Handed contrasting but demoralising defeats in their opening Super Eight matches, England and New Zealand will aim for resurrection when they face off in what is likely to be an even contest at the World Twenty20 in Pallekele on Saturday.
England were done in by the all-round brilliance of Chris Gayle as they lost by 15 runs to the West Indies, while New Zealand were stunned in the Super Over even though they came close to victory in regulation play itself.
The distinct flaw in both teams' approach was the tendency to leave it too late, something suicidal in the Twenty20 format.
More is also expected of skipper Ross Taylor even though he has shown glimpses of his explosive self in entertaining cameos.
England, on the other hand, failed to fire from the top. The team has lost early wickets in most games which invariably hurt the all-important scoring rate.
In the absence of the temperamental but immensely talented Kevin Pietersen, England's title defence has looked shaky and the team is likely to be put through a tough test by the Kiwis, who have a reputation of punching above their weight in big events.
"We've got to stop losing early wickets because it's hurting us," England skipper Stuart Broad has stated, underlining the biggest problem plaguing the team.
The bowlers too have not had an exceptional outing so far, even though Broad himself can draw confidence from the economical spell he bowled against a destructive West Indian line-up.
A lot was expected of spinner Graeme Swann but he hasn't really worked much magic in conditions that are considered tailor-made for tweakers. But he might hit his stride against the spin-wary Kiwis.
New Zealand's bowling problems are quite similar. Their pace spearhead Tim Southee hasn't been too effective. Experienced former captain Daniel Vettori's spin has also not produced desired results.
Given the very similar nature of their strengths and weaknesses, it will be an intriguing battle when the two teams clash at the Pallekele International Cricket Stadium.
Teams (from):
England: Stuart Broad (c), Jonathan Bairstow, Ravi Bopara, Tim Bresnan, Danny Briggs, Jos Buttler, Jade Dernbach, Steven Finn, Alex Hales, Craig Kieswetter (wkt), Michael Lumb, Eoin Morgan, Samit Patel, Graeme Swann, Luke Wright.
New Zealand: Ross Taylor (c), Doug Bracewell, James Franklin, Martin Guptill, Ronnie Hira, Brendon McCullum, Nathan McCullum, Kyle Mills, Adam Milne, Rob Nicol, Jacob Oram, Tim Southee, Daniel Vettori, BJ Watling, Kane Williamson.
Match starts 1530 IST.
PHOTOS: Sri Lanka sink Kiwis in Super Over
Jamshed, Ajmal lead Pakistan to easy win over New Zealand
Kiwis look to seal Super Eight berth against Pakistan
Stats: Afridi is top wicket-taker in ICC World T20
India rise to No 3 in T20 rankings