World Cup 2014 TV Schedule: Start Date and ESPN Games For Brazil Soccer Summer Event

Feb 28, 2014 04:46 PM EST
FIFA Secretary General Jerome Valcke
FIFA Secretary General Jerome Valcke arrives to speak about the status of the host city Curitiba ahead of the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Florianopolis in Santa Catarina state, February 18, 2014. "

The World Cup schedule is coming and things are starting up very soon from Brazil for the 2014 event and right now things are on track to start in June and ESPN will be putting on every match streaming online and on TV from ESPN2 and ABC networks and the main channel has a number of great games, including Brazil and the United States.

There are 43 matches overall that will be on the ESPN channel and all will be streaming online and the rest are distributed to the other channels in the ESPN family of networks. The company is pulling out all the stops for their coverage and they are expecting to have everything fully ready for the event, while Brazil is still actually doing construction on many of the venues.

Some of the top games for ESPN on the schedule includes the opener against Croatia for Brazil and that will be on June 12, while they also have England and Italy and that will be a huge match. Spain plays against the Netherlands on ESPN and the channel also has England Uruguay as well as the United States playing against Shana and that is expected to be one of the most anticipated matches of the tournament.

Check here for the ESPN World Cup Schedule.

Here is more from Reuters.com on the World Cup and Carnival.

Carnival got under way across Brazil on Friday interspersed with simmering antigovernment protests and alongside preparations in 12 cities for the upcoming soccer World Cup.

The festivities, which each year rouse millions to revel in nearly a week of parades and block parties, are the first since a series of mass demonstrations last June, when Brazilians took to the streets to decry rising prices, a sluggish economy, poor public services and corruption.

Although those protests have ebbed, smaller antigovernment groups have continued to agitate in major cities, sometimes clashing with police.

In Rio de Janeiro, home to Brazil's best-known Carnival festivities, activists in recent days have been rallying members on social media to remind revelers of the issues that riled so many during the earlier demonstrations.

While they are unlikely to spoil the occasion for the nearly 5 million partiers expected, protests would provide a novel counterpoint to the gaiety, more traditionally marked by mass debauchery, litter-strewn streets and occasional vandalism.

Last year's demonstrators successfully used a widely watched warmup tournament for the World Cup as a stage to contrast the billions spent on the soccer event and the 2016 Rio Olympics with Brazil's feeble investment in public services.

With the World Cup itself starting June 12, activists are eager to rekindle the anger and angst. "Revelers unite!" wrote one in an online manifesto for a group dubbed "Occupy Carnival," whose aim is to "contaminate Carnival with the spirit of popular protest."

Rio and other major cities are well accustomed to activities of any stripe during the festival - from good-humored parades by transvestites to swarms of beachcombing bandits.

The Rio state government said it would deploy nearly 17,000 police officers, 16 percent more than it did last year. Earlier this week, the government showed off new riot gear and body armor that officers will be donning for any unrest.

Friday morning, shopkeepers in Ipanema, a beachside Rio district popular with tourists, had already boarded up windows to protect their inventory. In Salvador, the northeastern city where throngs follow massive mobile stages along 25 kilometers of closed avenues, local media broadcast a smartphone video of a group of revelers beating a suspected thief.

Meanwhile, authorities in the dozen host cities for the upcoming soccer games are scrambling to finish stadiums, public works and other preparations. In Rio, where officials recently demolished an elevated highway and rerouted much of the traffic across the city center to make way for new infrastructure, locals were anticipating worse-than-usual gridlock.

Still, the overall atmosphere is expected to remain festive throughout Carnival, a tradition whose history lies in a final binge of sin before the austere Catholic season of Lent. Beer and liquor advertisements began blanketing the city in recent days, while government workers staffed stands to hand out free condoms.

Friday morning, Rio Mayor Eduardo Paes relinquished the key of the city to Rei Momo, the figurehead king of a celebration taken so seriously in Brazil that many businesses close. The stock exchange in São Paulo, the country's biggest city and financial capital, halts trading during the event from Monday through mid-day Wednesday, Carnival's traditional end.

(Reuters)

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