ENGLAND take on Germany in the final of Women’s Euro 2022 on Sunday, hoping to lift the European Championship trophy for the first time.

Here are the details of the game – and how you can watch it…


WHERE IS THE GAME TAKING PLACE?

Sunday’s final will be staged at Wembley Stadium, meaning England’s men’s and women’s teams will both have played in a Euros final in London in the space of two summers.

The final is the only game of the tournament being played at Wembley.


WHAT TIME IS KICK-OFF?

Sunday’s final will kick off at 5pm.


ARE TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE?

No – Sunday’s final was a complete sell-out before it was even known that England would be playing in the game.

The sell-out completes a remarkable tournament in terms of ticket sales, with Euro 2022 having broken all attendance records for a Women’s European Championships.


IS THE GAME BEING TELEVISED?

Yes – as has been the case right throughout the tournament, there will be live coverage of the final on the BBC.

The game is being screened live on BBC One, with coverage from Wembley starting at 3.50pm.

There will also be a live stream of the game on the BBC Sport website.


WHAT MIGHT ENGLAND’S SIDE BE?

England boss Sarina Wiegman has named the same starting side in each of her side’s matches in the tournament so far.

She is unlikely to change tack on Sunday, which will mean Ellen White retaining her place in attack despite Alessia Russo having impressed as a super-sub and scored one of the Goals of the Tournament via a back-heel nutmeg in the semi-final.

Whitby-born Beth Mead, who has been the star of the Euros so far, will start on the right of England’s attack, with Berwick-born Lucy Bronze playing behind her at right-back.


HOW ARE GERMANY SHAPING UP?

Germany will provide England with their toughest test of the tournament so far, having been every bit as impressive as the Lionesses as they have progressed through to the final.

The Germans beat Denmark, Spain and Finland in their group matches, before seeing off Austria 2-0 in the quarter-finals.

Their semi-final with France was a tight affair, but they came through 2-1 thanks to two goals from Alexandra Popp, who is the tournament’s joint top scorer with six goals.