There is a sense of momentum across this weekend’s sport. Domestic competitions are reaching their conclusions, European finals take centre stage and the Premier League signs off with its usual mix of clarity and chaos.
From cricket’s short-form return to football’s defining fixtures, it is a schedule that rewards attention.
Friday 22 May
Pick of the day
Cricket: Men’s T20 Blast – Somerset v Hampshire Hawks
6.25pm, Sky Sports Cricket
The T20 Blast returns with a familiar narrative. Somerset begin their title defence against the side they overcame in last year’s final, Hampshire Hawks, in what feels like a natural continuation rather than a reset.
Last September’s finals day was defined by aggressive batting and confident chasing, with Will Smeed’s decisive innings still fresh in the memory. There is little reason to expect a slower tempo here. Early-season matches often carry a looseness that suits the format, and both sides are well equipped to take advantage.
It is also a useful marker. The Blast is a long competition, but opening statements tend to linger.
Also on Friday
- Rugby Union, European Challenge Cup Final, Montpellier v Ulster, 7pm, Premier Sports and ITV4
- Netball Super League, Nottingham Forest v Manchester Thunder, 7pm, Sky Sports Mix
- Rugby League Super League, Leigh Leopards v Hull FC, 7.30pm, Sky Sports+
- Formula One, Canadian Grand Prix Sprint Qualifying, 9pm, Sky Sports F1
Saturday 23 May
Pick of the day

Rugby Union: European Champions Cup Final – Leinster v Bordeaux-Bègles
1.45pm, ITV4 and Premier Sports
There is a weight to this final that goes beyond the occasion. Leinster have been here repeatedly in recent years and have repeatedly fallen short. Four runner-up finishes since 2018 is a record that demands context rather than criticism, but it also creates pressure.
Bordeaux arrive as defending champions and, crucially, as a side comfortable with that pressure. Their recent success against elite opposition gives them a psychological edge, even if the margins are likely to be fine.
Finals tend to hinge on control rather than ambition. Leinster’s challenge is to impose themselves early without chasing the game. If they can do that, the narrative shifts quickly.
Also on Saturday
- Football, Scottish Cup Final, Celtic v Dunfermline Athletic, 2pm
- Football, Championship Play-off Final, Hull City v Southampton, 3pm
- Football, UEFA Women’s Champions League Final, Barcelona v Lyon, 4pm
- Cricket, England v New Zealand Women’s T20, 2pm
- Athletics, Diamond League Xiamen, from 12pm
Sunday 24 May
Pick of the day

Football: Premier League – Final Day
From 2pm, Sky Sports
The final day rarely disappoints, even when the title itself is settled. This year, the focus shifts slightly lower down the table, where European qualification and survival remain unresolved.
The structure is familiar. Simultaneous kick-offs, shifting permutations and a league table that changes by the minute. For teams outside the top six, the difference between a strong finish and a disappointing one can come down to a single goal elsewhere.
At the bottom, the tension is sharper. A two-point cushion is rarely comfortable on the final day, particularly when goal difference remains in play. Matches take on a different character under that kind of pressure, often becoming cautious before suddenly turning chaotic.
It is less about quality and more about consequence. That is what gives the final day its edge.
Also on Sunday
- Motorsport, Indy 500, 3pm, Sky Sports F1
- Motorsport, Formula One Canadian Grand Prix, 7.30pm, Sky Sports F1
- Tennis, French Open, from 9.30am, TNT Sports
- Football, League One Play-off Final, Stockport County v Bolton Wanderers, 12pm
- Cycling, Giro d’Italia Stage 15, 12pm

Liberty Shield takeaway

A weekend like this highlights how fragmented sports broadcasting has become. Cricket sits on one platform, football across several, and major finals split between traditional broadcasters and streaming services.
For viewers, especially those travelling or based outside the UK, access is no longer straightforward. Rights vary by region and coverage can disappear entirely depending on location.
This is where a stable, UK-based connection becomes useful. Services such as Liberty Shield are typically used to maintain consistent access to familiar platforms like Sky Sports, BBC iPlayer and ITV, without interruption or sudden changes in availability.
The technology itself is not the story. The experience is. Being able to follow a final, or a season-defining match, without friction remains the priority.
