Over the past 12 days, the competition has delivered a combination of the sublime— witness some of Belgium’s goals and Italy’s ruthless brilliance—the comical— Slovakia’s goalkeeper Martin Dubravka will never want to see his calamitous mistake against Spain again—and the downright dramatic as Denmark midfielder Christian Eriksen collapsed on the field following a cardiac arrest.

The 24 teams that entered the tournament have been whittled down to 16, as Euro 2020 reaches the business end with the knockout stages due to begin on Saturday.

There are lots of compelling storylines in the Round of 16, none more so than England and Germany colliding at Wembley Stadium exactly a quarter of a century since they met in the same venue—albeit in its old incarnation, which was replaced by the current stadium at the turn of the century—in the semifinal of Euro 96.

Current England manager Gareth Southgate’s miss proved the difference as Germany won the penalty shootout and ultimately defeated the Czech Republic in the final. England won Group D despite scoring just twice, but it’s yet to concede a goal, while Germany needed a late equalizer against Hungary in the final game of Group F to progress.

France and Portugal, the reigning world and European champions, respectively, also qualified from the so-called Group of Death, but their paths toward the final couldn’t look more different. France takes on Switzerland on Monday and could face the winner of the game between Croatia and Spain in the quarterfinals, while Portugal faces Belgium on Sunday, with the victor taking on the winner of the tie between Italy and Austria.

Belgium and Italy—along with the Netherlands, which takes on the Czech Republic—are the only two sides to have won all their three group games and they have looked mightily impressive so far. Elsewhere, Wales will be looking to reach the quarterfinals for the second consecutive tournament when it plays Denmark on Saturday, while the winner of Sweden vs. Ukraine on Tuesday will play either England or Germany.

Here’s all you need to know to keep up with the action.

When does Euro 2020 knockout stage begin?

The knockout phase begins with the Round of 16, which gets underway on Saturday afternoon when Wales takes on Denmark. There are two games scheduled each day through to Tuesday, before two more days of rest ahead of the quarterfinals, which are held on July 2 and July 3.

The semifinals are scheduled for July 6 and July 7, with the final to be held on July 11.

How to watch Euro 2020 on TV and online

The knockout stages will be broadcast in the U.S. across ESPN and ABC, which along with ESPN2 carried every game of the group stages.

Every game will be available for live stream on ESPN+ and the ESPN app. Games will also be available via streaming services like fuboTV and Sling TV.

Euro 2020 Round of 16 TV schedule

All times ET

Saturday, June 26

Game 1: Wales vs. Denmark—12 p. m. , ESPNGame 2: Italy vs. Austria—3 p. m. , ABC

Sunday, June 27

Game 3: Netherlands vs. Czech Republic—12 p. m. , ESPNGame 4: Belgium vs. Portugal—3 p. m. , ABC

Monday, June 28

Game 5: Croatia vs. Spain—12 p. m. , ESPNGame 6: France vs. Switzerland—3 p. m. , ESPN

Tuesday, June 29

Game 7: England vs. Germany—12 p. m. , ESPNGame 8: Sweden vs. Ukraine—3 p. m. , ESPN

The quarterfinals will begin on Friday, July 2 with the winner of Game 6 facing the winner Game 5 in St. Petersburg, while the winner of Game 4 takes on the winner of Game 2 in Munich. The following day will see the winner of Game 3 taking on the winner of Game 1 in Baku, while the winner of Game 8 will play the winner of Game 7 in Rome.

Euro 2020 odds

Reigning world champion France remains the team to beat in the eyes of the bookmakers.

The pre-tournament favorite, France finished top of Group F and is a 7-2 favorite with William Hill, followed by Italy and England at 6-1 and 13-2, respectively. Germany and Spain may not have impressed during the group stages, but are next in line at 7-1 and 15-2, respectively, while Belgium remains a 9-1 outsider despite winning all its three group games and being the No. 1-ranked team in the world over the past four years.

Portugal is 10-1 to defend its title, while Denmark is a 20-1 dark horse to repeat its memorable 1992 triumph. Croatia and Sweden are 50-1 outsiders, while the Czech Republic and Ukraine are 100-1 and 125-1 long shots, respectively.