It all gets serious for Phil Neville's England on Sunday as they take on Cameroon in the last 16 of the Women's World Cup in France.
When is the match taking place?
Sunday, June 23 at 1630 BST
Where are they playing?
Stade du Hainaut, Valenciennes
Where can I watch it?
BBC One, with radio coverage via BBC 5 Live and Talksport
What are the latest odds?
England are huge 1/7 favourites to win the match in 90 minutes, given they face the lowest ranked team still remaining in the Women's World Cup, with Cameroon huge 14/1 outsiders.
To qualify England are even stronger fancies at 1/20 with Cameroon 8/1 to get through to the last eight. Either team to go through on dreaded penalties is 22/1
Head here to see the full betting
How did they qualify?
England topped Group D after winning all three of their matches, beating Scotland, Argentina and Japan although they've not yet hit top gear in the tournament.
Cameroon got through in the most dramatic fashion, beating New Zealand 2-1 thanks to a late, late winner, five minutes into stoppage time, to get through as one of the best third-placed teams.
Who will England or Cameroon play in the quarter-finals?
The winners will face Norway in the quarter-final at the Stade Oceane in Le Havre on Thursday 27 June (20:00 BST).
Team news
Neville's squad has a clean bill of health after forward Toni Duggan's return to action against Japan, while Cameroon can also select from a fully fit squad.
Several players need to be careful though as those carrying a booking into this game are just one yellow card away from missing a potential quarter-final.
For England, Reading's Jade Moore is the only Lioness carrying a booking into the game, while Cameroon have six players all on a yellow - Christine Manie, Raissa Feudjio, Gaelle Enganamouit, Marlyse Ngo Ndoumbouck, Genevieve Ngo Mbeleck and Alexandra Takounda will all have to watch their step.
Key Stats
- This will be the first ever competitive meeting between England and Cameroon. England won their only previous Women's World Cup match versus African opposition, beating Nigeria in 1995 (3-2).
- Cameroon have reached the knockout stages of the Women's World Cup for the second tournament in a row. On the other occasion they lost 1-0 to China in the last-16 in 2015.
- England have won each of their last four matches at the Women's World Cup; the Lionesses have never before emerged victorious in five successive games in the competition.
- England failed to win any of their first three knockout stage matches at the Women's World Cup (D1 L2) - however, in 2015, they won three of their four such games, only losing to Japan in the semi-finals thanks to a 90th minute own goal.
- Ellen White has scored more goals than any other England player at the 2019 Women's World Cup, scoring three goals from six shots on target. If she scores versus Cameroon, White (4) will become the joint-highest scorer for the Lionesses in the competition alongside Fara Williams (5 goals).
Key Quotes:
Phil Neville: "I don't think they are the 46th best team in the world.
"They are better than that. They are a team who are very unpredictable."
"Alongside us, they were probably in the toughest group. They've navigated their way out of the group and have got dangerous players in the attacking third," Neville said.
"They're a team who will go for the victory. That is something we've not experienced so far - a team who will go for the victory. We've got to defend well against that and exploit those weaknesses."
Alain Djeumfa: "Everything is in place for us to showcase our talents.
"I know these players inside out. They have been made for this and have a winning spirit, a fighting spirit.
"That is our strength and I can assure you that you will see this on the pitch.
"Cameroon is gaining in strength. We're taking baby steps at the moment. We will be the underdog. But we have something up our sleeves like the boys."
Women's World Cup fixtures
Sunday June 23
39: England v Cameroon (1630, Valenciennes)
40: France v Brazil (2000, Le Havre)
Monday June 24
41: Spain v USA (1700, Reims)
42: Sweden v Canada (2000, Paris)
Tuesday June 25
43: Italy v China (1700, Montpellier)
44: Netherlands v Japan (2000, Rennes)
Quarter-finals
Thursday June 27
45: W37 vs W39 (2000, Le Havre)
Friday June 28
46: W40 vs W41 (2000, Paris)
Saturday June 29
47. W43 vs W44 (1400, Valenciennes)
48. W38 vs W42 (1730, Rennes)
Semi-finals
Tuesday July 2
49: W45 vs W46 (2000, Lyon)
Wednesday July 3
50: W47 vs W48 (2000, Lyon)
Third-place play-off
Saturday July 6 (1600, Nice)
Final
Sunday 7 July (1600, Lyon)
