Skip to main content

How Will I Watch Lehigh/Villanova Tonight?

Not going to the game at the Main Line, and you want to know how to catch tonight's game?

Never fear.  LFN's here.


Kickoff time on the main line is 6:00 PM.

The game is not on TV, but it is available through a live stream from Villanova here.  It requires a login and a subscription fee.

If you're cheap, like me, and want to listen to the game on the radio, you can catch the Lehigh game feed online here, or you can listen on AM at three spots on the AM Dial: 1160, 1230 and 1320.

Additionally, if you're in and around the Philadelphia area, AM 610 offers the Villanova radio broadcast (and this is a legit way to follow the game if you're outside the Lehigh Valley Radio area).

If you're looking for something to do before the game starts, there's a lot of streamed games available on the internet.  Here they are:

1:00 PM, Elizabeth City (D-II) at Fordham, Campus Insiders
6:00 PM, Bucknell at Duquesne, NEC Front Row
6:00 PM, Georgetown at Marist, Marist Athletics
6:00 PM, Delaware at Lafayette, Campus Insiders and on TV at Lafayette Sports Network (check local listings)
7:00 PM, Holy Cross at New Hampshire, CAA.TV and on NESN the American Sports Network (you can check listings for the American Sports Network here, or watch the American Sports Network's live stream of the game here.)

Finally, need to catch up on the full preview fun pack of tonight's game?




Comments

Popular posts from this blog

How The Ivy League Is Able To Break the NCAA's Scholarship Limits and Still Consider Themselves FCS

By now you've seen the results.  In 2018, the Ivy League has taken the FCS by storm. Perhaps it was Penn's 30-10 defeat of Lehigh a couple of weeks ago .  Or maybe it was Princeton's 50-9 drubbing of another team that made the FCS Playoffs last year, Monmouth.  Or maybe it was Yale's shockingly dominant 35-14 win over nationally-ranked Maine last weekend. The Ivy League has gone an astounding 12-4 so far in out-of-conference play, many of those wins coming against the Patriot League. But it's not just against the Patriot League where the Ivy League has excelled.  Every Ivy League school has at least one out-of-conference victory, which is remarkable since it is only three games into their football season.  The four losses - Rhode Island over Harvard, Holy Cross over Yale, Delaware over Cornell, and Cal Poly over Brown - were either close losses that could have gone either way or expected blowouts of teams picked to be at the bottom of the Ivy League. W

UMass 21, Lafayette 14, halftime

Are you watching this game? UMass had this game under control until about 3 minutes in the second quarter, and then got an interception, converted for a TD. Then the Leopards forced a fumble off the return, and then converted THAT for a TD, making this a game. It's on CN8. You really should be watching this.

Examining A Figure Skating Rivalry: Tonya and Nancy

It must be very hard for a millennial to understand the fuss around the Nancy Kerrigan and Tonya Harding figure skating scandal in the run-up to the 1994 Olympics. If you're of a certain age, though - whether you're a figure skating fan or not, and I am decidedly no fan of figure skating - the Shakespearean story of Harding and Kerrigan still engages, and still grabs peoples' attention, twenty years later. Why, though?  Why, twenty years later, in a sport I care little, does the story still grab me?  Why did I spend time out of my life watching dueling NBC and ESPN documentaries on the subject, and Google multiple stories about Jeff Gilooly , idiot "bodyguards", and the whole sordid affair? I think it's because the story, even twenty years later, is like opium. The addictive story, even now, has everything.  Everything.  The woman that fought for everything, perhaps crossing over to the dark side to get her chance at Olypic Gold, vs. the woman who