Real Madrid vs. Real Betis: Live stream, start time, how to watch La Liga in English and Spanish

Real Madrid's Gareth Bale, left, celebrates with Eden Hazard after scoring his side's opening goal during a Spanish La Liga soccer match between Levante and Real Madrid at the Ciutat de Valencia stadium in Valencia, Spain, Sunday, Aug. 22, 2021.

Real Madrid will look to return to winning ways in La Liga when they head to Seville on Saturday to take on Manuel Pellegrini’s Real Betis side.

Los Blancos have collected four points from their opening two league matches to sit third in the table, while Betis have picked up two points from as many fixtures to occupy 10th position at this stage.

Betis enjoyed an impressive 2020-21 campaign, collecting 61 points from their 38 matches, which was enough to finish sixth, allowing them to qualify directly for the group stage of this season’s Europa League, and it was their joint-highest placing at this level since 2004-05.

Pellegrini’s team will look to push high up the division once again, but they are yet to record their first win of the season, sharing the points with Mallorca and Cadiz in their opening two fixtures.

Real Madrid vs. Real Betis (Sat., 4:00 p.m. ET)

How to watch: This Saturday’s match will be broadcasted on ESPN Deportes in Spanish. The match will also be live-streamed on ESPN+ in English as part of a new eight-year TV deal between ESPN and the Spanish League. Any match that is exclusive to ESPN+ will not be available on TV. However, select matches (including many for FC Barcelona and Real Madrid) will air on ESPN-affiliated channels, including ESPN, ESPN2, ESPN Deportes and ABC. The match will also be streamed on fuboTV, which currently has a free trial.

How to watch matches in English and Spanish - Matches broadcast on ESPN+ will be available in both Spanish and English.

What is ESPN+? How much does it cost? - ESPN+ is a standalone streaming services that carries exclusive live sports. It does not include events that are broadcast on ESPN TV channels. Instead, ESPN+ is designed to be a home for certain sports like Spanish League matches. Fans can sign up for ESPN+ starting at $5.99 a month.

More coverage via the Associated Press

European football’s biggest teams didn’t need a Super League to secure heavyweight clashes this season.

The draw for the Champions League did the job in Istanbul on Thursday, after three of the rebels still pursuing the breakaway competition were allowed entry to the group stage.

So Madrid, the record 13-time winners of the European Cup, will be taking on Italian champion Inter Milan — one of nine clubs who quickly abandoned the Super League split in April. They are in Group D with Shakhtar Donetsk and Sheriff, the Moldovan side which qualified for the Champions League for the first time and would have struggled to squeeze into the planned largely-closed breakaway.

“We are living a fairy tale,” Sheriff manager Iurii Vernydub said, “and want it to continue for as long as possible.”

Madrid, Barcelona and Juventus were only allowed into the Champions League this season because UEFA’s disciplinary case about their pursuit of a Super League is on hold.

Barcelona, which is weighed down by $1.6 billion in debt and won the fifth of its European titles in 2015, is in Group E with Bayern Munich, the six-time winners who wouldn’t sign up to the Super League. They’ll also play Benfica and Dynamo Kyiv.

Juventus will come up against defending champion Chelsea, one of the six English clubs to implode the Super League inside 48 hours and accepting fines from UEFA for the mutiny. They are in Group H with Malmo and Zenit St. Petersburg, whose stadium will host the final.

One of the biggest winners from the Super League debacle was Paris Saint-Germain, which refused to sign up and its president, Nasser Al-Khelaifi, replaced Juventus chairman Andrea Agnelli as head of the European Club Association.

What’s missing now for PSG, which gets its funding from Qatar’s sovereign wealth, is lifting the European Cup for the first time. Signing Lionel Messi should help PSG’s European quest, which ended in the semifinals against Manchester City last season.

There’s an instant reunion of two of world football’s richest clubs, with PSG in Group A together with Abu Dhabi-funded City, which is also yet to win European football’s top prize.

“It is (about revenge),” Al-Khelaifi said. “We lost last year’s semifinal, so it will be a good motivation for our players, our manager and, you know, it will be interesting for the viewers. So it will be big matches.”

They’ll also face German club Leipzig, which had a win and loss against PSG in last season’s group stage, and Club Brugge, which has never played the German club or City.

City was the first English club to officially pull out of the Super League and Liverpool was among the last after a backlash from fans and even players who helped win the Champions League for a sixth time in 2019. Liverpool, which only qualified for the Champions League on the last day of last season, is in Group B with AC Milan —- which won the last of its seven European titles in 2007 against the Reds and is back in the competition after a seven-year absence — Atletico Madrid, and Porto.

“I laughed, to be honest, pretty loud because it is a tough group obviously,” Liverpool manager Jürgen Klopp said. “It’s the Champions League, so that’s how it is, and you have to play the best teams in Europe, and obviously some of them are in our group.”

Group F will see rematches of last season’s Europa League final which saw Manchester United surprisingly beaten by Villarreal. They will also face Atalanta and Young Boys.

Sporting Lisbon, Borussia Dortmund, Ajax and Besiktas were drawn in Group C. Lille, Sevilla, Salzburg, and Wolfsburg are in Group G.

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