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tour de france

How to Watch the Tour de France If You Don’t Have Cable

By
Ethan Wolff-Mann
Ethan Wolff-Mann
and
Money
Money
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By
Ethan Wolff-Mann
Ethan Wolff-Mann
and
Money
Money
Down Arrow Button Icon
July 2, 2016, 8:00 AM ET
La Course By Le Tour De France 2015
PARIS, FRANCE - JULY 26: Anna Van Der Breggen of the Netherlands and Rabo Liv Woman Cycling Team celebrates as she crosses the finish line to win the La Course By Le Tour De France 2015 Women's Race on July 26, 2015 in Paris, . (Photo by Doug Pensinger/Getty Images)Photograph by Doug Pensinger — Getty Images

This article was originally published on Money.com.

This year’s Tour de France —which begins Saturday, July 2, in Normandy with a flat stage to Utah beach and ends on the Champs-Élysées in Paris on Sunday, July 24—looks promising. According to Andrew Hood, veteran correspondent for VeloNews, “the 2016 edition is the hardest route the Tour de France has served up in a long time.”

Watching the blue-chip favorites like Britain’s Chris Froome, last year’s champion, Spain’s Alberto Contador, and Colombia’s Nairo Quintana is going to be easier (if not cheaper) this year for people who don’t have cable.

If you do have cable, you can watch the Tour on NBC Sports Network, which has negotiated exclusive rights in the U.S. Because of the time zone difference, coverage usually begins around 8 a.m. And ends around 11:30 a.m. On the East Coast. So you may find yourself wanting to watch when you’re away from your TV and in need of a streaming option.

In that case, you’ll have to get it through NBC’s Sports Gold service. Unfortunately, instead of allowing cable customers to sign in with their provider login credentials on the regular NBC Sports app or site, the network is making everyone, subscribers and non-subscribers alike, cough up $29.99 for its “Sports Gold” app, an ad-free package across all major platforms (phones, Apple TV, desktop). On the upside, the fee also gets you the Vuelta a España and a few other future bicycle races, including the 2017 Paris-Roubaix.

And since the package is not a cable add-on, it’s also the option for cord cutters who eschew cable completely. Annoying perhaps, but for just over a dollar per stage, it beats trying to watch a pixilated feed streamed through malware-ridden pirate sites.

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By Ethan Wolff-Mann
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