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England vs. Belgium 2018 live stream: Start time, TV channel, and how to watch World Cup online

England and Belgium fight to secure the top spot in Group G.

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Belgium v Tunisia: Group G - 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia
Belgium v Tunisia: Group G - 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia
Photo by Laurence Griffiths/Getty Images

England and Belgium are set to face off in their final match of group play on Thursday. Kickoff is at 2 p.m. ET at the Kaliningrad Stadium in Kaliningrad, Russia, and you can watch it on FOX and Telemundo. Online streaming is also available in English through FOX Sports Go here or in Spanish through Telemundo here.

England and Belgium are both tied with six points at the top of Group G, with Tunisia and Panama both already eliminated with zero points. If England and Belgium draw, because they are tied in points, goal differential and goals scored, it will head deeper into the tiebreakers.

England vs. Belgium Time, TV channel, and streaming info

Time: 2 p.m. ET

Location: Kaliningrad Stadium, Kaliningrad, Russia

TV: FOX (English), Telemundo (Spanish)

Streaming: Watch the game on Fox Sports Go (English) and Telemundo Deportes en vivo (Spanish) for free if you sign in with your TV provider. It’s also on subscription services like Fubo and Hulu.

Odds: EV (Full odds at OddsShark)

For listings from more countries, check out Live Soccer TV.

England vs. Belgium news to read before kickoff

Why England and Belgium should try to get lots of yellow cards on purpose

After a 6-1 win over Panama, things are going well for England in World Cup Group G. Amazingly, it was the exact result that the Three Lions needed to draw level with Belgium in every way — points, goal differential and goals scored. The two teams play each other in the final day of the group stage, so if their match ends in a draw, the two teams will be tied by every measure.

Roberto Martínez belongs to the world and we must protect him

Belgium’s manager is not, strictly speaking, a landmark. He’s not a waterfall. Nor is he a big old church or a really nice bridge. But beyond these mere technicalities, he exceeds the requirements. He is certainly a “masterpiece of ... cultural significance,” and there is no doubt he exhibits “an important interchange of human values.” Nobody could doubt that he bears “exceptional testimony to a cultural tradition.” And as for being “directly or tangibly associated with events or living traditions,” well, he was managing in the World Cup just earlier today.

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