How to watch France vs Morocco in Canada: Time, TV channel, live streams for 2022 World Cup clash

Toby Miles

How to watch France vs Morocco in Canada: Time, TV channel, live streams for 2022 World Cup clash image

Defending champions France take part in an extra special World Cup semifinal on Wednesday, but their focus will be on their own history-making.

Morocco will be the first African nation to contest a World Cup semifinal after throwing Portugal out of the competition in the last eight, wrecking Cristiano Ronald's farewell tournament.

With nothing to lose and the African and the Arab worlds right behind them, they'll be determined to party all the way to the final. 

Olivier Giroud scored the winner as an unconvincing France beat England in the quarterfinal, moving Les Blues one step closer to back-to-back World Cups. No team has achieved that feat since Brazil in 1962.

LIVE: France vs Morocco World Cup score, highlights, result from 2022 semi final match

France vs Morocco TV channel in Canada

  • Date: Wednesday, December 14
  • Time: 2 p.m. ET / 11 a.m. PT
  • English-language TV channel: TSN 1
  • French-language TV channel: RDS

The 2022 World Cup will be televised in Canada by rights-holders Bell Media. Games will be shown across Bell Media platforms, including primarily TSN, with some games shown on network television station CTV. Bell Media will also broadcast the World Cup in French via RDS.

For English-language coverage, the France vs Morocco match will be shown on TSN 1.

The TSN studio coverage will be anchored by Kelcey Brade and Carmelina Moscato in Canada, with on-location hosts James Duthie, Luke Wileman, and Lindsay Hamilton leading the charge from Qatar. The analyst team includes Steven Caldwell, Julian de Guzman, and Kevin Kilbane, plus Canadian national team players Janine Beckie and Tosaint Ricketts, all on location in Qatar.

Reporters Matthew Scianitti and Daniel Zakrzewski will provide additional coverage in Qatar, and the on-location rules expert is Joe Fletcher.

For the French-language broadcasts, Olivier Brett and Claudine Douville are the lead commentary crew, with Patrick Leduc and Jean Gounelle leading the analysis team.

MORE: France route to FIFA World Cup final: Can Les Bleus clinch successive titles?

Stream France vs Morocco online in Canada

  • Date: Wednesday, December 14
  • Time: 2 p.m. ET / 11 a.m. PT
  • English-language streaming: TSN app, TSN website
  • French-language streaming: RDS app

While all games at the 2022 FIFA World Cup will be available on cable in Canada, there are also a few streaming options as well.

Bell Media offers streaming via the TSN app, TSN GO, and on the TSN website, TSN.ca. For Bell Media cable customers with TSN in their subscription package, they can sign in to the TSN GO app with their cable login and access content for non additional charge.

Fans can also purchase a subscription to the streaming service via either a monthly or yearly subscription, allowing fans without cable to access all of TSN's content, including the 2022 FIFA World Cup.

How to watch World Cup 2022 in Canada

The 2022 World Cup will be televised in Canada in English by TSN and in French by RDS. All channels are owned by parent company Bell Media.

Every match from the entire World Cup will be broadcast in Canada, either on cable or terrestrial television. Additionally, every match from the tournament can be streamed.

Every Canada match, as well as 15 group-stage games and over half the knockout stage, will be shown on over-the-air television via CTV.

All matches will be broadcast in French on RDS or RDS2, with replays available on RDS2 and RDS Info. Fans can refer to the RDS World Cup broadcast schedule for any last-minute updates or changes.

  • Dates: Sunday, November 20-Sunday, December 18
  • English-language TV channel: TSN, TSN2, CTV
  • English-language streaming: TSN app
  • French-language TV channel: RDS, RDS2, RDS Info

Toby Miles

Toby Miles Photo

Toby joined Sporting News in 2022 ahead of the World Cup, bringing previous sports writing experience at MailOnline and UEFA. An Englishman and Chelsea fan still fuming about Frank Lampard's 2010 ghost goal but never afraid to say 'It's Coming Home'.