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How to watch men’s soccer at the 2024 Paris Olympics: Events, schedule, more

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Tim Ream #13 of the United States moves with the ballduring a game between Uruguay and USMNT atArrowhead Stadium on July 1, 2024 in Kansas , Kansas. 

John Dorton/ISI Photos/USSF/Getty Images for USSF


Soccer at the 2024 Summer Olympic Games has already begun with matches for both the USMNT and the USWNT.  While the USWNT has dominated Olympic soccer in recent years, the American men’s team has never won a medal in the modern Olympic era.

The USMNT hopes to change that this summer at the 2024 Paris Olympics. Keep reading to find out how you can watch men’s soccer at the 2024 Olympics.


How and when to watch men’s soccer events at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris

Both men’s and women’s soccer competitions at the 2024 Summer Olympics are scheduled to be played July 24, 2024 through August 10, 2024. 

The men’s soccer events at the Paris Olympics will air on NBC, USA Network and E! Channel. All Olympic events will stream on Peacock.


How to watch the Paris 2024 Summer Olympic Games without cable

While many cable packages include NBC and the other channels broadcasting the 2024 Summer Olympics, it’s easy to watch the 2024 Summer Olympics if those channels aren’t included in your cable TV subscription, or if you don’t have cable at all. Your best options for watching are below. (Streaming options will require an internet provider.)

Watch every event of the Paris 2024 Olympics on Peacock

In addition to major sporting events like the 2024 Paris Olympics, Peacock offers its subscribers live-streaming access to NFL games that air on NBC and sports airing on USA Network. The streaming service has plenty more live sports to offer, including Big Ten basketball, Premier League soccer and WWE wrestling (including formerly PPV-only events such as WrestleMania). There are 80,000 hours worth of recorded content to watch as well, including hit movies and TV series such as “The Office” and “Parks and Recreation.”

A Peacock subscription costs $8 per month. An annual plan is available for $80 per year (best value). You can cancel anytime.

Top features of Peacock:

  • Peacock’s Olympic coverage will include “multi-view” options in which fans can curate their viewing journey, choosing the Olympic events they are most interested in watching.
  • Peacock will air exclusive coverage of PGA Tour events, Olympic trials and Paris Olympics 2024 events.
  • Peacock features plenty of current and classic NBC and Bravo TV shows, plus original programming such as the award-winning reality show “The Traitors.”

Stream the 2024 Summer Olympic Games on Sling TV 

For streaming the Paris Olympics — and for streaming all the must-watch college football and NFL games to follow this fall — we like Sling TV. The cable TV replacement option offers packages that include your local NBC station starting at $45 per month, or $70 for two months (special prepay offer). You also get access to E! and USA Network (including 400 hours of Olympics programming on USA in 4K resolution). We like that there’s a $11 per month sports add-on plan called Sports Extra and the option to add on Paramount+ if you want to catch even more sporting events this fall.

Tap the button below to sign up for Sling TV.

Top features of Sling TV Orange + Blue plan:

  • Sling TV is our top choice for streaming major sporting events like NASCAR.
  • There are 46 channels to watch in total, including local NBC, Fox and ABC affiliates (where available).
  • You get access to most local NFL games and nationally broadcast games at the lowest price.
  • All subscription tiers include 50 hours of cloud-based DVR storage.
  • You can add Golf Channel, NBA TV, NHL Network, NFL RedZone, MLB Network, Tennis Channel and more sports-oriented channels (19 in total) via Sling TV’s Sports Extras add-on.

Watch the 2024 Summer Olympics airing on network TV with Fubo

You can also catch the 2024 Summer Olympics airing on network TV on Fubo. Fubo is a sports-centric streaming service that offers access to network-aired sports like the Tour de France, and almost every NFL game next season. Packages include the live feed of sports and programming airing on CBS, Fox, NBC, ESPN, NFL Network and more, so you’ll be able to watch more than just the Summer Olympics- all without a cable subscription.

To watch the 2024 Summer Olympic Games without cable, start a seven-day free trial of Fubo. You can begin watching immediately on your TV, phone, tablet or computer. In addition to Olympic events, you’ll have access to NFL football, Fubo offers NCAA college sports, MLB, NBA, NHL, MLS and international soccer games. Fubo’s Pro Tier is priced at $80 per month after your free seven-day trial.

Sports fans will want to consider adding on the $7.99 per month Fubo Extra package, which includes MLB Network, NBA TV, NHL Network, Tennis Channel, SEC Network and more channels. Or upgrade to the Fubo Elite tier and get all the Fubo Extra channels, plus the ability to stream in 4K, for an extra $10 per month.

Top features of Fubo Pro Tier:

  • There are no contracts with Fubo — you can cancel at any time.
  • You can watch sporting events up to 72 hours after they air live with Fubo’s lookback feature.
  • The Pro tier includes over 180 channels, including NFL Network and Golf Channel.
  • Fubo includes all the channels you’ll need to watch college and pro sports, including CBS (not available through Sling TV).
  • All tiers come with 1,000 hours of cloud-based DVR recording.
  • Stream on your TV, phone, and other devices.

Watch the 2024 Summer Olympics on Hulu + Live TV

You can watch the 2024 Summer Olympics and more top-tier sports coverage, including NFL Network, with Hulu + Live TV. The bundle features access to 90 channels, including Golf Channel. Unlimited DVR storage is also included. Watch the 2024 Summer Olympic Games and every NFL game on every network next season with Hulu + Live TV,  plus exclusive live regular season NFL games, popular studio shows (including NFL Total Access and the Emmy-nominated show Good Morning Football) and lots more.

Hulu + Live TV comes bundled with ESPN+ and Disney+ for $77 per month.


Watch the 2024 Summer Olympic Games live with a digital HDTV antenna

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Amazon


You can also watch the 2024 Summer Olympic Games airing on network TV with an affordable indoor antenna, which pulls in local over-the-air HDTV channels such as CBS, NBC, ABC, Fox, PBS, Univision and more. Here’s the kicker: There’s no monthly charge.

For anyone living in a partially blocked-off area (those near mountains or first-floor apartments), a digital TV antenna may not pick up a good signal — or any signal at all. But for many homes, a digital TV antenna provides a seriously inexpensive way to watch sports without paying a cable company. Indoor TV antennas can also provide some much-needed TV backup if a storm knocks out your cable.

This ultra-thin, multi-directional Mohu Leaf Supreme Pro digital antenna with a 65-mile range can receive hundreds of HD TV channels, including ABC, CBS, NBC, PBS, Fox and Univision, and can filter out cellular and FM signals. It delivers a high-quality picture in 1080p HDTV, top-tier sound and comes with a 12-foot digital coax cable.

This antenna is currently $56 at Amazon, reduced from $70 with coupon.


2024 Summer Olympic Games: Men’s soccer schedule

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Walker Zimmerman #3 of the United States passes the ball during the Men’s group A match between France and United States during the Olympic Games Paris 2024 at Stade de Marseille on July 24, 2024 in Marseille, France.

Daniela Porcelli/ISI Photos/Getty Images


Men’s soccer group stage 

Group standings and schedule for men’s soccer at the 2024 Summer Olympics in Paris.

All times Eastern

Group A

July 24
Guinea 1, New Zealand 2
France 3, United States 0

July 27
New Zealand vs. United States, 1 p.m. on USA
France vs. Guinea, 3 p.m. on Telemundo

July 30
United States vs. Guinea, 1 p.m. on USA
New Zealand vs. France, 1 p.m. on Universo

Group B

July 24
Argentina 1, Morocco 2
Iraq 2, Ukraine 1

July 27
Argentina vs. Iraq, 9 a.m. on Universo
Ukraine vs. Morocco, 11 a.m. on Universo

July 30
Morocco vs. Iraq, 11 a.m. on Universo
Ukraine vs. Argentina, 11 a.m. on Telemundo

Group C

July 24
Uzbekistan 1, Spain 2
Egypt 0, Dominican Republic 0

July 27
Dominican Republic vs. Spain, 9 a.m. on Telemundo
Uzbekistan vs. Egypt, 11 a.m. on Peacock

July 30
Dominican Republic vs. Uzbekistan, 9 a.m. on Universo
Sapin vs. Egypt, 9 a.m. on Telemundo

Group D

July 24 
Japan 5, Paraguay 0
Mali 1, Israel 1

July 27
Isrzel vs. Paraguay, 1 p.m. on Universo
Japan vs. Mali, 3 p.m. on Universo

July 30
Paraguay vs. Mali, 3 p.m. on Telemundo
Israel vs. Japan, 3 p.m. on Universo


Knockout stage schedule

Below is the schedule for the knockout stage of men’s soccer at the 2024 Summer Olympics.

Aug. 2
1B vs. 2A, 9 a.m.
1D vs. 2C, 11 a.m.
1C vs. 2D, 1 p.m.
1A vs. 2B, 3 p.m.

Aug. 5
TBD vs. TBD, 12 p.m.
TBD vs. TBD, 3 p.m.

Aug. 8
Bronze medal match, 11 a.m.

Aug. 9
Gold medal match, 12 p.m.




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Beirut doctor on treating injuries from device explosions as Israel-Hezbollah tensions boil over

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Beirut doctor on treating injuries from device explosions as Israel-Hezbollah tensions boil over – CBS News


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The Israeli military on Friday said it conducted a “targeted strike” in Beirut, Lebanon, after a night that saw dozens of airstrikes in one of Israel’s most intense bombardments against the Hezbollah militant group in Lebanon. Those strikes follow Hezbollah’s leader vowing revenge for a series of deadly device explosions that targeted the group’s members this week. CBS News’ Imtiaz Tyab has a report on the situation and Dr. Salah Zeineldine, associate vice president for clinical affairs at the American University of Beirut, joined CBS News to discuss treating the injured.

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Golf: The presidential pastime that’s a nightmare for the Secret Service

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Before President William Howard Taft ever stepped on a golf course as commander-in-chief, he was cautioned by his predecessor to avoid the sport altogether. 

“I have received hundreds of letters protesting it,” then-President Theodore Roosevelt wrote to Taft, who was his secretary of war. Roosevelt warned that photo-ops of political leaders’ leisure-time activities could damage their public image. “Photographs of me on horseback, yes. Tennis, no,” he wrote. “And golf is fatal.”

Roosevelt was speaking figuratively, but the U.S. Secret Service views presidential golfing as a literal physical threat. While former President Donald Trump was on the fairway of the fifth hole at Trump International Golf Club last Sunday in West Palm Beach last Sunday, an advance agent spotted the barrel of a rifle jutting through barbed wire fencing along the tree line bordering the sixth-hole putting green. The gunman was apprehended, and the FBI is still investigating the apparent attempt on Trump’s life — the second in about two months.

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File: A secret service agent does a security sweep of the second hole as President Biden, not pictured, golfs at Joint Base Andrews in Maryland on June 4, 2023. 

JIM WATSON/AFP via Getty Images


Secret Service agents were given little time to survey the course for threats to Trump’s safety. According to two people familiar with the events, Trump’s protective detail was given roughly a 30-minute heads-up that he would play a round at his course Sunday, sending them scrambling to accommodate the unplanned outing. 

“The president wasn’t even really supposed to go there,” Acting U.S. Secret Service Director Ronald Rowe told reporters this week. “It was not on his official schedule. And so we put together a security plan, and that security plan worked.”

“Off-the-record movements”

Trump’s round of golf is what the Secret Service calls an “off the record” or unplanned movement, an outing excluded from any public schedule. It’s the kind of excursion that usually offers far less time to prepare for agents tasked with shielding a president or former president from threats. Current and former agents likened it to President Biden’s last-minute pit stops for ice cream or President Barack Obama’s unannounced visits to nearby restaurants. 

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File: President Bill Clinton takes some practice drives on the range while a uniformed Secret Service officer keeps a watch on the crowds that gathered around the course to watch at the Bellevue Country Club, August 1999, in Syracuse, New York. 

TIM SLOAN/AFP via Getty Images


“But if somebody’s going to lay down a bet in Vegas on a Sunday afternoon, they may just wager that the president’s going to play golf,” offered former Secret Service Deputy Director A.T. Smith, noting that while serving as an agent on then President Bill Clinton’s detail, he used to carry around three outfits in anticipation of his weekend ritual. 

“We’d pack one outfit to go running, one to go to church, and a third to play golf,” Smith recounted.

Presidential respite turns into crisis

Golf outings offer the commander-in chief a rare respite from the churning demands of the Oval Office, but for the Secret Service agents who must scan fairways and putting greens, the assignment is a nightmare. 

“In a perfect world, the Secret Service would rather the protectee never leave the house,” he added. “And that includes the White House.” 

That nightmare first became a reality in October of 1983, when an armed man wielding a .38 caliber pistol pummeled his truck through an unmanned security gate and rumbled into the clubhouse, holding five hostages — including two Reagan aides — while demanding to speak with the president. The Secret Service reportedly whisked Reagan off the 16th hole and into a bulletproof limousine, but not before the president phoned the clubhouse to try and negotiate with his assailant. Charles Harris served five years in jail, but no one was injured. 

A presidential putting green and namesake course 

Since Taft first pierced the “green curtain” more than a century ago, sixteen presidents have stepped onto a golf course while in office, with President Dwight D. Eisenhower carding more than 800 rounds, according to the USGA. The avid golfer installed a putting green on the White House grounds in 1954. 

Clinton — notorious for his “mulligans” — later moved it south of the Rose Garden, a short jaunt from the Oval Office, but nixed the sand bunker at the request of the U.S. Secret Service, who feared the president might knock a wedge shot through a West Wing window, according to Golf.com

Reportage: President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden practice their putting on the White House putting green April 24 2009.
President Obama and Vice President Biden practice their putting on the White House putting green April 24 2009.

Hum Images/Universal Images Group via Getty Images


While in office, Trump preferred his namesake golf courses. According to a count by former CBS News White House correspondent Mark Knoller, Trump played golf at his heavily trafficked club in West Palm Beach 89 times during his presidency, with frequent outings to his other courses in Sterling, Virginia, and Bedminster, New Jersey, too. The latter suffered tens of thousands of dollars in damages back in 2017, after Clifford Tillotson allegedly used chemicals to etch anti-Trump messages in the greens, first reported by Bloomberg, at the time.

The day after Sunday’s incident at his Florida course, Rowe advised Trump during a closed-door meeting that it is unsafe for the former president to keep golfing without additional security measures, a senior official with the Trump campaign confirmed to CBS News. 

The protective bubble 

“The Secret Service isn’t authorized to protect the former president’s golf courses 24 hours a day,” said Paul Eckloff, a former Secret Service agent and assistant detail leader for Trump, who has protected him at golf courses “dozens of times,” including at the club in West Palm Beach. 

Trump’s 27-hole course, an 8-minute drive from his residence at Mar-a-Lago, features wide open spaces interspersed with rows of swaying coconut palms and a 58-foot waterfall. Those terrain features offer cover to the former president when he plays, but they also conceal potential threats, current and former agents tell CBS News. 

“On a golf course, the detail needs to stay a terrain feature ahead and a terrain feature behind to create that perimeter of protection for the former president or whoever it is that we’re protecting,” said Mike Matranga, a former U.S. Secret Service agent assigned to Obama’s detail.

But while Matranga considers Sunday’s response “a win” for the agency, he added, “The Secret Service should have had a counter surveillance or additional tactical element in that wood line with a K-9 sweeping the area,” a reference to where Ryan Routh lingered in the brush for nearly 12 hours, according to evidence retrieved by the FBI from the suspect’s cell phone. Routh currently faces two firearms charges over the incident.

During his U.S. Secret Service training, Matranga ran drills simulating an attack on a protectee at the links on Andrews Air Force Base, the same golf course where he routinely accompanied Obama for weekend rounds. 

After retiring from the agency, the 12-year-veteran of the U.S. Secret Service admitted he sold his clubs. “I never wanted to step foot on a golf course again.”

contributed to this report.





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Deadly flooding in West and Central Africa leaves corpses of crocodiles and snakes floating among human bodies

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Houses swept away to the very last brick. Inmates frantically fleeing the city’s main prison as its walls were washed away by water rising from an overflowing dam. Corpses of crocodiles and snakes floating among human bodies on what used to be main streets.

As torrential rains across Central and West Africa have unleashed the most catastrophic floods in decades, residents of Maiduguri, the capital of the fragile Nigerian state of Borno — which has been at the center of an Islamic extremists’ insurgency — said they have seen it all.

Earlier this week, Nigerian authorities said more than 270 inmates were missing after escaping from custody when severe flooding damaged a prison in Maiduguri, CBS News partner BBC reported. Borno state Governor Babagana Zulum described the extent of the damage in the area as “beyond human imagination.”

The floods, which have killed more than 1,000 people and displaced hundreds of thousands across the region this year, have worsened existing humanitarian crises in the countries which have been impacted the most: Chad, Nigeria, Mali and Niger. Over four million people have been affected by flooding so far this year in West Africa, a threefold increase from last year, according to the U.N.

With rescue operations still underway, it is impossible to give an accurate count of lives lost in the water. So far, at least 230 were reported dead in Nigeria, 265 in Niger, 487 in Chad and 55 in Mali, which has seen the most catastrophic flooding since the 1960s.

While Africa is responsible for a small fraction of global greenhouse gas emissions, it is among the regions most vulnerable to extreme weather events, the World Meteorological Organization said earlier this month. In sub-Saharan Africa, the cost of adapting to extreme weather events is estimated between $30-50 billion annually over the next decade, the report said. It warned that up to 118 million Africans could be impacted by extreme weather by 2030.

Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state, has been under significant strain. Over the last decade, Borno has been hit by a constant string of attacks from Boko Haram militants, who want to install an Islamic state in Nigeria and have killed more than 35,000 people in the last decade. 

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This aerial view shows houses submerged under water in Maiduguri on September 10, 2024. 

AUDU MARTE/AFP via Getty Images


Saleh Bukar, a 28-year-old from Maiduguri, said he was woken up last week around midnight by his neighbors.

“Water is flooding everywhere!” he recalled their frantic screams in a phone interview. “They were shouting: ‘Everybody come out, everybody come out!” Older people and people with disabilities did not know what was going on, he said, and some were left behind. Those who did not wake up on time drowned right away.

Local authorities are overwhelmed by the scale of the disaster: over 600,000 people in Borno state have been displaced, while at least 100 were killed and 58 injured, according to the U.N.

Last week, floods killed about 80% of the animals at the Borno State Museum Park and an unspecified number of reptiles escaped. Ali Donbest, who runs the Sanda Kyarimi Zoo, told the BBC that he does not know exactly how many wild animals escaped the zoo but a hunt was on to locate them. He also said the cages where the lions and hyenas were kept had been submerged by floodwaters but the zoo could not determine if they had escaped.

Maiduguri resident Ishaq Sani told the BBC his biggest fear is to come across a wild animal. He abandoned his home due to the floods and is now staying with a friend in another location.

The waters also knocked down the walls of the local police station and some of the government’s offices.

Rescue operations continue 10 days later, with some parts of the city returning to normal as waters recede.

Flooding forces woman to abandon her baby

Survivors recounted chilling scenes of bodies in the floodwaters.

Aishatu Ba’agana, a mother of three, had to abandon her recently born baby as water surging over her house overwhelmed her. “I yelled for my family to help me get my child, but I don’t know if they were able to. I haven’t seen any of them since,” she said, crying at the camp where rescue workers brought her.

The flood also destroyed crucial infrastructure, including two major dikes of a dam along Lake Alau. When the dam failed, 540 billion liters of water flooded the city. Key bridges connecting Maiduguri collapsed, turning the city into a temporary river.

Governor Babagana Zulum urgently appealed for international assistance. “Our resources are stretched to the limit, and we cannot do this alone,” he said.

The World Food Program has set up kitchens providing food to the displaced in Maiduguri as well as emergency food and cash assistance to people in the most hard-hit areas. USAID said Wednesday it has provided more than $3 million in humanitarian assistance to West and Central Africa, including $1 million provided in the immediate aftermath of the floods.

But many say they were left to fend for themselves.

Floods in mostly arid Niger have impacted over 841,000 people, killing hundreds and displacing more than 400,000.

Harira Adamou, a 50-year-old single mother of six, is one of them. She said the floods destroyed her mud hut in the northern city of Agadez.

“The rooms are destroyed; the walls fell down,” she said. “It’s a big risk to live in a mud hut but we don’t have the means to build concrete ones.”

Adamou, who is unemployed and lost her husband four years ago, said she has not received any support from the state and has not had the opportunity — or the means — to relocate. She and her children are living in a temporary shelter next to their shattered hut, and fret that the torrential rains might return.

“I understood there was a change in the weather,” she said. “I have never seen a big rain like this year here in Agadez.”

In Maiduguri, 15% of the city remains underwater, according to local authorities. As forecasts predicted more rains across the region, Nigerian authorities warned earlier this week that more floods are expected.

Bukar said he kept going back to see whether the water that swallowed his home had receded, but that has not happened. He said he has not received any aid from authorities except for some food items handed out at the local school, where he is sheltering with 5,000 others.

He is trying to stay sane by helping others. Along with his friend, he helped recover 10 bodies and rescued 25 people, rowing down the streets in a canoe. He said he’s also helping out cooking meals for those that are sheltering with him.

“I am volunteering to help, but I am also a victim,” he said. “Our people need us. They need help.”

The deadly flooding comes about five months after hundreds of people in Tanzania and Kenya died after heavy rain during the region’s monsoon season.



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