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Where to watch Boston Celtics vs. San Antonio Spurs free live stream

There is NBA action on Saturday, March 29 when the San Antonio Spurs host the Boston Celtics at Frost Bank Center in San Antonio.

The game is scheduled to start at 8 p.m. EDT and will be broadcast on NBA TV, FanDuel Sports Network Southwest and NBC Sports Boston. Fans looking to watch this NBA game can do so for free by using DirecTV Stream, which offers a free trial, or FuboTV, which also offers a free trial and up to $30 off your first month. SlingTV doesn’t offer a free trial but has promotional offers available.

The Celtics won the previous matchup between these squads, 116-103, and now bring a seven-game winning streak into the rematch. The spurs have lost their last two and are at their lowest point of the season, 10 games under .500 at 31-41.

Boston is 54-19 and with some help tomorrow, could be just 3.5 games behind the Cleveland Cavaliers for first place in the East.

WATCH THE GAME FOR FREE HERE

Who: Boston Celtics vs. San Antonio Spurs

When: Saturday, March 29 at 8 p.m. EDT

Where: Frost Bank Center in San Antonio

Stream: FuboTV (free trial); Sling; DirecTV Stream (free trial)

Betting: Check out our MA sports betting guide, where you can learn basic terminology, definitions and how to read odds for those interested in learning how to bet in Massachusetts.

What is FuboTV?

FuboTV is an internet television service that offers more than 200 channels across sports and entertainment including Paramount+ with SHOWTIME. From the UEFA Champions League to the WNBA to international tournaments ranging across sports, there’s plenty of options available on FuboTV, which offers a free trial and up to $30 off the first month for new customers.

What is DirecTV Stream?

DirecTV Stream offers practically everything DirecTV provides, except for a remote and a streaming device to connect to your television. Sign up now and get three free months of premium channels including MAX, Paramount+ with SHOWTIME and Starz.

What is SlingTV?

SlingTV offers a variety of live programing ranging from news and sports and starting as low as $20 a month for your first month. Subscribers also get a month of DVR Plus free if they sign up now. Choose from a variety of sports packages without long-term contracts and with easy cancelation.

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NBA and FIBA to take next steps toward adding a new European league, sides announce

By TIM REYNOLDS AP Basketball Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — The NBA may soon be significantly expanding its presence in European basketball, in the form of partnering with FIBA on a new league that the sides have been talking about for many years.

Specifics are few, with the initial target — for now — being that it would be a 16-team league. But the announcement made Thursday by NBA Commissioner Adam Silver and FIBA secretary general Andreas Zagklis is a major step forward after a long process of the sides going back and forth with ideas about what might work.

“We feel now is the time to move to that next stage,” Silver said, noting that NBA owners offered “enthusiastic support” for such a move.

It’s a notion that has made sense for some time, particularly with the growth of the game in Europe and development of stars hailing from that part of the world. About one in every six current NBA players hail from Europe, including Denver’s Nikola Jokic (Serbia) and Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokounmpo (Greece) — who have combined for five of the last six MVP awards — along with the Los Angeles Lakers’ Luka Doncic (Serbia) and San Antonio’s Victor Wembanyama (France).

“Basketball is the No. 2 sport in Europe. It’s widely popular. Hundreds of millions of fans. Roughly 15% of the players in the NBA right now are from Europe. Five out of the last six of our MVPs have been European,” Silver said. “But there’s a huge gap, I think, between the amount of interest in the sport and the development in terms of how we operate a league here in North America.”

The league would likely use FIBA rules, such as a 40-minute game instead of the NBA’s 48-minute model, Silver said. But much of the other details — who, when, where — will be determined in the months ahead.

“FIBA has been running competitions for almost seven decades, since the 1957-58 season, and certainly we have seen great product,” Zagklis said. “We have seen great players. But at the same time, we have come to the conclusion that the popularity of the sport and the success that we’ve had with the national team competitions is not matched by fan interest and a commercial impact commensurate to that success.”

The NBA and FIBA, the sport’s global governing body, were in discussions for some time about adding either an annual competition in Europe or having an NBA-operated league there. It was a topic at a Board of Governors meeting this past September, one where Zagklis took part.

Zagklis was back for this meeting, and clearly things were trending this way since at least last summer if not even longer.

“Coming out of the most successful World Cup and Olympics ever, we also believe it is the right time to take the next step for club basketball,” Zagklis said.

In January, speaking at the NBA Paris Games — when the league took advantage of the trip to France to meet with European stakeholders on the topic of the future of basketball on that continent — Silver said he believes the NBA remains “on track” in the process of expanding its footprint in Europe. That was also when he said the league’s governors would be briefed further at the March meeting.

“The response we’ve gotten from the marketplace is very positive,” Silver said.

Zagklis said FIBA’s leadership also unanimously agrees that it’s the right time to partner with the NBA on a new league.

“Our role as a federation is to unite the basketball ecosystem,” Zagklis said.

The new league — which would likely carry some sort of NBA branding, given how recognizable the league and its logo are — would be part of the current European club system, and teams would also play in their respective national leagues. One of the ideas being floated, if it is a 16-team final product, is to have perhaps as many as four spots available to be reallocated through relegation, something popular in European leagues but nonexistent in major U.S. sports.

The NBA and FIBA would also provide money and resources to the continued development of the game in Europe, with more team academies and adding to their existing programs there designed to work with players, coaches and referees.

“Given the opportunity to design a league from scratch, one of the things we’re looking at is what are the best elements we can take of both systems,” Silver said.

The Associated Press contributed to this article

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