If you need to watch Golden State Warriors vs Phoenix Suns live and track match player stats at the same time, this piece tells you exactly where to tune in, which apps to open for live box scores, and the simple setup I use to watch the broadcast while following advanced stats. I’ve tested the workflows I recommend and include quick fixes for blackouts, cheap stream combos, and the best stat sources.
How broadcasts and streaming rights affect where you can watch
The first thing to know is rights matter. Locally, the Warriors’ regional broadcasts typically appear on the Bay Area regional sports network and the Suns’ local games air on the Phoenix regional network. Nationally, marquee matchups often land on ABC, ESPN, TNT, or NBA TV — so check the national schedule. That distribution explains why searches for “where to watch golden state warriors vs phoenix suns” spike before tipoff: fans need to know whether the matchup is on a local RSN or a national telecast.
Live TV channels and national networks (quick checklist)
- ABC/ESPN/TNT/NBA TV — national telecasts, available via most live TV services.
- Local RSNs — Warriors: Bay Area regional network (carries most local regular-season games); Suns: Arizona regional sports network (carries most Suns local games).
- Local over-the-air (rare) — some games may also be simulcast on local broadcast partners if designated as such.
Streaming options in the United States
If you don’t have cable, these streaming services carry the national networks and often the RSNs depending on your market:
- Hulu + Live TV — carries ABC/ESPN/TNT and regional networks in many markets.
- YouTube TV — strong national coverage and expanding RSN carriage.
- fuboTV — sports-focused; often carries regional sports networks and national channels.
- Sling TV — cheaper packages; good for TNT/ESPN but RSN availability varies.
- NBA League Pass — lets you stream out-of-market games live, plus full game replays and condensed games; note blackout rules for local market games.
Pro tip: if the game is airing on your local RSN, League Pass will usually be blacked out in that market, so use a live-TV service or the RSN app tied to a cable/streaming login.
Best apps and sites for live match player stats
Watching the broadcast and following live stats is where the real enjoyment is for stat-savvy fans. For real-time player numbers and advanced metrics, open one or two of these while you watch the TV stream:
- NBA.com/game — official box score, play-by-play, plus Second Spectrum advanced tracking on many games.
- ESPN Gamecast — reliable play-by-play, live shooting charts, and player minute tracking.
- Basketball-Reference — best for historical and advanced splits after the game; not always the fastest live feed but excellent for postgame analysis.
- Stat-focused apps: StatMuse, Bleacher Report, and the NBA App (mobile) for push updates on key player stat milestones.
My setup for watching and tracking match player stats
What insiders know is you don’t need a complicated rig. Here’s the workflow I use that fits a laptop+phone setup:
- Primary screen: TV or computer streaming the live broadcast (Hulu Live, YouTube TV, or RSN app).
- Secondary screen: laptop or tablet with NBA.com/game or ESPN Gamecast open for live box score and play-by-play.
- Phone: NBA App for push alerts and the official live stat widget; I enable shot-clock and player stat alerts for players I follow.
This gives you the broadcast feel and the instant stat context to interpret in-game decisions — minutes, plus/minus, shot charts, usage rates. If you’re into advanced metrics, open the game’s tracking on NBA.com to see league-tracking data (distance covered, shot speed) as it updates.
Avoiding blackouts and common streaming pitfalls
Blackouts are the number-one frustration for fans. Here’s what usually trips people up and how to handle it:
- Local market blackout: League Pass blocks live local telecasts. If you’re in the Warriors’ or Suns’ market, you’ll need the local RSN or a streaming service that carries that RSN.
- RSN carriage: RSN availability varies between services and regions — check your ZIP code on the service’s site before subscribing.
- Simultaneous stream limits: Some RSN apps and streaming services limit the number of concurrent streams on a single account.
Workaround: If you only need the stats and are blacked out on League Pass, you can still use NBA.com or ESPN Gamecast to follow match player stats live even if the video is unavailable in your feed.
Cheap combos and short-term access
If this is a single must-watch game, consider short-term options:
- Free trials — many services offer trials (Hulu + Live TV, fuboTV) — use with caution and check trial availability in your region.
- One-month subscriptions — Sling often offers the cheapest monthly price for TNT/ESPN access.
- RSN day passes — some regional apps sell single-game or short-term passes in certain markets.
Radio, condensed replays, and alternate viewing
If video is impossible, follow the game via local radio broadcasts, SiriusXM NBA Radio, or the team apps’ live audio streams. For tight schedules, watch condensed replays on the NBA app or League Pass — these show all possessions in ~20 minutes and are perfect if you want the highlights plus full stat context.
Where to find deep postgame match player stats and breakdowns
After the final buzzer, these sites are my go-to for context beyond the box score:
- NBA.com/stats — shot charts, lineup data, tracking metrics.
- ESPN postgame box score — quick read for fantasy and headline stats.
- Basketball-Reference — detailed splits, game logs, and veteran-level statistical tables.
Insider tips to get the most from live stats
- Watch usage and minutes first: a quick check of usage% and minutes tells you who’s impacting the offense even before points pile up.
- Toggle play-by-play filters: filter for “shot type” or “turnovers” to spot run triggers and momentum shifts.
- Save player comparisons: keep two player stat windows (one for each team) so you can compare shot charts and efficiency in real time.
Legal and safety notes
Stick to official broadcasters and licensed streaming services to avoid malware and account theft. If a third-party stream pops up in search results, it’s usually not legal and often risky.
Quick decision flow: Where should you watch right now?
- Check if the game is on a national network (ABC/ESPN/TNT/NBA TV). If yes, use your preferred live-TV service.
- If it’s a local RSN game: use the RSN app via a cable or authenticated streaming subscription that carries your local RSN.
- If out-of-market and video isn’t essential: open NBA.com or ESPN Gamecast for live match player stats while listening to team radio or highlights.
Bottom line: for most U.S. viewers the simplest combo is a live-TV streaming service (YouTube TV, Hulu + Live TV, or fuboTV) + NBA.com or the NBA App for match player stats. That gives you the broadcast commentary and the live data you need to follow every minute like an analyst.
External references used in my workflow: the official NBA game center at NBA.com and ESPN’s live gamecast at ESPN.com. For historical and advanced splits, I rely on Basketball-Reference.
Frequently Asked Questions
It depends on the game’s designation: national broadcasts go to ABC, ESPN, TNT, or NBA TV; local regular-season games air on the teams’ regional sports networks. Check the NBA schedule or your streaming service guide for your market.
Only if you are out-of-market. League Pass typically blackouts local RSN broadcasts in the teams’ home markets, so in-market viewers need the RSN or a live-TV service that carries it.
Use NBA.com/game or the NBA app for official live box scores and tracking; ESPN Gamecast and StatMuse also provide fast play-by-play, shot charts, and real-time player stat updates.