Full Rugby Match Replays

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Enrique Vasquez

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Aug 4, 2024, 11:34:23 PM8/4/24
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Primemembers in the UK (England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland) and Ireland can watch the Autumn Nations Series rugby on Prime Video for no additional fees. Non-Prime members can start a 30-day free trial of Prime (8.99/month or 95/year), or our Prime Video subscription (5.99/month). For more information visit www.amazon.co.uk/primevideo.

The Autumn Nations Series kicks off on 29th October 2022 across 5 weekends, UK and Ireland Prime customers will have access to all 21 scheduled matches. All matches will be live exclusively on Prime Video (Ireland Home matches are Co-Exclusive in Ireland). Visit =22172910031 to see the full schedule of our live coverage.


Go to the Prime Video app on your device and you will see matches called out under "live and upcoming events" or you can go to Amazon's homepage and click on Prime Video where you will see a link to "live and upcoming events". Alternatively, go to your Prime Video app (or Amazon homepage) and search for "Rugby".


Yes. There will be full commentary on every match. In addition, our Welsh customers will be able to watch dedicated Welsh language coverage of Welsh matches. An alternative natural Stadium Atmos option will also be available via the audio settings allowing you to tailor your live broadcast experience.


The default audio option is labelled English, while Stadium FX is true stadium sound. Welsh customers will be able to watch dedicated Welsh language coverage of Wales matches. Follow these steps while in the video player to view audio options and select Stadium FX: On Web, Android phones and tablets, Fire tablets, Alexa devices, iPhones and iPads, go to the speech bubble. On Fire TV, press the menu button on your remote, then select Audio. On Apple TV, swipe down on your remote to view the menu, then select Audio. On some living rooms devices, press up on your remote to bring up the player controls, then press up again to access the Audio menu. On other living room devices, you can choose your audio track on the match page from the Audio tab (English for the default audio with commentary and crowd noise, and Stadium FX for the real stadium audio).


Autumn Nation Series is available to customers based in the UK and Ireland. We don't have the broadcast rights for other territories. Ireland customers will be able to access the stream if within the European Union. All other international locations are not supported. Prime Video doesn't support streaming content through Virtual Private Network (VPN) or proxy connections. To watch Prime Video, you must disable these services on your device or try switching to another available connection.


If you're trying to access Autumn Nations Series via web browser in Ireland, you will need to go to PrimeVideo.com. If you're still experiencing issues, please Contact Us by clicking the "Start chatting" or "Call me" button at the bottom of this page.


Prime members residing within Ireland, will have the ability to watch live rugby matches, replays and highlights while travelling within the European Union. All other international locations are not supported.


First, check your device bandwidth speeds. For the best live streaming experience, Prime Video recommends a minimum download speed of 1 Mbps for SD & 5 Mbps for HD. Prime Video will serve the highest quality streaming experience possible based on the bandwidth speed available. If you're experiencing any issues with video juddering/motion, we recommend turning the Motion setting on your TV to Off. This setting might have a different name depending on your TV manufacturer. Some examples of the Motion setting include Auto Motion Plus, Tru Motion, MotionFlow, Cinemotion, and Motion Picture. If you still experience issues, please contact us.


Live sport is supported on Amazon devices such as the Fire TV and Fire tablet, on web browsers and on more than 650 connected devices via the Prime Video app, including compatible games consoles (PS3, PS4, PS5, Xbox One), set top boxes and media players (such as Google Chromecast, BT TV, Sky Q, NOW TV, TalkTalk TV, Virgin TV, Roku and Apple TV), smart TVs, Blu-ray players, tablets and mobile phones running iOS or Android.


If you cannot see live sport on your device, please update your app to the latest version. Android Users: Open the Google Play Store app, Search "Prime Video", Tap "Update". iOS Users: Open the App Store, Search "Prime Video", Tap "Update".


Rewind, pause and fast forward are available on Android/iOS Mobile, Web (Chrome, FireFox, Edge), Fire TV, Apple TV (Gen 3) & selected Smart TVs. Use Watch from beginning play buttons on the detail page or in player to watch from start.


You can turn Subtitles on or off by selecting the "CC" icon in your playback controls. For some devices, the Subtitles icon looks like a dialogue box, or it may be listed as a menu option under "Subtitles" on the video's detail page.


You can update your apps automatically by following these instructions: 1. Go to Settings, and select Applications. 2. Go to Appstore. 3. Set the option to YES to have applications updated automatically. if this is set to no, then you will see individual update options for each app icon in your app library. To sync the compatible apps on your Amazon Fire TV device with your Cloud: Go to Settings > My Account > Sync Amazon Content.


Please check with your local pub as availability may vary based on their setup. Sky will be providing access to matches for business premises and clubs in the UK and Ireland. For more information, please visit


Add the Stan Sport package to a Stan plan to watch every match of some of the world's best rugby union and rugby sevens competitions, ad-free, live & on demand with Stan Sport. You will be able to watch SVNS, Super Rugby, Super W, WXV, Oceania Rugby Sevens, the Bledisloe Cup and more live, as well as highlights, mini matches and full match replays on Stan Sport.


Stan Sport subscribers can also tune into Between Two Posts, hosted by Sean Maloney and Andrew Mehrtens and other special guests, recapping all the action on the field and looking ahead to the matches to come.


Additionally, with the advent of live pause, second and third screens, great commentary as well as the expense of attending the game live, how many fans now prefer to watch from home or in the pub? Over the past decade, the sports sector has focused so much on engaging remote viewers that fans in the ground have been somewhat overlooked. Realistically it is no longer good enough to rely on the quality of competition; fans have evolved and need something more than trys, tackles, short loo queues and quickly served beer (although solving this in some grounds would be a quantum leap forward).


So how can technology significantly enhance the live experience? There was no better place to start than speaking with some elite players; Jamie Roberts, Danny Care, Tim Visser and James Horwill, who are all experienced club, country and Lions veterans and brought a very particular degree of insight to the process.


Most fans are now aware of the role GPS data plays in training and game-strategy but around the sector there have been discussions about who owns this. Is it the intellectual property of the player and kept private? Or can it be leveraged commercially? Given this I was surprised by the degree to which the players were happy to share data with fans, in effect telling them how effective or hard working any player had been at any time. The role of this in dictating stadium design is interesting as it could be as basic as uploading it creatively onto the big screen, alternatively it could be a core theatrical element in making substitutions.


Whilst artificial surfaces abound in modern sport, there is scope for these to become even more game changing. For example, by adding fibre optics to the playing surface, we could conceivably create initiatives such as ghost replays of previous play. These would be exclusive to fans in the ground, adding another theatrical element to the match ticket as well as giving crucial assistance to officials.


The story dates from 1978, and is counted among the classics. Bill Beaumont, up there alongside Martin Johnson as the most venerated of England captains, was delivering his final dressing-room exhortation before a Five Nations Championship game with Wales at Twickenham. "Right," he fumed, steam billowing from his nostrils. "This Welsh team has had it. The Pontypool front row? Past it. Allan Martin and Geoff Wheel? No good. Terry Cobner? Too slow."


At which point, a nervous voice emerged from some dark corner of the inner sanctum. "Yeah, but what about Gareth Edwards, Phil Bennett, Gerald Davies and JPR Williams?" Profoundly flummoxed, Beaumont wracked his second- rower's brain for a suitable response. "For Christ's sake," he said eventually. "Even we're good enough to beat four men."


Not quite good enough to beat those four, as it turned out - England lost, by three penalty goals to two in a veritable riot of trylessness. They almost always lost in those days. Between January 1963, when they prevailed on a skating rink at the old Arms Park, and February 1980, when Beaumont led his country to the third leg of a Grand Slam with a single- point win in London, the red rose army managed only one victory in 17 matches. Their record in Cardiff was more grisly still, the '63 triumph being their last for 28 years.


Which was just how the Welsh liked it. Nothing in the universe was as important as strangling the public school twits with their own cravats on an annual basis, because in the towns and valleys where the miners and steelworkers toiled for their weekly wage, rugby was very much a class game. More than that, it gave a small nation a big say in international sporting affairs. Mervyn Davies, the magnificent No 8 from Swansea, put it this way in a thoughtful autobiography entitled In Strength and Shadow. "Wales was a different country back in the 1970s. It had great coal and steel industries. It had dockyards that saw ships come in from all parts of the world. It had sustainable farming and a burgeoning tourist trade. Above all else, Wales and the Welsh people celebrated their nationalism through rugby. Rugby gave Wales a global identity, a genuine reason to crow."

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