England vs Germany women's Euro 2022 final time: How to live stream the Lionesses and watch on TV

Summarized by: Live Sports Direct
 
England vs Germany women's Euro 2022 final time: How to live stream the Lionesses and watch on TV

England's women's team will play Germany in the European Championship final on Sunday at Wembley. Sarina Wiegman's side have been brilliant in their home tournament so far.

England and Germany are playing in the Women's European Championship final on Sunday afternoon. Sportsmail explains what to expect and how to watch it live.

England will play Germany in the Euro 2022 final on Sunday July 31 at 5 pm British Summer Time at Wembley Stadium.

The match will be broadcast on BBC One, on iPlayer and via the BBC Sport website. The pre-match build-up will begin from 4pm BST. Fans can also watch via a live stream on UEFA.tv. Sportsmail will run a blog during the match.

England beat Spain in the quarter-finals and Sweden in Tuesday's semi-final. England are currently 8/11 to win the Euro 2022 tournament. Germany are the defending champions. Germany and England will meet in a Euro 2020 final.

Germany beat Denmark 4-0, Spain 2-1, Finland 3-2 and Austria 2 -0 in their group. Martina Voss-Tecklenburg and her team progressed to the final thanks to a 2,1 win on Wednesday. Alexandra Popp scored a double as Martine Vosseltelburg's team won. England play France in the Euro 2022 final.

England and Germany are playing in the Euro 2022 final. Klara Buhl will miss Wednesday's semi-final due to a positive test for Covid-19. England have played the same starting XI for each of their five games.

England squad consists of Mary Earps, Ellie Roebuck, Hannah Hampton, Lucy Bronze, Jess Carter, Millie Bright, Leah Williamson, Lotte Wubben-Moy, Alex Greenwood, Demi Stokes, Keira Walsh, Georgia Stanway, Jill Scott, Fran Kirby, Ella Toone, Alessia Russo, Chloe Kelly, Lauren Hemp, Ellen White, Beth England, Nikita Parris, and Chloe Kelsall.

Germany squad for the Euro 2022 final: Goalkeepers: Merle Frohms, Ann-Katrin Berger, Almuth Schult, Kathrin Hendrich, Marina Hegering, Giulia Gwinn, Felicitas Rauch, Sara Doorsoun, Lena Oberdorf, Sydney Lohmann, Svenja Huth, Linda Dallmann and Lina Magull. Midfielders: Lena Lattwein, Sara Dabritz, Lena Oberdorf, Jule Brand, Lea Schuller, Laura Freigang, Alexandra Popp, Nicole Anyomi, Tabea Wassmuth and Klara Buhl.

Both England and Germany are favourites to win the tournament. England are at 8/11 to lift the trophy, while Germany at evens.