The Women's European Championships have started their quarter-final stage, with the first match and semi-finalists being decided.
The Women's Euros has reached the quarter-finals, where eight countries all remain in contention for the trophy. Four fixtures will determine who the final four of the tournament will be.
The matches include England playing Sweden, France and Germany going head to head, and favourites Spain meeting hosts Switzerland.
One result has already been confirmed as Italy and Norway took the stage on Wednesday night. An intense match that saw both sides fight to remain in the competition.
It was Italy took the lead through Cristiana Girelli in the 50th minute, getting themselves a 1-0 lead.
In the 66th minute Norway equalised and from that moment, became a pressuring threat for Italy.
The match looked as it was headed for an extra 30 minutes to decide the winner, but, Cristiana Girelli found the back of the net as she headed in the winning goal in the 89th minute to secure their place in this year's semi-final.
A 2-1 victory for Italy sees them become the first team to qualify for the last four, while Norway leave the competition.
The first fixture out of the batch did not fail to deliver, and there still are three matches of this round left to play.
On Thursday, at 20:00 (UK) it will be England vs Sweden, a tough game for both nations. The Lionesses won two of their three group games, a 4-0 win over Netherlands and a 6-1 result over Wales. As for Sweden, they achieved three wins out of three, beating Denmark, Poland and Germany to claim first spot. Whoever wins this fixture will meet Italy in the next match.
On Friday, at the same time, the favourites to go all the way and win the title, Spain, will be playing the host country Switzerland. Both have had rather contrasting performances so far, Spain remained a dominate force and blew past all their three opponents. Whereas, Switzerland struggled a bit more as they only managed one win and a draw to move into this stage.
To finish it off, it will be a massive clash between Germany, who had a decent group stage as they beat Poland and Denmark but fell short to Sweden, and France, who achieved nine points out of nine against opposition. A match that will be a standout piece to find the last team to join the others.