Can I watch the Oilers game online?
You can stream this game without cable on Apple TV, Roku, Android TV, Amazon Fire TV, & Mobile with a Live TV Streaming Service like DIRECTV STREAM. If you haven’t tried it before, you can get a 5-Day Free Trial of DIRECTV STREAM.
Is the Oilers game being streamed tonight?
Due to NHL regulations, tonight’s game is streamed LIVE on EdmontonOilers.com within the Oilers market only (Alberta, Saskatchewan, Northwest Territories).
How can I watch the Oilers game without cable?
You can watch the Edmonton Oilers live online without cable with any one of these streaming services: Sling, DIRECTV, Fubo TV, and Hulu.
What channel is the Oilers game on?
ESPN+ will show every Oilers game that isn’t exclusively airing nationally on ESPN or TNT. NHL.TV is moving its games to ESPN+ for the 2021-2022 NHL season.
Where can I watch the Oilers game?
Live Streaming Edmonton Oilers Games
| Hulu Live | YouTube TV | AT Now |
|---|---|---|
| Trial | Trial | Trial |
Why are the Oilers blacked out?
Since NHL LIVE™ is an out-of-market product, this means that with a subscription, you are blacked out from streaming the “home” team in any given market. To simplify, if you live within the red and orange area, encompassing all of Alberta, you will be blacked out from watching regional Flames and Oilers games.
How can I watch the Oilers game on Roku?
Stream NHL games on ESPN and ABC live on DIRECTV STREAM, Hulu + Live TV, fuboTV, and Sling TV. You can authenticate the ESPN and ABC channels on your Roku device with a participating pay TV provider to stream games live.
Where can you watch the Oilers game?
Stars vs. Oilers
- Start time: 8:30 p.m. ET.
- TV channel: NHL Network.
- Live stream: NHL Network, NHL App.
Where can I watch the Oilers vs Flames?
EdmontonOilers.com
You can watch the game live on EdmontonOilers.com starting at 7:00 PM MT. Watch below or follow along with our in-game blog for tweets, highlights, updates and more.
Why are Oilers games blacked out in BC?
For the NHL specifically, blackouts are present to allow regional sports networks to broadcast as many games as possible. “Blackout restrictions exist to protect the local television telecasters of each NHL game in the local markets of the teams. Blackouts are not based on arena sell-outs.