaming platforms such as FuboTV and Sling offer alternatives for enjoying the game.
If you’ve gotten rid of cable and satellite TV, you'll need a streaming platform. To see Saturday’s Virginia Tech vs. Miami Hurricanes football game, here are the best streaming solutions available to you.
Sling TV's $55/month Orange & Blue package provides 48 channels, catering to the needs of college football fans, and includes ESPN coverage of showdowns like the Miami Hurricanes vs. Virginia Tech game. Newcomers to Sling TV enjoy a $27.50 rate for the first month.
If you’re looking to just watch the Miami vs. VT game, the Orange Plan is available at $20 for the first month, followed by $40 monthly.
In higher-priced plans, Sling TV’s sports channel offerings include ABC, ACC Network, Big Ten Network, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPN3, ESPNews, ESPNU, Fox, FS1, FS2, NBC, NFL Network, and SEC Network.
You can try FuboTV free for seven days and explore its extensive selection of more than 250 live TV channels. If you’re a fan of college football, the Pro package costs $49.99 for the first month, with channels like ESPN to watch the Miami Hurricanes vs. Virginia Tech football game. After the first month's introductory rate, the regular price is $79.99 per month.
FuboTV’s sports channel offerings include ABC, ACC Network, Big Ten Network, CBS, CBS Sports Network, ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNews, Fox, FS1, FS2, Golf Network, Marquee Sports Network, Monumental Sports, NBC, NFL Network, and SEC Network.
Topics Streaming Sports How to Watch
Alibaba’s 1688 to eliminate “refund only” policy · TechNodeLG Display transfers 8.5Tencent tests Yuanbao AI assistant within WeChat, expanding its role beyond chat · TechNodeWordle today: The answer and hints for July 13Zhipu AI launches free AI agent as China’s tech race heats up · TechNodeDeepSeek founder Liang Wenfeng joins global billionaires list · TechNodeJD.com food delivery hits 1 million daily orders in 40 days · TechNodeNYT's The Mini crossword answers for July 14SpaceX's workhorse rockets are grounded. Here's why.'House of the Dragon' Season 2, episode 5: Daemon's strange sex vision, explainedBest earbuds deal: Amazon Echo Buds with ANC on sale at $35China issues new regulations on facial recognition technology, effective June 1 · TechNodeDidi launches pet transportation service in seven Chinese cities · TechNodeAT&T reportedly paid hacker $370,000 to delete stolen customer dataWordle today: The answer and hints for July 13Didi launches pet transportation service in seven Chinese cities · TechNodeSpaceX's workhorse rockets are grounded. Here's why.Kuaishou reports strong 2024 earnings as Kling AI gains traction · TechNodeChina and EU resume negotiations on EV duties following Trump tariff hikes · TechNodeDire wolves have been brought back from extinction. What does this mean? Ragnar Kjartansson Uses Clichés to Destroy Western Culture Photos of the Million Man March, Twenty Years Later The Rise and Fall of Magnetic Poetry The Captain’s Doll Gore Vidal Visits Mississippi At Tokyo’s Book and Bed, Readers Are Encouraged to Doze Off The History of the Yew Tree, “The Tree of the Dead” Coping with the Mets’ World Series Loss: Don’t Get Angry W. Eugene Smith’s Obsessive, Quixotic Documentary Work Christopher Logue’s Poster Poems Listen to a William Carlos Williams Radio Interview from 1950 Staff Picks: Marcus, MacFarquhar, Ben Franklin Elliot Paul’s “The Last Time I Saw Paris” (1942) How Terrifying a Ship on Fire Is—Robert Walser on Shipwrecks Criterion at Thirty by Charlotte Strick Ray Bradbury’s “The October Country” Turns Sixty Portable People: Short Fiction by the Late Paul West August, October: An Interview with Andrés Barba Rowan Ricardo Phillips on the Portland Trail Blazers The Lights Dim at La Pagode, One of Paris’s Best Cinemas
2.3112s , 10133.1171875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Nikki Nova Archives】,Fresh Information Network