Dak Prescott and the Dallas Cowboys face the Las Vegas Raider for Monday Night Football on ABC and ESPN. Cooper Neill/Getty Images
When to watch Dallas Cowboys vs. Las Vegas Raiders
This Monday Night Football game will be on Nov. 17 at 8:15 p.m. ET (5:15 p.m. PT).
Where to watch Dallas Cowboys vs. Las Vegas Raiders
The Cowboys-Raiders game will be broadcast nationally on ABC and ESPN. The ManningCast will air on ESPN2.
The Raiders have lost three straight to fall to 2-7 on the year and are already looking ahead to next year. The Cowboys at 3-5-1 still hold a glimmer of hope for a playoff run this season but will need a road win tonight in the desert to keep its faint chances alive.
Tonight's Monday Night Football game kicks off at 8:15 p.m. ET (5:15 p.m. PT) on ABC and ESPN. You can flip over to ESPN2 during the game to catch the ManningCast with brothers Peyton and Eli, the popular alternative broadcast where the former NFL greats analyze the game and chat with different guests each week.
How to watch Cowboys vs. Raiders on Monday Night Football
If you don't have a cable or satellite TV subscription, you can watch tonight's game on ABC and ESPN or the ManningCast on ESPN2 with a live TV streaming service, including some of the new skinny bundles that cost less per month than a full package that includes many channels you probably will never watch.
ESPN ESPN DTC Watch MNF on ESPN and ABC for $30 per month ESPN DTC comes in two flavors. The ESPN Unlimited plan costs $30 a month (or $300 a year) and lets you stream all ESPN linear networks: ESPN, ESPN2, ESPNU, ESPNews, ESPN Deportes, SEC Network and ACC Network. You also get access to programming on ESPN on ABC, ESPN Plus, ESPN3, SECN Plus and ACCNX. For NFL fans, this new ESPN service lets you watch every Monday Night Football game and the ManningCast for the 12 weeks it airs (11 weeks during the regular season and a Wild Card playoff game). There is also a $12 a month ESPN Select plan that is like a rebranding of ESPN Plus. It offers you access to thousands of live games — including small college conferences, whose games you can't watch anywhere else — but not the NFL. See at ESPN
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