SBS has put Australia’s meeting with Turkey on the board for 14 June in Vancourver, with kickoff set for 14:00 Australian east coast time. The broadcaster is also promising live and free coverage of all 104 matches at the 2026 FIFA Dünya Kupası™ on SBS On Demand.
That is why Kenan Yıldız is being searched now, even before the tournament begins: the matchup has been fixed, the viewing window is clear, and the channel carrying it is already telling fans how to follow the whole event. Alongside live matches, SBS On Demand will carry full replays, mini matches and highlights during the tournament, giving viewers in Australia a single place to track the campaign from start to finish.
Aziz Behiç is part of the same promotional frame, with a caption that places him beside his father and recalls a simple line behind his sporting life: he was encouraged to do sports to keep him away from bad habits. His name gives the broadcast a family thread, while the match itself gives it urgency. Yaşar Behiç put the human side of that story into one sentence: “İki ülke de gruptan çıksın.”
That wish leaves the bigger sporting question hanging in plain sight. Australia and Turkey can both move on only if the group results break the right way, and the schedule alone does not explain how that would happen. What SBS does make clear is what comes next on its World Cup slate: Canada-Bosna Hersek and ABD-Paraguay are listed for the following day.
For SBS, the timing matters as much as the fixture. The network says it has broadcast World Cup matches in Australia since 1986, and it is leaning on that history while adding more ways to watch, including SBS Türkçe on weekdays except Tuesday. For viewers, the message is simple: the Australia-Turkey match is now date, time and place certain, but the path for both teams to advance is still the part everyone will be watching for when the tournament starts.

