The Kansas Jayhawks take on the South Dakota Coyotes Friday in Week 1 college football action from KU Memorial Stadium. This will be the first game of the season for both teams. South Dakota managed to play a handful of spring games, finishing at a disappointing 1-3. As for Kansas, they played nine games last fall, going winless in that campaign.
Here’s how to follow along with all the action:
- When: Friday, Sept. 3 | Time: 6 p.m. ET
- Where: David Booth Kansas Memorial Stadium, Lawrence, KS
- TV: ESPN+
- Online streaming: fuboTV (Try for free. Regional restrictions may apply.)
South Dakota was unable to improve on their 5-7 record in 2019 (4-4 in MVFC play) this spring, posting a 1-3 record overall. That finish left the Coyotes in a tie for seventh place in the conference. South Dakota was amid a logjam of four other MFVC teams with just one win.
The Coyotes started out the spring season well enough with a 27-20 win over Illinois State. After that came losses to North Dakota, Missouri State and Youngstown State, however. South Dakota had four more games originally scheduled, but those were cancelled.
Where can I watch Kansas vs South Dakota Football 2021?
Once signed up for ESPN+, you can watch The Kansas vs South Dakota live on the ESPN app on your Roku, Roku TV, Amazon Fire TV or Firestick, Apple TV, Chromecast, PlayStation 4 or 5, Xbox One or Series X/S, any device with Android TV (such as a Sony TV or Nvidia Shield), Samsung Smart TV, Oculus Go, iPhone, Android phone, iPad or Android tablet.
How can I watch the South Dakota vs Kansas Game online via live stream?
The game (7 p.m. ET start time) isn’t on TV anywhere, but anyone in the US can watch South Dakota vs Kansas live on ESPN.
TV: ESPN
With ESPN+, you’ll be able to stream hundreds of live college football games during the 2021 season. It also includes dozens of other live sports, every 30-for-30 documentary and additional original content (both video and written) all for $6.99 per month.
Or, if you also want Disney+ and Hulu, you can get all three for $13.99 per month. Separately, the three streaming services would cost a total $20.97 per month, so you’re saving about 33 percent.