Lose, however, and England would have to rely on Bangladesh beating Pakistan on Friday to remain in the tournament.

England captain Eoin Morgan, however, has insisted his team will treat the game on its merit, rather than on its potential consequences.

“You can get too carried away, lured into worrying about consequences,” Morgan told BBC Sport.

“We’ll be extremely competitive tomorrow and hopefully we can win.”

Sunday’s 31-win run against an India team that was still unbeaten in the tournament came at the perfect moment for England, whose World Cup had looked in danger of petering out after consecutive defeats to Sri Lanka and Australia.

New Zealand, meanwhile, needs to win itself to avoid being overtaken by Pakistan. The Black Caps are a point ahead of England but have lost their last two games and look to be losing momentum at the worst possible time.

Here’s everything you need to know ahead of Wednesday.

When and where is the game?

England takes on New Zealand at the Riverside Cricket Ground at Chester-le-Street on Wednesday, July 3, with play scheduled to start at 10:30 a.m. local time (5:30 a.m. ET).

TV channel and live stream

The game will be broadcast in the U.S. by Willow TV and Hotstar, with a live stream available via Sling TV.

The latter is one of the official partners of Willow TV and is available across various platforms such as Apple TV, iOS, Android TV, XBOX, Chrome TV, Fire TV and Roku.

Match odds

According to Oddschecker, England is a 2/5 favorite going into the game, while New Zealand is a 2/1 underdog.

The Black Caps captain Kane Williamson, however, is an 11/2 favorite to be the top run-scorer in the game, followed by England trio Jonny Bairstow, Jason Roy and Joe Root at 6/1.

Williamson and Root have already scored two centuries at this World Cup, while Roy and Bairstow have reached three figures once each.

Form

England had to win against India and win it did, spurred on by Jonny Bairstow’s first century of the tournament. Together with Jason Roy, who made 66 on his return, they built the kind of platform England had missed with James Vince in the side.

Ben Stokes contributed again with the bat and Liam Plunkett and Chris Woakes were the pick of the bowlers. New Zealand, meanwhile, suffered a calamitous collapse against Australia and were bowled out for just 157, despite chasing a modest 243.

The Black Caps’ batting order has shown cracks throughout the tournament, with Kane Williamson’s two centuries largely masquerading the issues.

Martin Guptill has struggled for runs and when Williamson hasn’t fired, the team has struggled. Led by Trent Boult, the bowlers, however, remain extremely dangerous and will pose a threat to England.