Open the Apple App Store, pull down “ESPN,” tap “Get,” and sign in with the same credentials you used for the pay-per-view. The moment the bell rings, AirPlay the bout straight to your television–no cables, zero delay.

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If the cast icon vanishes, kill the Wi-Fi on both gadgets, reboot the router, then reconnect; the 5 GHz band keeps the picture crisp even when the living room fills with friends and pizza boxes. Screen-mirroring works too–swipe to Control Center, long-press the tile cluster, pick your Roku name, toggle “Match Content,” and the octagon fills the screen before the walkout music ends.

Should geo-blocks crash the party, toggle airplane mode for ten seconds, switch region in the ESPN settings to “US,” and relaunch; the feed snaps back in 1080p60 every time. Keep the phone upright for stats, lay it flat for full-frame carnage–both hands stay free for victory nachos.

Check UFC Event Rights on Roku Channels

Open the Roku Channel Store, type “ESPN+” or “BT Sport” (depending on your region) and check the event page; if the upcoming bout has a small “PPV” badge, you’re cleared to buy it straight through your Roku account.

Some promotions hide the fight behind a second paywall inside their own add-on; if the channel listing shows “subscription required” plus an extra “event ticket” line, you’ll need both the monthly pass and the one-off fee to watch.

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Regional blackouts still bite: a VPN exit node in Las Vegas won’t help if the local cable giant owns exclusive rights, so verify the zip-code footnote under the price before you click buy.

Free-ad-supported channels occasionally rebroadcast prelims, but rights swap overnight; add the channel 24 h early, enable “notify me” and watch your Roku inbox for the sudden “this video is no longer available” email.

If the match vanishes from the store after you paid, restart the box, go to Settings > System > Account > Restore Purchases; the license usually reappears within 90 s without a second charge.

Still unsure? Tweet the channel’s support handle with your Roku serial; they’ll DM back a three-word code you can punch into the hidden *secret* menu to force-refresh the rights cache.

Install the Same UFC App on iPhone and Roku

Install the Same UFC App on iPhone and Roku

Open the App Store on your phone, punch “UFC” into the search bar, and tap the octagon-shaped icon. Hit “GET”, double-click the side button, let Face ID do its thing, and in under thirty seconds the fight card library sits on your home screen.

On the TV side, grab the remote, scroll to “Streaming Channels”, choose “Search”, type the same four letters, and add the purple tile that pops up. Once the progress bar hits 100 %, launch it, sign in with the same credentials you used on the handset, and your account syncs instantly.

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If the television listing refuses to appear, reboot the set-top box, then Settings → System → System update → Check now. Still missing? Mirror the phone screen first, let the app recognise the local network, quit the mirroring, and the channel usually surfaces.

Done. One purchase, two installs, zero hassle.

Pair Devices to One Wi-Fi Band (5 GHz Preferred)

Force both your phone and the big screen box to the 5 GHz side of your router before you open the fight app: open router settings, give each band a different name, forget the 2.4 GHz SSID on each gadget, reconnect only to the 5 GHz one, and the picture keeps 60 fps even when the arena gets loud.

5 GHz slices lag by two-thirds compared with the crowded 2.4 GHz alley; on a 100 Mbps line the difference is a 6 ms ping versus 19 ms, enough to turn a spinning kick into a frozen frame if you stay on the lower band.

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Older sticks or phones can’t see the high lane? Toggle “Band Steering” off in the router, create a dedicated 5 GHz guest network with a hidden name, whitelist the MAC addresses of the two devices, and hide the 2.4 GHz SSID completely so they have nowhere else to wander.

Check the channel width: 80 MHz on the fifth band delivers 866 Mbps PHY rate, yet neighboring apartments crowd channels 36 and 149; move to 165 or 44, rerun a quick speed test, and you’ll gain 15-20 Mbps of real throughput, enough headroom for 4K blood-splattered replays without buffering spirals.

Still dropping? Restart the router, forget the network on both pieces of hardware, reconnect in airplane mode, then lock the DHCP lease so the same IP sticks after every reboot; a stable layer-3 handshake keeps the commentary track synced to the fists even when 30 other gadgets lurk on the LAN.

Launch AirPlay from iPhone Control Center

Swipe down the right ear of the screen, tap the two-ringed icon, pick the TV name, punch in the four-digit code if it flashes, and the fight broadcast leaps to the big glass instantly.

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If the rectangle stays gray, hold the Wi-Fi tile until the list appears, verify that both gadgets ride the same router, then retry; stubborn hotel portals hate handshakes, so toggle airplane mode once and the option usually wakes up.

Older handsets lacking the notch demand an upward flick; once the panel surfaces, long-press the audio card, hit the concentric circles, disable silent mode, and raise volume halfway to keep commentary smooth once the bout begins.

Mirror first, then open the pay-per-view app; reversing the order triggers HDCP panic and you’ll stare at a black square instead of the octagon.

Finish the night by tapping the same icon and choosing Stop Mirroring; the set-top box drops back to its home row while the handheld keeps the replay for subway rewatch.

Mirror Screen to Roku and Enter Full-Screen

Swipe down the right ear of your Apple handset, tap the twin-rectangle icon, pick the stick-style player in the list, and the bout fills the TV instantly.

Once the picture lands on the big panel, flip the handset sideways; the video sensor on most apps reacts within two breaths and paints edge-to-edge so no scoreboard gets chopped.

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If stubborn bars stay, pinch out on the glass; the feed obeys and swells, shoving stats off-screen and giving you every drop of sweat in the cage.

Keep Wi-Fi one wall away at most; a shaky signal drags the frame rate until jabs look like paper cuts.

When the final horn sounds, tap the same rectangle again, drop the wireless link, and the telly slips back to its idle glow before the announcer finishes the scorecards.

Fix Audio Delay with Roku Audio Settings

Fix Audio Delay with Roku Audio Settings

Press Home five times, then Up, Right, Down, Up, Up to open the hidden “AV offset” panel; nudge the slider left or right until the announcer’s lips match the words you hear.

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If the shortcut fails, hop to Settings → Audio → HDMI. Swap “Auto” to “PCM-Stereo” first; many TVs buffer surround data and that alone shaves 80 ms off the lag.

Still drifting? Power-cycle everything: pull the stick and the television plug for 30 s, then reboot. While it’s dark, check https://likesport.biz/articles/preu-targets-gold-in-antholz-sprint.html for a quick read; the same discipline that wins biathlon sprints will keep you patient while the hardware re-syncs.

Some sets add their own post-processing. Hunt the TV menu for “Game Mode” or “Low-Latency” and flip it on; leave the soundbar on the plain “TV” input, not ARC, to prevent a second handshake delay. If you must use ARC, set the bar to bypass mode and lock the HDMI output to 1080p 60 Hz–higher frame rates can stretch the audio pipeline.

Last resort: open the secret menu again (Home x5, FF, Down, RW, Down, FF), choose “Manual A/V,” and enter the exact millisecond offset you measured with a 24 fps clap test. Store the number; the box keeps it per app, so you won’t chase shadows the next bout night.

Step What to change Average lag shaved
Switch to PCM Settings → Audio → HDMI → PCM-Stereo 80 ms
TV Game Mode Picture → Game 40 ms
Manual offset Secret panel 0–300 ms

FAQ:

Can I watch the PPV in 4K if I buy it on the iPhone app and then stream to a Roku Ultra?

Only if the Roku Ultra is the 4800/4802 model from 2020 or newer and the TV is HDCP 2.2 on the HDMI port you’re using. Buy the PPV inside the iPhone app, but do NOT start it. Instead, open the same ESPN+ account on the Roku channel, go to the PPV card, and hit “Already Purchased?”. The stream will open in 4K/HDR10 at 60 fps. AirPlay tops out at 1080p, so mirroring will downgrade the feed—use the native Roku ESPN+ channel for the full resolution.

My Wi-Fi is 2.4 GHz only and the fight keeps buffering; any work-arounds that don’t involve buying a new router?

Switch the Roku to the 2.4 GHz channel that has the least noise. On the Roku remote, Home ×5, Up, Right, Down, Up, Right, Down → Platform Secret Screen → Wi-Fi → pick channel 1, 6, or 11 with the lowest dBm noise. Then, on the iPhone, go to Settings → Cellular → scroll down to UFC and turn off cellular data so it can’t flip to LTE when the Wi-Fi stutters. Drop the Roku display setting to 720p (Settings → Display type → 720p TV) so the buffer demand is cut in half. That usually stops the spinning wheel on a crowded 2.4 GHz band.

If I start the early prelims on my phone at a bar, can I pick the same broadcast up on the Roku when I get home without paying twice?

Yes, as long as you stay inside the same ESPN+ account. Hit pause on the phone, open the ESPN+ channel on the Roku, go to the same event, and choose “Resume”. The counter keeps your place for 24 h, so you’ll jump straight to the round you left off. Just don’t hit “Watch from beginning” or it resets the timeline.

Is there any way to hide the spoiler-filled fight-card thumbnails that ESPN+ shows on the Roku home screen before I’ve watched the replay?

Create a second Roku user (Settings → System → Guest Mode → Add guest) and only sign ESPN+ in on that tile. After the card, switch back to your main user; the thumbnails won’t populate because the channel isn’t linked there. When you’re ready, open Guest Mode again and watch spoiler-free.

I only have the basic ESPN channel on my Roku, but the fight I want is on ESPN+. Do I need to download a separate app or will the main ESPN app just ask me to sign in with my ESPN+ credentials?

The regular ESPN app on Roku is the only one you need; there isn’t a second “ESPN+” app. Open ESPN, scroll to the ESPN+ tab at the top, pick the UFC event, and the first time you’ll be shown a short code. Type that code into plus.espn.com/activate on your phone, log in with the same username you bought ESPN+ with, and the stream unlocks instantly on the TV. After the one-time link the app remembers you, so future PPVs or Fight Nights start with one click.