Watch the Women’s Rugby World Cup Final
The moment we have all been waiting for is here.
England and Canada, the world No.1 and No.2 ranked sides, will do battle at 16:00 BST for the Women's Rugby World Cup Trophy.
Get all the lowdown you need for the big one here.
And if you are not lucky enough to be one of the 82,000-plus heading to Allianz Stadium, get all the details here as to how you can watch live coverage worldwide.
Can't wait for some ENG v CAN action?
The minutes can pass very slowly during the countdown to a massive game... so if you need some entertainment while you wait, how about catching up with what happened the last time England played Canada at a Rugby World Cup:
And if that is not enough, check out the best bits from the final that followed - it should whet your appetites for kick-off...
Fire-up your final Fantasy Team with Maggie Alphonsi
If Maggie Alphonsi is to be believed, the whole of England will be celebrating big style by 18:00. And she does has form, having lifted the trophy herself in 2014... beating Canada in the process.
The Hall of Famer picked six Red Roses in her Fantasy Team, compared to four Canadians, three New Zealanders and two Frenchwomen. And then tipped England, for good measure!
Check out the worldwide Fantasy leaderboard here.
Japan coach & BBC pundit Lesley McKenzie analyses final
Chaos, high-pace and huge performances from the front-row and the back-three - these are the ingredients Canada need to win their first ever RWC Final - that's according to former Canadian international and current Japan head coach, Lesley McKenzie.
Jones v de Goede v Miller
It may not be the trophy they really, really want but the tussle for the World Rugby's Women's 15s Player of the Year is an intriguing side-battle.
Will it be Canada's Sophie de Goede?
Or England's star centre Megan Jones?
Or might New Zealand's young tyro Jorga Miller pip them both with a huge Bronze Final performance?
Miller has also been nominated for 15s Breakthrough Player of the Year, alongside teammate Braxton Sorensen-McGee and Fiji's Josifini Neihamu. In addition, Coach of the Year and Referee award winners plus the Women’s 15s Dream Team and Try of the Year will be announced after the conclusion of the final.
Battle for bronze is on
Do not forget there is a huge match before the final gets underway, one upon which the aforementioned Jorga Miller will no doubt have a major influence on.
Both France and New Zealand of course wish there were in the big one, but now they are there, they have both said what a huge motivation a bronze medal is - read the full story here.
Do not miss kick-off, 12:30 BST at the sold-out Allianz Stadium.