Arizona
Arizona Cardinals vs San Francisco 49ers game today: Time, TV channel, how to watch Week 5
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The Arizona Cardinals and San Francisco 49ers play on Sunday, Oct. 6 in a game on the NFL Week 5 schedule.
Here’s a look at the time, channel and broadcast information for the Week 5 NFL game, which will be played at Levi’s Stadium.
The 49ers are a 7.5-point favorite over the Cardinals in NFL Week 5 odds for the game, courtesy of BetMGM Sportsbook.
San Francisco is -375 on the moneyline, while Arizona is +300.
The over/under (point total) is set at 49.5 points.
The Cardinals are coming off a 42-14 loss against the Washington Commanders in NFL Week 4.
The 49ers beat the New England Patriots, 30-13.
NFL Week 5 picks: Buccaneers vs Falcons | Jets vs Vikings | Panthers vs Bears | Ravens vs Bengals | Bills vs Texans | Colts vs Jaguars | Dolphins vs Patriots | Browns vs Commanders | Raiders vs Broncos | Cardinals vs 49ers | Packers vs Rams | Giants vs Seahawks | Cowboys vs Steelers | Saints vs Chiefs | The Arizona Republic’s predictions
More: San Francisco 49ers change uniform for NFL Week 5 game against Arizona Cardinals Sunday
Watch Cardinals at 49ers live on FUBO (free trial)
Here’s how to watch the Cardinals-49ers game, including time, TV schedule and streaming information:
What channel is Arizona Cardinals vs San Francisco 49ers game on today? Time, TV schedule
TV channel: FOX
Start time: 1:05 p.m. MST (Arizona), 4:05 p.m. ET
NFL Sunday schedule, TV channels: How to watch NFL Week 5 games today
What channels are NFL games on today? How to watch NFL Week 5 on TV Sunday
How to watch Arizona Cardinals vs San Francisco 49ers on livestream
Streaming options for the game include sites that stream FOX Sports, including FUBO, which offers a free trial.
NFL Week 5 predictions: ESPN matchup predictor’s picks, win probabilities for this week
NFL power rankings Week 5: Where are Cardinals, 49ers now?
Who are the announcers for the Arizona Cardinals vs San Francisco 49ers NFL Week 5 game?
Kevin Burkhardt (play-by-play) and Tom Brady (analyst) are scheduled to be the announcers for the Cardinals at 49ers Week 5 NFL game.
NFL Week 5 announcers: Television broadcasters, announcing crews for Week 5 NFL schedule
NFL Week 5 schedule: Television channels, how to watch, stream games
Arizona Cardinals schedule 2024 (all times MST)
- NFL Week 1: Bills 34, Cardinals 28
- NFL Week 2: Cardinals 31, Rams 10
- NFL Week 3: Lions 20, Cardinals 13
- NFL Week 4: Commanders 42, Cardinals 14
- NFL Week 5: At San Francisco 49ers, Sunday, Oct. 6, FOX, 1:05 p.m.
- NFL Week 6: At Green Bay Packers, Sunday, Oct. 13, FOX, 10 a.m.
- NFL Week 7: Los Angeles Chargers, Monday, Oct. 21, ESPN+, 6 p.m.
- NFL Week 8: At Miami Dolphins, Sunday, Oct. 27, FOX, 10 a.m.
- NFL Week 9: Chicago Bears, Sunday, Nov. 3, CBS, 2:05 p.m.
- NFL Week 10: New York Jets, Sunday, Nov. 10, CBS, 2:25 p.m.
- NFL Week 11: BYE
- NFL Week 12: At Seattle Seahawks, Sunday, Nov. 24, FOX, 2:25 p.m.
- NFL Week 13: At Minnesota Vikings, Sunday, Dec. 1, FOX, 11 a.m.
- NFL Week 14: Seattle Seahawks, Sunday, Dec. 8, CBS, 2:05 p.m.
- NFL Week 15: New England Patriots, Sunday, Dec. 15, CBS, 2:25 p.m.
- NFL Week 16: At Carolina Panthers, Sunday, Dec. 22, FOX, 1 p.m.
- NFL Week 17: At Los Angeles Rams, Saturday, Dec. 28 or Sunday, Dec. 29, TBD, TBD
- NFL Week 18: San Francisco 49ers, Saturday, Jan. 4 or Sunday, Jan 5, TBD, TBD
NFL Week 5 odds: Point spreads, moneylines, over/unders for betting on NFL games this week
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NFL’s highest paid players in 2024: Quarterbacks | Running backs | Wide receivers | Tight ends | Offensive linemen | D-linemen | Cornerbacks | Safeties | Linebackers | Edge rushers | Highest paid players: Overall | By position | By team
Reach Jeremy Cluff at jeremy.cluff@arizonarepublic.com. Follow him on X, formerly Twitter @Jeremy_Cluff.
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Arizona
Where to watch Arizona Diamondbacks vs St. Louis Cardinals: TV channel, start time, streaming for June 25
What to know about MLB’s ABS robot umpire strike zone system
MLB launches ABS challenge system as players test robot umpire calls in a groundbreaking season.
The 2026 MLB season has surpassed the quarter mark, and after each team’s first 40 games, there’s plenty of reasons to tune in all summer long.
Chicago White Sox slugger Munetaka Murakami has already proven doubters wrong by launching 17 home runs, Pittsburgh’s Paul Skenes consistently looks like the best version of himself on the mound and Milwaukee ace Jacob Misiorowski is throwing harder than any starter in the majors.
The MLB action continues on Thursday as the Arizona Diamondbacks visit the St. Louis Cardinals.
Here’s everything you need to know to tune in for the first pitch.
See USA TODAY’s sortable MLB schedule to filter by team or division.
What time is Arizona Diamondbacks vs St. Louis Cardinals?
First pitch between the St. Louis Cardinals and Arizona Diamondbacks is scheduled for 7:45 p.m. (ET) on Thursday, June 25.
How to watch Arizona Diamondbacks vs St. Louis Cardinals on Thursday
All times Eastern and accurate as of Thursday, June 25, 2026, at 6:33 a.m.
- Matchup: ARI at STL
- Date: Thursday, June 25
- Time: 7:45 p.m. (ET)
- Venue: Busch Stadium
- Location: St. Louis, Missouri
- TV: Cardinals.TV and DBACKS.TV
- Streaming: MLB.TV on Fubo
Watch MLB all season long with Fubo
MLB regional blackout restrictions apply
MLB scores, results
MLB scores for June 25 games are available on usatoday.com . Here’s how to access today’s results:
See scores, results for all of today’s games.
Arizona
Arizona State parts ways with head track and field coach Dion Miller
Graham Rossini on Arizona State’s continued investment in track & field
Rossini said work is underway to rebuild the “track and field infrastructure” at ASU.
Arizona State is making a change at the head track and field coach position.
Dion Miller, the director of cross-country and track and field at ASU, has been let go, a school spokesperson confirmed to The Arizona Republic.
A national search is now underway to find the new coach to lead the program.
Miller was hired as director in July 2019, his second stint with the school. During his time with ASU, Miller — who primarily focused on the sprints — helped coach 36 All-Americans across the men’s and women’s programs.
ASU’s track and field team also just lost record-breaking junior sprinter Jayden Davis, a homegrown talent who recently entered the transfer portal.
Logan Stanley is a sports reporter with The Arizona Republic who primarily focuses on high school, college and Olympic sports. To suggest ideas for human-interest stories and other news, reach out to Stanley at logan.stanley@usatodayco.com or 707-293-7650. Follow him on X, formerly Twitter: @LSscribe.
Arizona
How Arizona powered a 1st-of-its kind space telescope rescue mission
A NASA mission to rescue its Swift Observatory from the brink has relied on Arizona, with Flagstaff’s Katalyst Aerospace supplying the spacecraft due to reach orbit and boost the telescope’s orbit.
Arizona plays a central role in a daring NASA mission: It will soon attempt to stave off the death of one of its space telescopes in danger of falling back to Earth.
The Swift Observatory has been scanning the cosmos for more than two decades while orbiting Earth. But in recent years, NASA has noticed that the crucial satellite has been unexpectedly getting lower and lower – putting it in danger of burning up in Earth’s atmosphere.
Now, the U.S. space agency is on the cusp of mounting a rescue mission later in June – the likes of which has never before been attempted – that stunningly came together in less than a year.
The daring venture has recently reached the final stages, with the spacecraft that will fly in orbit – manufactured by an Arizona aerospace company – being mated with the rocket and the aircraft that will deploy it to orbit. If all goes to plan, the mission will soon send the spacecraft on a trajectory to intercept NASA’s telescope and reverse its decaying orbit by boosting it to a higher altitude, extending the observatory’s life.
Here’s what to know about the mission, and Arizona’s integral role in ensuring everything came together to save the observatory in time.
What is the Swift Observatory?
Launched in 2004, NASA’s Swift Observatory has spent more than two decades orbiting Earth while studying a variety of cosmic phenomena. The satellite’s primary objective, though, is to observe gamma-ray bursts – events triggered by the catastrophic deaths of massive stars and considered to be the most powerful types of explosions in the universe.
The satellite is equipped with three multiwavelength telescopes that are able to collect data in visible, ultraviolet, X-ray and gamma-ray light.
Swift space telescope falls faster to Earth than expected
NASA to mount rescue mission for vital space telescope named Swift
NASA and commercial partners will launch a spacecraft in June to boost Swift Observatory’s orbit, staving off its destruction and extending its life.
The Swift Observatory is in a region of space known as low-Earth orbit nearer to the atmosphere, which is also where the International Space Station resides.
All spacecraft in that region can expect to fall to lower altitudes if they don’t have propulsion systems to counteract atmospheric drag and maintain their orbits. But the Swift Observatory has fallen faster than NASA has anticipated because of increased solar storms since fall 2024.
NASA plans mission to rescue Swift
NASA could allow the Swift Observatory to fall back to Earth, where it would harmlessly burn up as it careened into the atmosphere.
Instead, the space agency is planning a mission to rescue the telescope and extend its mission for several more years.
A successful mission would mark the first time that a commercial robotic spacecraft captured a government satellite that – unlike other spacecraft like the Hubble Space Telescope – was never meant to be serviced in space. The unprecedented venture, NASA leaders say, would also test a new capability that could be used on other missions while negating the need to spend even more money to replace the observatory.
To accomplish the risky feat, NASA will need a spacecraft designed to capture and raise the orbit of the Swift Observatory, and a rocket to launch it into space, according to the agency. In the meantime, mission teams on the ground are keeping Swift at least 185 miles above Earth, where the boost mission has the best chance of success, NASA said.
Arizona aerospace company races to develop rescue spacecraft
The spacecraft that will attempt to rescue the Swift Observatory was developed by Katalyst Space, an aerospace company based in Flagstaff, Arizona, which was awarded the $30 million contract in September 2025.
With less than a year to help NASA mount a rescue mission, Katalyst developed the LINK robotic servicing spacecraft intended to latch onto a space telescope that was never meant to be captured.
Because Swift has no docking ports or grappling fixtures to grab onto, Katalyst built LINK with a custom robotic capture mechanism that will attach to a feature on the satellite’s main structure. The process is meant to mitigate the chance of any sensitive instruments being damaged, Katalyst said in a press release.
Why such a quick turnaround? Because Swift is falling – and falling fast.
According to Katalyst, the satellite has a 50% chance of making an uncontrolled reentry by mid-2026 without intervention, with those odds increasing to 90% by the end of 2026.
Northrop Grumman to launch LINK spacecraft
LINK will hitch a ride to space with a rocket manufactured by Northrop Grumman, a Virginia-based aerospace and defense company. At about 55 feet tall, Northrop Grumman’s Pegasus XL is classified as a small-lift rocket regarded as the world’s first privately developed orbital launch vehicle.
In mid-June, LINK was securely encapsulated in a payload fairing inside the Pegasus XL rocket at NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia, according to Katalyst.
The Pegasus XL was also attached around the same time to the belly of Northrop Grumman’s Stargazer aircraft tasked with deploying the rocket, NASA said in a press release. The Stargazer aircraft then took off June 18 from Wallops bound for the Marshall Islands, where the mission is due to commence.
When, where is launch?
The Pegasus XL rocket is due to launch later in June from the Kwajalein Atoll in the Marshall Islands, located in the South Pacific Ocean between Hawaii and the Philippines, according to NASA.
Rather than get the rocket off the ground vertically on a launch pad, Northrop Grumman deploys an air-launch strategy to send the Pegasus to space. The approach will require the company’s Stargazer L-1011 aircraft to take off and climb to approximately 40,000 feet over the ocean, where Pegasus will be released.
After several seconds in free-fall, the Pegasus XL will then ignite the first of its three-stage rocket motors, delivering LINK into orbit in about 10 minutes, according to Northrop Grumman.
Eric Lagatta is the Space Connect reporter for the USA TODAY Network. Reach him at elagatta@usatodayco.com
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