Schalke 04 vs Newcastle United: Live Stream, TV Channel, Betting Odds, Start Time of Club Friendly Match

Schalke 04 and Newcastle United are set to face off in a pre-season friendly match.
Schalke 04 vs Newcastle United: Live Stream, TV Channel, Betting Odds, Start Time of Club Friendly Match
The team of Schalke looks dejected after losing the penalty shoot-out of the match between FC Schalke 04 and West Ham United as part of the Schalke 04 Cup Day at Veltins-Arena on August 2, 2014 in Gelsenkirchen, Germany. The match between Schalke and West Ham United ended 6-7 after penalty shoot-out. (Photo by Christof Koepsel/Bongarts/Getty Images)
8/3/2014
Updated:
8/2/2014

Schalke 04 and Newcastle United are set to face off in a pre-season friendly match. 

Kick-off time is 11:40 a.m. EDT (5:40 p.m. CET, 4:40 p.m. BST) at Veltins-Arena, Gelsenkirchen.

The game will be broadcast on Sport1 Germany in Germany, as well as Quest in the United Kingdom.

The game will also air on ESPN3 in the United States. 

Live streaming is available on Watch ESPN. 

Schalke are 19/20 to win the match, while Newcastle are 13/5, as per OddsChecker.com. 

See an AP article below. 

Ukraine, Russia spar over soccer in Crimea 

MOSCOW (AP) — Five months after the annexation of Crimea, Russia and Ukraine are now squabbling oversoccer clubs in the region.

Defying authorities in Ukraine, Russia is incorporating three Crimean teams into its own leagues — a move that could strain relations between the host country of the 2018 World Cup and the sport’s world governing body.

The three Crimean clubs — SKChF Sevastopol, Zhemchuzhina Yalta and Tavria Simferopol — will leave Ukrainian soccer and play in the second division south, part of the Russian league system’s third tier, the Russian Football Union said in a statement.

Ukrainian soccer officials called on FIFA and European governing body UEFA to respond, saying Russia has no right to run the sport on what Ukraine considers its territory. FIFA has already rejected calls for Russia to be stripped of the World Cup in the wake of the downing of a Malaysian airliner over Ukraine.

“We can’t do the work of FIFA and UEFA,” Ukrainian Football Federation spokesman Pavel Ternovoi told The Associated Press on Friday. “We hope that in the near future these bodies take the corresponding decisions.”

The move by Russia in Crimea follows other problems for more well-known Ukrainian soccer teams. While Crimea has avoided the violence raging in eastern Ukraine, it has not escaped the chaotic conditions for sport in the region.

Ukrainian champion Shakhtar Donetsk has been forced to play its home games in exile in Lviv near the Polish border, a Ukrainian-speaking city that is the cultural opposite of mostly Russian-speaking and industrial Donetsk.

Six Shakhtar players, all from South America, have refused to report back to the club for the new season, citing safety concerns. Some are now reportedly in talks to transfer to clubs in other European countries.

Ukraine’s other representative in the Champions League — Europe’s top club competition — is Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, which is playing its home games in the capital, Kiev. Its first European match of the season — a third-round qualifying game against FC Copenhagen — was interrupted by crowd violence Wednesday, prompting a UEFA investigation.

Since Russia annexed the Crimean Peninsula in March, it has registered a total of five new clubs there.

Sergei Stepashin, a former Russian prime minister who sits on the RFU executive committee, told local media that “sanctions are possible” if Russia incorporates the Crimean clubs, but that the organization had “no doubts” it was the right thing to do.

Asked about possible sanctions against the Russians, Ternnovoi said the Ukrainian federation “doesn’t want the destruction of Russian football.”

“The federation wants justice and the absence of politics in football, both in Russia and in Crimea,” he said.

The RFU wants Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko, a FIFA executive committee member, to lobby FIFA President Sepp Blatter on the issue, Stepashin said.

FIFA and UEFA offices in Switzerland were closed Friday, a national holiday. Attempts to reach officials for comment were unsuccessful.

Some European politicians, including British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, want Russia removed as host of the 2018 World Cup. But FIFA has stood by Russia, saying the tournament “can achieve positive change” in the country. FIFA President Sepp Blatter had already rejected calls to strip Russia of the tournament after it annexed Crimea.

Russian World Cup organizers have previously said Crimea could host team training bases during the tournament.

While eastern Ukraine has been engulfed by fighting between the Ukrainian army and pro-Russian rebels, Crimea has remained peaceful and fully under Russian government control.

With more than 1,000 people killed — including the 298 passengers and crew of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 — and many more displaced, the conflict in eastern Ukraine has touched all aspects of everyday life. Last week, Ukrainian Premier League club Zorya Luhansk, whose home city is the base of a pro-Russian group, posted pictures of damage to its stadium caused by mortar rounds that smashed seats and left a crater in the field.

Tavria shares its name with a former Ukrainian champion club renowned as a hotbed of pro-Ukraine sentiment in Crimea, especially among its hardcore fans. Even after the annexation, Tavria and fellow Crimean team FC Sevastopol played out the remainder of the season in the Ukrainian Premier League, but have now been replaced by new Russian-registered entities.

In the second division south, the Crimean clubs will face a mixture of once-major Russian clubs fallen on hard times, such as former national champion Alania Vladikavkaz, local semi-professional clubs and reserve teams for Premier League sides.

Playing in tiny Russian provincial stadiums represents a step down for longtime Tavria fans, whose team was playing Europa League soccer as recently as the 2010-11 season.

Larry Ong is a New York-based journalist with Epoch Times. He writes about China and Hong Kong. He is also a graduate of the National University of Singapore, where he read history.