When England and Wales were drawn together in Group D of Euro 2025, many fans and pundits would have circled the fixture between the home nations as a key date in the competition.
However, after both sides lost their opening games in Switzerland, there is real fear the match will be a dead rubber.
If, on Wednesday, England lose to the Netherlands and Wales are beaten by France, both will be eliminated before their final game.
They are fighting for their Euro lives - and both know improved displays are required to avoid the worst-case scenario of a double elimination after two matches.
BBC Sport takes a look at the challenges facing both sides in their second games in Switzerland.
England v Netherlands at Euro 2025
Venue: Stadion Letzigrund, Zurich Date: Wednesday 9 July, 17:00 BST
Coverage: Watch on BBC One, iPlayer and the BBC Sport website. Listen on BBC Radio 5 Live and BBC Sounds
Defending champions England face Euro 2017 winners the Netherlands and, following their 2-1 defeat by France on Saturday, they will be knocked out if they lose and France are not beaten by Wales.
The Netherlands have won two of their last three meetings with England - but the Lionesses have never lost back-to-back matches under Sarina Wiegman.
If teams finish on the same points after three matches, it will come down to head-to-head records to decide the two qualification spots.
"Ultimately we don't like losing but when a result like that happens you have to reflect and come together as a team," said England striker Alessia Russo.
"We have bounced back before. We know we weren't up to it against France. For our own standards, we want to be better. That sets the bar for us.
"We're our own biggest critics as players so we're all ready to get out there and have another good game."
Manager Wiegman, who won Euro 2017 as Netherlands boss, said England have "not talked about consequences" but admitted it was a must-win game.
"We lost [against France] and we play against a very good opponent again, but we're really good too," she told BBC Radio 5 Live.
"It's a final for us, we will do everything to win. Every game is must-win. We've experienced that before."
Wiegman was captain under Netherlands boss Andries Jonker for the national team and they have been friends for almost 30 years.
Asked how Wiegman will handle the pressure, Jonker said: "She is very experienced and she knows you cannot always win.
"She will not panic and her experience will help her. It is not a problem for her - but more for everyone around her.
"If you win, there is a party. If you don't win, then you have a problem. In football you have to play against each other and you want to win.
"It wouldn't make me more happy to win than against anyone else in football, if anything, I [would be] disappointed for Sarina. But I want to win."