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

Euro 2016’s biggest star, Cristiano Ronaldo, plays his first match in the competition today when Portugal (considered by many a favorite for this tournament) play Iceland, who are competing in the tournament for the very first time. It should be a victory for Portugal, but we have yet to see an upset at Euro 2016. Could Iceland do the unthinkable?

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

Who: Portugal vs. Iceland
What: Euro 2016, Group F
When: Game kicks off at 3pm ET / Noon PT; Tuesday, June 14, 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 Portugal vs. Iceland 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

After losing 1-0 on home soil to Albania early in the qualifying group, few would have anticipated Portugal to be in such high spirits ahead of Euro 2016. But manager Santos, who replaced Paulo Bento in the aftermath of the aforementioned nadir, steadied the ship and instilled some overdue steel into this group.

Indeed, despite boasting the most feared attacker in the competition in Ronaldo, this is not a Selecao side that places a great onus on their forward forays. Santos has stuck to the blueprint he used to push Greece into the knockout stages of the last two major tournaments, with defensive structure his modus operandi.

Regardless of what transpires in terms of the results they pick up on the field in France this summer, Iceland will make history when they kick-off their campaign at Euro 2016.

With just 323,000 people residing on the Nordic island, in terms of population they are the smallest country to ever feature at these championships. However, they’ve shown with their startling development in recent years that they shouldn’t be taken lightly by anyone in France, with Lagerback and Hallgrimsson formulating an extremely capable football team.

Indeed, lets not forget that had they not run into a talented Croatia team in 2014 this is a country that would have qualified for the World Cup. For this tournament, no playoffs were needed, as Strakarnir Okkar—translated as “Our Boys”—were outstanding in a very testing pool.

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