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Track Champions League fixtures across Tuesday and Wednesday matchweeks with calendar routines, reminders, and schedule patterns that reduce confusion.
Follow as many teams and players as you like — every match you care about, synced to your calendar.
Every Matchday 1 result from the 2026 World Cup group stage, group by group. Messi's hat-trick, Haaland and Mbappé doubles, Germany's seven-goal rout, and Japan's 2-2 with the Netherlands — plus what each result sets up for Matchday 2.
Paris Saint-Germain beat Arsenal on penalties (1-1 aet, 4-3) in the 2026 Champions League final to go back-to-back. The goals, the shootout, Vitinha's MOTM, Arteta's reaction, what it means, and how Japan watched it.
View the World Cup 2026 schedule across all 104 matches, with timezone-aware kickoff times and calendar options for every fixture.
Add football fixtures to Apple Calendar with an ICS feed, set up iPhone and Mac sync, and fix common problems when match updates stop.
Arsenal are 2025-26 Premier League champions — their first title in 22 years. How Mikel Arteta's side clinched it, the players behind it, and what comes next, including the Champions League final.
The Champions League is harder to follow than a domestic league because its rhythm is uneven. Matches cluster on Tuesdays and Wednesdays, vanish for weeks, then return with two-legged knockout ties. Tracking that by hand fails. Subscribe to a KOC Champions League feed once and the midweek nights land on your calendar automatically, in your own time zone.
League matches arrive every weekend. Champions League matchdays arrive in blocks. During busy weeks, several major games kick off at similar times; during gaps, there is no European football at all.
That stop-start rhythm is exactly why manual tracking breaks. A subscribed calendar keeps the competition visible without making you rebuild the schedule every round.
Subscribe once. Every match syncs to Google, Apple, and Outlook automatically — no manual updates needed.
Most Champions League weeks follow a simple shape:
The exact list shifts by season, broadcaster window, and UEFA scheduling, so let the calendar feed handle the final details.
Create a dedicated Champions League colour, then subscribe to the KOC competition feed. If you follow one club, also subscribe to that club's calendar so domestic and European fixtures appear together.
Use the guide that matches your app:
Do not turn on alerts for every Champions League match. Set reminders for your club, the highest-value neutral games, and knockout second legs. Leave the rest visible in the calendar without notifications.
Watching from outside Europe? Mind the date shifts. A Tuesday night match in Europe can be Wednesday morning in Asia or Oceania, and the feed converts that for you.
The calendar answers the logistics question: when is the match? For context, also note draw dates, knockout bracket changes, and whether a tie is the first or second leg. Those details decide whether a game can be managed conservatively or has to be chased.
Most main-round and knockout fixtures use Tuesday and Wednesday windows, but finals and special scheduling can differ.
Use the whole competition if you watch neutrals. Use a club feed if you mainly care about one team.
Your calendar converts European kickoff times into your local time zone, which can push the event past midnight.