University of Richmond Athletics

Television Information For Saturday's Richmond-App. State Game
11/29/2009 | Football
Nov. 29, 2009
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND, Va. - All four games of the Quarterfinal Round of the 2009 NCAA Division I Football Championship are national broadcasts on ESPN GamePlan and ESPN360.com. Fourth-seeded Richmond hosts Appalachian State Saturday at 7 p.m. ET at UR Stadium.
The game is also an ESPN Syndication broadcast, and has been picked up by MASN in the Mid-Atlantic region.
Tickets for Saturday's game are $25 for adults, $10 for youth and $5 for App. State students (with ID). Richmond students are admitted free with ID.
The Richmond/App. State winner faces the top-seeded Montana vs. Stephen F. Austin winner (2 p.m. ET) in the NCAA Semifinals. That game would be at Richmond if both the Spiders and Stephen F. Austin advance.
Saturday's other Quarterfinal games are: William & Mary at third-seeded Southern Illinois at 12 p.m. ET and New Hampshire at second-seeded Villanova at 3:30 p.m. The winners of those two games meet in the Semifinals.
Of the eight teams remaining in the Playoffs, four are from CAA Football.
ESPN GamePlan Information
ESPN's GamePlan package can be purchased through your cable or satellite provide for a weekly subscription fee of $24. (ESPN GamePlan announces its weekly channel lineup 24-48 hours before the start of Saturday's games.)
ESPN360.com Information
The game will be shown live online via ESPN360.com -- ESPN's signature broadband sports TV network. The game is available completely free to any student on Richmond's campus (in fact, to any student on any college campus nationwide). This season, ESPN360.com will feature more than 300 college football games.
In the U.S., ESPN360.com is a 24/7 broadband sports network, delivering more than 3,000 live global sports events annually. ESPN360.com is available at no charge to fans who receive their high-speed Internet connection from an affiliated service provider. Additionally, it is available free to approximately 18 million students and military personnel via any computer on a U.S. campus or military base computer network.










