Millions of England fans are expected to leave work early on Wednesday and drink 28million pints of beer to cheer on the Three Lions at the World Cup.
Thomas Tuchel‘s men will play their first knockout match of this year’s tournament at 5pm BST, heading to Atlanta to take on the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Workers are expected to abandon desks and ditch last-minute meetings to rush to bars or dash home to watch the Round of 32 match which will be broadcast on BBC One.
The 5pm kick-off time is notable given it will be England’s only game of the tournament that will start straight after most people finish work for the day.
Supporters are expected to drink 28million pints – equivalent to three and a half million gallons – of beer at the pub and at home from the moment of kick-off.
The match also marks the first time UK fans will benefit from a 1am nationwide late licensing extension, which will see pub doors kept open from 11pm to 1am.
The extra two-hour drinking window will see 14million pints pulled in pubs and another 14million drunk at home during the match at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
Some experts predict some staff will go further and pull a sickie on ‘Bunk Off Wednesday’ and dedicate their whole day to alcohol-fuelled pre-match partying.
England fans at Ultra Warehouse Derby as England score against Panama on Saturday
Supporters celebrate Jude Bellingham’s goal as they watch at Depot Mayfield in Manchester
Tonight’s game follows England’s 2-0 victory against Panama on Saturday night, thanks to goals scored by captain Harry Kane and midfielder Jude Bellingham.
The UK Government’s blanket licensing extension allows all 35,000 pubs in Britain to stay open until 1am for England’s knockout matches which kick-off between 5pm and 9pm.
A win for England over DR Congo will push Thomas Tuchel’s men into the last 16, where they will face either Mexico or Ecuador in Mexico City on Sunday night.
With that game starting in the UK in the early hours of Monday morning at 1am BST, it could run as late as 4am if penalties come into play.
However, dreams of a bank holiday hinged on England’s victory were crushed this week.
A spokesperson for the Prime Minister told reporters on Monday that there were ‘no plans’ for a bank holiday next Monday if England were to win in the last 16.
To set up the 1am last 16 encounter, England first have to get past DR Congo, who have a global ranking of 41, and finished third in Group K.
Mike Kill, chief executive of the Night Time Industries Association, which represents pubs and other venues, said: ‘A 5pm kick-off on Wednesday means pubs will be packed from the afternoon, with the later licensing hours meaning pubs can make the most of what could be one of the biggest trading nights of the year.
‘Thousands of extra pints will be pulled in bars. It’s a vital boost to takings at a time when many venues desperately need the additional revenue.’
Fans jump onto the tables in Newcastle as they celebrate an England victory on Saturday
England secured a 2-0 victory against Panama on Saturday night, thanks to Harry Kane (pictured) and Jude Bellingham
Alan Price, chief executive at BrightHR, which monitors absence among over a million employees at over 50,000 UK companies, said: ‘With a 5pm kick-off for the England game, it looks like ‘Bunk Off Wednesday’.
‘Businesses should expect a slowdown from mid-afternoon as millions of employees stop work early to get to the pub or back home in time for the match.
‘And employers are likely to see an influx of sickness absences as some staff are tempted by a whole afternoon in the pub before the game.’
Elsewhere, Tuesday night saw France breeze past Sweden 3-0 in their last 16 game, with Kylian Mbappe scoring twice to become the all-time leading goalscorer in World Cup knockout matches.
Meanwhile, Erling Haaland was on the scoresheet as Norway knocked out the Ivory Coast with a 2-1 win.
Monday night saw Germany’s first-ever World Cup penalty shootout defeat – losing to Paraguay, who had odds of 450-1 to win the tournament.
Morocco, fresh from a second-place finish in Group C, secured a 3-2 win on penalties over the Netherlands, prompting the latter’s elimination from the tournament.
And Brazil scored a dramatic last-gasp winner against Japan, who more than held their own against the five-time world champions.

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