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  1. ESPN (Latin America) ESPN (Brazil) ESPN (Caribbean) ESPN (Netherlands) ESPN (Oceania) ESPN (Sub-Saharan Africa) TSN (Canada) RDS (Canada) ESPN (Indian Subcontinent) ESPN (Southeast Asia) J Sports (Japan) Archived 2023-11-07 at the Wayback Machine; ESPN (UK and Ireland) ESPN (Philippines) ESPN (Singapore) ESPN QQ (China) ESPN Player

  2. ESPN 2 is a Latin American pay-television channel based in Buenos Aires broadcasting for Spanish-speaking Latin American countries. Its programming is mostly football -, tennis - and rugby union -related. The channel was first launched in 1996 as ESPN 2 in Mexico and Central America and in 2002 as ESPN+ for South America.

  3. LATIN AMERICA / CARIBBEAN. Launched in 1989, ESPNs pan-regional Latin America network transmits to 19 countries and territories, in high definition, divided by North, South, Brazilian and Caribbean feeds to better serve the fans in each region, broadcasting in Spanish, Portuguese and English.

  4. ESPN Latin America is the Latin American division of ESPN Inc., and broadcasts sports-related programming for the region in Spanish. It was launched on 31 March 1989. Its programming is adapted to the likes of viewers, who tend to prefer football and Hispanic baseball players to the more locally produced programs.

  5. LATIN AMERICA. Launched in 1989, ESPNs pan-regional Latin America network transmits in Spanish, Portuguese, and English to 42 countries and territories and is currently available in over 20 million homes in the region.

  6. Mar 3, 2023 · ESPN will broadcast Formula 1 across Latin America (excluding Mexico and Brazil) and the Caribbean for the next three seasons. Fans in Latin America will be able to tune into ESPN for live full coverage of all practice and qualifying sessions, F1 Sprint events and Grand Prix for over half of the races on the 2023 calendar.

  7. Follow all the latest Copa América football news, fixtures, stats, and more on ESPN.