Chicago Sky at Toronto Tempo: Sunday, June 7 at 3 p.m. ET on The U and TSN

The Chicago Sky visit the Toronto Tempo on Sunday, June 7, 2026, with tipoff at 3 p.m. ET; the game will air on The U and TSN for fans in the U.S. and Canada.

By
Chris Lawson
Editor
Sports writer with 9 years on the NFL and NBA beat. Sideline reporter and credentialed press member at three Super Bowls.
16 Views
3 Min Read
0 Comments
Chicago Sky at Toronto Tempo: Sunday, June 7 at 3 p.m. ET on The U and TSN

The travel to Toronto to face the Tempo on Sunday, June 7, 2026, with tipoff scheduled for 3 p.m. ET; the game will be broadcast on in the United States and TSN in Canada.

Chicago enters the matchup with a 4-6 record, while Toronto sits at 5-5 — a thin margin that makes this early-June meeting a chance for both teams to nudge their seasons toward even footing. is a recent source of offense for Chicago, scoring 24 points in an 85-80 win over the Sun (see: Skylar Diggins scores 24 as Chicago Sky snap five-game skid with 85-80 win — a performance the Sky will need to replicate away from home.

The 3 p.m. ET start and the pair of television windows are the core viewing details fans need: The U will carry the game for U.S. audiences and TSN will carry the game in Canada. Those channels provide the easiest live options for supporters who want to watch the matchup in real time rather than relying on condensed packages or highlights later.

As a watch guide, this notice supplies confirmed viewing information rather than a full game preview: it lists the date, start time and TV outlets so fans can plan when and where they will watch. The guide was created using technology provided by Data Skrive; betting, ticketing and streaming links that may appear around the broadcast are supplied by partners of The Athletic.

Notable here is the records gap and what it implies: a 4-6 Chicago squad against a 5-5 Toronto team means neither side has clear momentum heading into Sunday. The Sky’s recent win — with Diggins’ 24-point outing — halted a skid and supplied scoring proof, but it did not erase questions about consistency, especially on the road. That balance of records is the practical friction fans should watch when the clock hits 3 p.m. ET.

Logistics are straightforward for viewers. Fans in the U.S. should tune to The U at kickoff; Canadian viewers should have TSN on their dial. For those tracking the standings, the result will move one team closer to parity in early June and give a clearer sense of how each roster is settling into the regular season rhythm.

The immediate next step is plain: tune in at 3 p.m. ET on Sunday. The most consequential unresolved question after the final whistle will be whether the Sky can turn Diggins’ scoring into a reliable road formula or whether Toronto’s.500 stretch will become a foothold for the Tempo to establish control of this matchup.

Share
Editor

Sports writer with 9 years on the NFL and NBA beat. Sideline reporter and credentialed press member at three Super Bowls.