Express. Home of the Daily and Sunday Express.
England vs Sweden: What time is the England match on Saturday?
ENGLAND face Sweden in the World Cup 2018 quarter-finals after winning their first World Cup penalty shootout in history - but what time is the match on Saturday and how can you watch?
World Cup: Cheeky Lineker on Kane penalty heroics
The Three Lions scored their first knockout win in 12 years as Eric Dier calmly slotted a near left-hand corner kick, pushing England out in front at 4-3.
Moments earlier, Jordan Pickford pulled out an incredible save by swatting away Carlos Bacca’s ball with his left hand.
England coach Gareth Southgate, whose saved penalty in the 1996 semi-finals sent England home, called the win "fantastic" and “deserved”.
He was not the only one celebrating the win. Former England striker Gary Lineker tweeted: "Football. There is nothing like it. Nothing."
What time is the England match on Saturday?
England now faces Sweden in the World Cup quarter-finals at Samara Arena on Saturday at 3pm BST.
The match will be shown on BBC One with simultaneous live coverage on BBCiPlayer, Radio 5 and the BBC Sport website.
Highlights will be shown on ITV.
Who else is in the quarter-finals?
The other matches are as follows:
Uruguay vs France, 3pm BST, July 6, ITV
Brazil vs Belgium, 7pm BST, July 6, BBC
Russia v Croatia, 7pm, July 7, ITV
Can England win the World Cup 2018? Latest odds
England has now moved into second place to win the World Cup behind favourites Brazil.
Ladbrokes has slashed its odds on a Three Lions tournament win to 7/2 from 4/1.
Brazil remain on top with 11/4 odds while France lags just behind England in third place at 4/1.
Jessica Bridge of Ladbrokes said: "The Three Lions gamble is in full swing.
"Punters are piling into their odds of winning left, right and centre as they are convinced it really is coming home."
She added: "If Gareth Southgate's men are crowned 2018 champions it will be the most expensive day in bookies' history."
England fans are hoping their country’s win will now mean an end to years of endless defeats in penalty shootouts.
Brendan Collins, 30, described the match as an "emotional rollercoaster".
The Manchester-born supporter, who now lives in Russia, said: ”We won and to win on penalties was probably a massive boost to the ego.
"When it went to penalties, we had a lot of people around us like, 'hmmm'.
"But it's broken the curse now, it's coming home.”