Everton v Leicester City live stream and match preview, Saturday 5 November, 5.30pm GMT
Everton v Leicester City live stream and match preview
Looking for a Everton v Leicester City live stream? We’ve got you covered with our handy guide.
Leicester City will be hoping to climb out of the relegation zone when they travel to Merseyside to take on Everton on Saturday.
Brendan Rodgers’ side finally found some form in October after a dreadful start to the campaign, winning three of their six Premier League matches.
However, they suffered a 1-0 loss to Manchester City last weekend and remain in the drop zone in 18th, one point adrift of safety.
A win here would draw them level with Everton, despite the Toffees being as high as 12th in the standings.
Frank Lampard’s side bounced back from a three-match losing run to beat Crystal Palace and draw with Fulham in their last two outings.
A win would push them into the top half, but defeat could see them quickly dragged towards the wrong end of the table.
Everton got the better of Leicester last season, holding the Foxes to a 1-1 draw at home before beating them 2-1 at the King Power in May.
Team news
Ben Goffrey, Yerry Mina and Andros Townsend make up the Everton injury list.
Leicester’s also have three players sidelined: Jonny Evans, Ricardo Pereira and Ryan Bertrand.
Form
Everton: DWLLL
Leicester City: LWWDL
Referee
David Coote will be the referee for Everton v Leicester City.
Stadium
Everton v Leicester City will be played at Goodison Park.
Other games
Everton v Leicester is the late game on Saturday at 5.30pm.
Kick-off and channel
Kick-off is at 5:30pm BST on Saturday 5 November and the game is on Sky Sports Main Event and Sky Sports Premier League (opens in new tab) in the UK. See below for international broadcast options.
VPN guide
If you’re out of the country for a round of Premier League fixtures, then annoyingly your domestic on-demand services won’t work – the broadcaster knows where you are because of your IP address (boo!). You’ll be blocked from watching it, which is not ideal if you’ve paid up for a subscription and still want to catch the action without resorting to illegal feeds you’ve found on Reddit.
But assistance is on hand. To get around that, all you have to do is get a Virtual Private Network (VPN), assuming it complies with your broadcaster’s T&Cs. A VPN creates a private connection between your device and t’internet, meaning the service can’t work out where you are and won’t automatically block the service you’ve paid for. All the info going between is entirely encrypted – and that’s a result.
There are plenty of good-value options out there, and FourFourTwo currently recommends:
International Premier League TV rights
• UK: Sky Sports (opens in new tab) and BT Sport (opens in new tab) are the two main players once again, but Amazon (opens in new tab) also have a slice of the pie in 2022/23.
• USA: NBC Sports Group are the Premier League rights holders, with the Peacock Premium (opens in new tab) streaming platform showing even more than the 175 games it aired last season. If you pick up a fuboTV subscription (opens in new tab) for the games not on Peacock Premium, you’ll be able to watch every game.
• Canada: The way to watch Premier League football in 2022/23 is fuboTV (opens in new tab), which has exclusive rights to all the action.
• Australia: Optus Sport (opens in new tab) will screen every game of the Premier League season. Non-subscribers can access the action via a Fetch TV box (opens in new tab) and other friendly streaming devices.
• New Zealand: Sky Sport (opens in new tab) are serving up all 380 games – plus various highlights and magazine shows throughout the week, as well as the Champions League.