If you’re trying to find out how you can watch Spain vs. Czech Republic in Euro 2016, you’ve come to the right place.

With so much pressure riding on Spain as well as a sex scandal, the former World champions face a difficult obstacle against a resolute Czech Republic side who could spring the first surprise of Euro 2016.

Here are all of the details of where you can watch it on television and via legal streaming:

Who: Spain vs. Czech Republic
What: Euro 2016, Group D
When: Game kicks off at 9am ET / 6am PT; Monday, June 13, 2016
Where: Live on ESPN, ESPN Deportes, WatchESPN, Sling Latino and Sling TV (free trial)

If you live outside the United States, you can watch Sling TV via a VPN service (many offer a free trial).

With Sling TV, you can watch the Spain vs. Czech Republic and other Euro 2016 games with a free 7-day trial. With the legal streaming service, you can watch the game on your computer, smartphone, tablet, Roku or hook it up with your smart TV or Google Chromecast or Amazon Fire.

SEE MORE: How to watch Euro 2016 on Sling TV with this step-by-step guide

Plus Sling TV, the legal streaming service also includes beIN SPORTS (La Liga, Serie A, World Cup qualifiers), Univision Deportes (Liga MX, MLS, World Cup) as well as ESPN, ESPN2 plus tons of entertainment channels.

The Sling TV app is available for Windows 7 & higher, Apple computers (Lion 10.7 & higher) Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire tablet (running Android 4.4.2+), Roku, Android TV, ZTE, Channel Master, Apple iOS 8 (& higher) phones & tablets, Android 4.0.3 (and higher) phones & tablets and Xbox One.

SEE MORE: Preview of ESPN’s Euro 2016 TV and streaming coverage

Reigning champions Spain can make history this summer, as they seek to win their continental competition for the third consecutive edition. But all the signs point towards a team who will have things much tougher in France than they did four years ago.

After all, La Roja, then world champions, coasted to victory in 2012, playing the kind of precise and purposeful football that defined the generation. Much has changed since that tournament, though, with a torrid defence of their world crown and some vital figures in the setup walking away from international football.

The Czech Republic have been a regular feature in the latter stages of the European Championships since they first made their appearance at the tournament as a new country in 1996, when they were surprise finalists.

Despite their run to the last eight four years ago, you sense it’s going to be difficult to replicate the success of that effort 20 years earlier, or the semi-final showing inspired by Milan Baros and Jan Koller in 2004. Vrba, however, will be confident in the credentials of this team after they finished top of a very testing group in qualifying.

Indeed, it was a group that contained the Netherlands, as well as Turkey and Iceland; the latter two have also qualified. The Czechs did the double over the Dutch and will be relying on a similar dose of unbending determination to get them out of another tough pool in the competition proper.

SEE MORE: Where to find soccer channels on DirecTV and DISH.