Saturday is judgement day for England and Scotland in the T20 World Cup.
By Sunday morning, one of them will have booked a flight home and the other will be heading to the Super 8.
England will first face Namibia at 18:00 BST in Antigua.
The match between Scotland and Australia will be played at 1.30am BST on Sunday and the results of both games will be crucial in deciding the fate of each team.
- author, Matthew Henry
- role, BBC sports reporter in Antigua
Special Test Match commentary from both matches will be broadcast live on BBC Sounds, plus live text commentary and in-match clips on the BBC Sport website and app.
How will England and Scotland qualify?
The most likely and simplest answer is to hope that England beat Namibia and Scotland lose to Australia.
In that scenario, they would almost certainly qualify, as Thursday’s win over Oman gave them a significant boost in net run-rate.
If Scotland win, or if either match is abandoned, they will progress.
Showers are forecast for Antigua on Saturday, but rain the day before was brief and the weather generally fine.
There is the unlikely scenario of Scotland losing and England winning and still progressing, but to achieve the sub-100 target it would likely take something like Richie Berrington’s Scotland losing to Australia, scoring 200 and England winning all 120 balls.
What did England say?
The excitement leading up to England’s win over Oman was overshadowed by Australia’s Josh Hazlewood saying it would be in his team’s “best interests” for England to lose.
He mused about how Australia could create a result, namely by slowing down the pace in the run chase to help Scotland’s net run rate.
But that would mean skipper Mitchell Marsh could face a suspension, and Pat Cummins, captain of Australia’s Test and one-day international teams, said that wasn’t really an option.
England bowler Mark Wood said he fully expected Australia to play to their usual strength.
“I’m absolutely confident they’re going to come out and play the hardest,” Wood said.
“The Australian way is to play hard but fair and aim to win.”
What about Scotland?
Before England’s win over Oman, Scotland had also beaten the same opponents and were in a strong position to qualify.
They have never played Australia in a T20 match and have not faced them in any format since 2015. Australia have faced them five times in one-day internationals, winning all five.
“England have had to play two tough matches but they played extremely well in the first one,” all-rounder Michael Leask said.
“We always knew this was going to be a must-win game and this is a great opportunity for us to play some really good cricket and take on one of the best teams in the world.”
“We go into this game quietly confident but obviously we know Australia are one of the best teams in the world.
“It’s going to be a tough match, but why can’t we pull off an upset like we’ve done in the past?”
analysis
Former England bowler Stephen Finn:
England will simply have to repeat what they did against Oman. If Jos Buttler wins the toss again, England will have the advantage as they can do exactly the same thing – bowl first and then chase quickly.
Their speed and power should be more than enough for Namibia, especially with the way Namibia bowled the fastball against Australia, I expect them to select the same team.
Australia will be looking to play aggressively against Scotland, with Nathan Ellis having dipped a bit in form and Mitchell Starc coming in as a replacement who may give Ellis some fun cricket.
Scotland may have a 10% or even less chance of winning but as we have said throughout this tournament, a giant killing will happen.
Who would think Scotland wouldn’t do it?