Learn how to tune into La Liga on TV and Online. Check out who the global broadcasters are for the Spanish Primera Division across the globe by country.

Global Broadcasters for Spanish Primera Division

La Liga (2015-16 Season) – USA Broadcasters
The La Liga rights in the USA were exclusively acquired by beIN Sports. You can tune into La Liga on TV via beIN Sports USA, beIN Sports en Español. To watch La Liga online, you can access beIN SPORTS CONNECT, available to TV subscribers of beIN Sports. You can also watch beIN Sports online via subscription-based digital platforms that carry beIN Sports, such as fuboTV and Sling. 

La Liga (2015-16 Season) – Canada Broadcasters
beIN Sports also acquired the exclusive territorial rights for La Liga in Canada. Users in Canada can watch La Liga on TV on the beIN Sports Canada channel. Watching La Liga online can be accessed on beIN SPORTS CONNECT which is available to authenticated TV subscribers of beIN Sports.

La Liga (2015-16 Season) – UK Broadcasters
In the UK, Sky Sports holds the rights to broadcast coverage of La Liga. The three-year deal runs until the 2017-2018 season. You can watch La Liga on their Sky Sports 5 channel which focuses on European domestic leagues. Online you can watch the Primera Division on Now TV, the online Sky Sports Streaming platform.

 

La Liga (2015-16 Season) - Australian Broadcasters
In Australia, soccer fans can watch La Liga on the beIN Sports Australia channel. To watch La Liga online, authenticated users can access beIN SPORTS CONNECT.

For a list of additional countries, please visit the La Liga competition page to view specific territorial broadcasting rights. 

NOTE: The broadcast information on this page will be regularly updated as new broadcast information is confirmed. Please bookmark the page to check back.

How can I find out who is playing?
Visit our La Liga competition page for the most current official broadcast listings.

What is the current table ranking?
Visit our La Liga competition page for the latest table rankings.

2014-15 Spanish Primera Division (La Liga) Info and Highlights:

La Liga Champions: FC Barcelona

Top Scorers:
 

  • Pichichi: Cristiano Ronaldo, 48 goals
  • 2nd: Messi, 43 goals
  • 3rd: Neymar & Griezmann, 22 Goals

Most Assists

  • 1st: Messi, 18 assists
  • 2nd: Cristiano Ronaldo, 16 assists

Best Goalkeeper: Claudio Bravo: 0.51 goals per game

Teams Relegated: Elche, Almeria, Cordoba

Who are the 2015-16 La Liga season promoted teams?

  • Promoted: Real Betis, Sporting Gijon, Las Palmas

Who qualified for the 2015-16 UEFA Champions League?
A record five team from La Liga made it into the 2015/16 UEFA Champions League group stages. Last season’s Top Three teams (Barcelona, Real Madrid, Atletico Madrid) qualified automatically. They were joined by Valencia and Sevilla who won their respective UCL Playoff ties.

Who qualified for the 2015-16 UEFA Europa League?
Villarreal automatically qualified for the 2015-16 Europa League group stages thanks to their sixth place finish in the 2014/15 La Liga season. The Yellow Submarines were joined by Athletic Bilbao who finished seventh, eventually reached the Third Qualifying Round where they beat Azerbaijan’s Inter Baku 2-0 on aggregate before winning their playoff tie at MSK Zilina’s expense.

What were the biggest summer transfers?
Among La Liga’s biggest summer transfers were Iker Casillas’ departure from the Santiago Bernabeu to FC Porto, Arda Turan’s switch from Atletico Madrid to Barcelona for €34M, Jackson Martinez's transfer from FC Porto to Atletico Madrid for €35M and Pedro Rodriguez from Barcelona to Chelsea for around €30M.

Ironically, the biggest transfer everyone was expecting never happened: the transfer of David de Gea from Manchester United to Real Madrid was reportedly minutes away from materializing but the clubs failed to complete documentation before the transfer window deadline.

What were the biggest managerial changes before the start of the season?
The most notable managerial change was the sacking of Real Madrid's beloved Carlo Ancelotti who guided Los Blancos to La Decima and won the 2014 FIFA Club World Cup but failed to win silverware in 2015. The Italian was replaced by ex-Napoli coach Rafael Benitez. 

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