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

Turkey and Croatia meet in a rematch of the Euro 2008 quarter-final, which ended with Turkey winning on penalties before getting knocked out in the semi-final by Germany. If the match can even close to that memorable quarter-final, we’re in for a classic game between two very proud countries.

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

Who: Turkey vs. Croatia
What: Euro 2016, Group C
When: Game kicks off at 9am ET / 6am PT; Sunday, June 12, 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 Turkey vs. Croatia 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 no wins in their first three qualifying group games in a pool containing the likes of the Netherlands, Iceland and the Czech Republic, getting into the finals proper looked to be beyond this talented Turkey team at one point. But eventually they recovered well and avoided the need for a playoff.

Terim is a fiercely ambitious boss and despite being placed in one of the most testing foursomes at Euro 2016, will be confident this group can upset the establish tournament order. Indeed, the last time they featured in the Euros under his guidance in 2008, they made it all the way to the semi-finals.

Despite being able to field a classy starting XI, there is plenty of apprehension about how Croatia will fare at the summer showpiece.

Indeed, most sides in the tournament would love to call upon midfield options as grand as Luka Modric, Ivan Rakitic, Mateo Kovacic and Marcelo Brozovic, not to mention the attacking class of Ivan Perisic and Mario Mandzukic. But Croatia seem bereft of any direction at this juncture, despite what was a relatively straightforward qualifying process.

Much of that is down to the manager. Cacic took over this team following the sacking of Nico Kovac last year and given his relatively humble coaching background, his appointment hasn’t been galvanising to fans or players. Performances, systems and gameplans have been extremely inconsistent as a result.

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