How to watch the NBA Finals in Canada: Full TV schedule for 2023-24 season on TSN, Sportsnet channels & live streams

Kyle Irving

How to watch the NBA Finals in Canada: Full TV schedule for 2023-24 season on TSN, Sportsnet channels & live streams image

The NBA Finals are here.

After a thrilling 82-game campaign, 16 teams began their journey to win the Larry O'Brien Trophy. Now, only two remain.

In the Eastern Conference, the 1-seed Celtics swept the 6-seed Pacers in the Conference Finals to move a step closer to Banner No. 18. In the West, 5-seed Mavericks got past the 3-seed Timberwolves in five games.

Basketball fans in Canada can watch the NBA Playoffs from Game 1 of the first round through the title-clinching game in the NBA Finals, with games airing on TSN, Sportsnet and RDS.

Below, The Sporting News has you covered with a national TV guide that will be updated throughout the postseason to provide you with all the information you need to tune into the NBA in Canada.

What channel is the NBA on in Canada? Full TV schedule, live streams for 2023-24 season

NBA games will air on TSN, Sportsnet and RDS in Canada during the Finals. You can stream games via the TSN App and Sportsnet NOW.

All times are Eastern. Times, dates and broadcast information are subject to change.

DateMatchupTime (ET)Network
June 6Mavericks vs. Celtics (Game 1)8:30 p.m.RDS2, TSN 3/4
June 9Mavericks vs. Celtics (Game 2)8 p.m.RDS, SN
June 12Celtics vs. Mavericks (Game 3)8:30 p.m.TSN 1/3/4/5
June 14Celtics vs. Mavericks (Game 4)8:30 p.m.RDS, SN
June 17Mavericks vs. Celtics (Game 5)*8:30 p.m.TSN 1/3/4/5
June 20Celtics vs. Mavericks (Game 6)*8:30 p.m.RDS-Info, SN
June 23Mavericks vs. Celtics (Game 7)*8 p.m.RDS, TSN 3/4

* If necessary

Kyle Irving

Kyle Irving Photo

You read that wrong – not Kyrie Irving. From Boston, graduated from the University of New Hampshire. Sixth season as a content producer for NBA.com's Global editions. Covering the NBA Draft has become his annual "dream come true" moment on the job. Irving has a soft spot for pass-first point guards, with Rajon Rondo and Steve Nash being two of his favorite players of all time.