Mustafizur Rahman (Bangladesh): The left-arm fast bowler may not bowl with as much zip as he used to before he was sidelined by injury not too long ago. He is still a very dangerous bowler who is capable of making early inroads, which he will need to do to put pressure on England's middle order. Alex Davidson / Getty Images
Jason Roy (England): The opening batsman will do what he does best which is to try and go after the opposition bowling early in the innings. He will know he is dealing with a more than decent pace attack. But he if he can get his team off to a good start, that will be half the battle won. Andrew Boyers / Reuters
Jos Buttler (England): The middle-order batsman, who scored a brilliant century against Pakistan albeit in vain, is peaking in his career at the moment. He will almost certainly required to have a go in the latter overs of the innings to take the England total to 300-plus. Jason Cairnduff / Reuters
Jofra Archer (England): One of the most exciting fast bowlers today, Archer's pace could help keep Bangladesh's aggressive opening batsmen at bay. The earlier he can force the arrival of Shakib Al Hasan and Mushfiqur Rahim to the middle, the better for England. Alex Davidson / Getty Images
Shakib Al Hasan (Bangladesh): Possibly Bangladesh's greatest cricketer of all time, Shakib will be tasked with scoring the bulk of his team's runs and taking crucial wickets with his left-arm spin. David Rogers / Getty Images
Mushfiqur Rahim (Bangladesh): Along with Shakib, Mushfiqur is the more important batsman in the Bangladesh line-up, and he will be probably need to score a hundred to give his team the chance to post a match-winning total. Cooper / PA Wire
Mustafizur Rahman (Bangladesh): The left-arm fast bowler may not bowl with as much zip as he used to before he was sidelined by injury not too long ago. He is still a very dangerous bowler who is capable of making early inroads, which he will need to do to put pressure on England's middle order. Alex Davidson / Getty Images
Jason Roy (England): The opening batsman will do what he does best which is to try and go after the opposition bowling early in the innings. He will know he is dealing with a more than decent pace attack. But he if he can get his team off to a good start, that will be half the battle won. Andrew Boyers / Reuters
Jos Buttler (England): The middle-order batsman, who scored a brilliant century against Pakistan albeit in vain, is peaking in his career at the moment. He will almost certainly required to have a go in the latter overs of the innings to take the England total to 300-plus. Jason Cairnduff / Reuters
Jofra Archer (England): One of the most exciting fast bowlers today, Archer's pace could help keep Bangladesh's aggressive opening batsmen at bay. The earlier he can force the arrival of Shakib Al Hasan and Mushfiqur Rahim to the middle, the better for England. Alex Davidson / Getty Images
Shakib Al Hasan (Bangladesh): Possibly Bangladesh's greatest cricketer of all time, Shakib will be tasked with scoring the bulk of his team's runs and taking crucial wickets with his left-arm spin. David Rogers / Getty Images
Mushfiqur Rahim (Bangladesh): Along with Shakib, Mushfiqur is the more important batsman in the Bangladesh line-up, and he will be probably need to score a hundred to give his team the chance to post a match-winning total. Cooper / PA Wire
Mustafizur Rahman (Bangladesh): The left-arm fast bowler may not bowl with as much zip as he used to before he was sidelined by injury not too long ago. He is still a very dangerous bowler who is capable of making early inroads, which he will need to do to put pressure on England's middle order. Alex Davidson / Getty Images