Now it gets real for the United States men’s national team. After clinching first place in the group in just two matches, the United States enters the knockout stage.The Americans are significant favorites against Bosnia and Herzegovina, which is an unusual spot for the U.S. in a knockout game at a World Cup. Here’s a look at that match and Wednesday’s two other elimination games plus some picks from our betting staff.England-DR CongoTime: Noon ETTV: Fox (English), Telemundo (Spanish)Venue: Mercedes-Benz Stadium, AtlantaThe Three Lions have had three good attacking halves and three very forgettable ones. England scored four against Croatia and looked like a scoring machine. Three scoreless halves against Ghana and Panama followed, casting plenty of doubt on this team’s ability to break down a defensive opponent.England rallied with two second-half goals against Panama to win the match and the group, but again has to prove it against an underdog.DR Congo, one of the more fun stories of the tournament, has been difficult to beat. Portugal couldn’t do it. Colombia barely did it (failing to score until the 76th minute).England is, of course, heavily favored (-1100 to advance), but don’t overlook the Leopards. Yoane Wissa, who scored twice in a 3-1 win over Uzbekistan, has 46 career Premier League goals and is one of four DR Congo players to have played in the Premier League this past season.Belgium-SenegalTime: 4 p.m. ETTV: FS1 (English), Telemundo (Spanish)Venue: Lumen Field, SeattleIt’s easy to overlook this match because England and the host Americans are the clear headline teams of the day, but this is easily the most balanced game on paper. Belgium is favored, but both teams are plus-money to win in regulation. The Belgians are between -160 and -170 to advance, which implies they have a roughly 60 percent chance of moving on.Both teams entered the World Cup with somewhat high expectations, but have had mixed results so far.Belgium opened with a 1-1 draw against Egypt, which wasn’t so bad, but a scoreless draw against Iran, even though the Red Devils were down a man for a quarter of the match, was concerning. The lack of attacking punch raised plenty of questions.