The Oregon Ducks vs. Indiana Hoosiers College Football Playoff semifinal (Peach Bowl) is scheduled to air on ESPN, with streaming available through ESPN’s own platforms and several major live-TV streaming services.

Main ways to watch

  • National TV broadcast: The game is carried on ESPN as the primary television channel in the United States.
  • Kickoff details: Listed as a Peach Bowl CFP semifinal in Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium, with coverage beginning in prime time (evening Eastern Time, around 7:30 p.m. ET in current listings).
  • Cable/satellite: Any traditional cable or satellite package that includes ESPN should carry the game automatically.

Streaming without cable

Most current guides point to multiple legal streaming options that include ESPN.

  • ESPN app / ESPN streaming tier:
    • Log in with a cable/satellite/streaming provider that includes ESPN.
    • Some guides mention an ESPN-branded subscription tier (often bundled with broader ESPN access) for direct streaming.
  • Live TV streaming services that carry ESPN (availability varies by region and plan):
    • Fubo : Listed as a way to stream the matchup live with ESPN in the channel lineup.
* **DirecTV streaming offer** : Current viewing guides name DirecTV’s streaming product as another option that includes ESPN.
* Other ESPN-carrying services (e.g., Sling-style bundles) are also mentioned generically in watch guides as valid ways to stream the Peach Bowl if they include ESPN in your package.

On-demand and replay options

  • Highlight and replay videos:
    • Full game highlights and extended recap videos for Oregon vs. Indiana CFP matchups are already appearing on major sports channels’ video platforms, including ESPN College Football and CBS Sports’ online outlets.
  • Sports news sites:
    • Outlets such as Yahoo Sports and The Athletic are publishing “how to watch” pages and game recaps, which often embed or link to highlight clips and postgame analysis.

Forum and trending chatter

  • Fan forums and Reddit threads discuss TV times, channel confirmations, and streaming frustrations around Indiana–Oregon matchups, including earlier regular-season games, which helps confirm ESPN as the primary broadcaster and hints at strong national interest in this semifinal.
  • Streaming locator tools (like JustWatch-style listings) note past Indiana–Oregon games and where they streamed, reinforcing that major college games with these teams typically appear on large national sports networks and their associated streaming services.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.