England are equipped with considerable talent, despite going to the brink of defeat against Afghanistan. They collapsed to 57 for six in the 10th over, before reaching a defendable 142.
The West Indies beat England in pool play because Chris Gayle's freakish 100 off 48 balls helped haul in 183. That can be countered by England's chase to reach 230 against South Africa - the highest in World T20 history.
Five of their staple top seven - Jason Roy, Alex Hales, Joe Root, Eoin Morgan and Ben Stokes - were there when England beat New Zealand by 56 runs in a one-off match at Manchester last June.
Spinners Adil Rashid and Moeen Ali can be effective, although New Zealand's Mitchell Santner and Ish Sodhi have starred among the slow bowlers at this tournament.
New Zealand also have a mental advantage, knowing they trounced England in pool play at Wellington during the 50-over World Cup, their most recent tournament contest.
Nine of the Black Caps' 15-man squad have experience in the Indian Premier League but, curiously, those who haven't, such as Martin Guptill, Santner and Sodhi, have had the most bearing on the team's performances.
If New Zealand advance beyond the semifinals, their opponent will be either the West Indies, or the winner between Australia and India (the Black Caps defeated both in pool play).
New Zealand have played the West Indies once in the six editions of World T20 - a tie at Pallekele in 2012, which the West Indies won in the eliminator.