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Valentine Holmes, Wade Graham and new recruit Cronulla Josh Dugan line up for the Kangaroos, 100-game Sharks player and a member of the 2016 Premiership winning team in Chris Heighington for the Lions, when Australia play England in the World Cup Final at Suncorp Stadium on Saturday night.

The three current Sharks have been outstanding throughout the tournament for the Kangaroos, while Heighington has played his part for England and comes back into the side after missing his team’s semi-final victory over Tonga.

The scorer of an incredible 11 tries in his past two matches, many of those as a result of a last pass thrown by Dugan, Holmes will be looking to add to that tally and at the same time help secure a win for his team.

As for Graham, a standout performance against France early in the tournament has been backed up by a series of consistent efforts in an interchange role, with his versatility again likely to prove vital in tomorrow night’s final.

The match is scheduled for an 8.00pm kick off.

NRL.com have provided the following preview to Saturday’s big game.

 

Australia v England: RLWC Final preview

By Martin Gabor, National Correspondent‌‌, ‌‌‌NRL.com

English spirits might have taken a battering in the cricket at the Gabba but all hope isn't lost with their rugby league heroes out to salvage some national pride when they take on Australia in Saturday night's World Cup final.

Wayne Bennett's men will start as rank outsiders, and while their coach doesn't believe they are playing well enough to beat the defending champions England will head into this weekend's clash with plenty of confidence after they survived a furious Tongan comeback in the semi-final to hang on for a thrilling 20-18 win.

There might have been some controversy at the end but the final few minutes masked what had been a fairly dominant performance by the English who are now on a four-game winning streak after dropping the opening game of the tournament to Australia.

While their opponents snuck into the decider, there were no such issues for the Kangaroos who maintained their perfect record with a crushing win over Fiji that was headlined by Valentine Holmes's record-breaking six-try haul.

The Aussies have seemingly gotten better with every game they've played, and despite a couple of knocks against Fiji they are unchanged for this weekend's clash.

It's a different story for England who will be without hooker Josh Hodgson after he tore his ACL last week. James Roby will take his place in the No.9 jersey with Chris Heighington joining the bench.

‌Why Australia can win: From Valentine Holmes's incredible finishing skills to Australia's grunt up front, there are countless reasons why Australia should win on Saturday night. However, the key could be the 'big three' as they approach what might be their last game together. With Cooper Cronk off to the Roosters next year and the rep futures of Billy Slater and Cameron Smith up in the air, the World Cup final could very well be the last time we see the talented triumvirate line up together. They helped the Maroons clinch an unlikely State of Origin series, they combined to secure another premiership for the Storm and now they have the chance to say goodbye on a ground where they've shared some of their fondest memories.

Why England can win: It will take something special for England to upset the Aussies, but stranger things have happened. Everything will need to go right for the underdogs and they must not gift the Kangaroos opportunities through errors and penalties. The northerners have a world-class pack led by James Graham and Sam Burgess that can punch holes in the defensive line and it's up to the in-form Gareth Widdop to link with his outside backs to punish Australia when they are in good-ball areas.

The history: Played 15; Australia 12; England 2; Drawn 1. England might have been unbeaten against the men in green and gold after their first three meetings but it's been one-way traffic since then with the Kangaroos currently on a 12-game winning streak.

Match officials: Referee: Gerard Sutton. Sideline officials: Chris Butler and Chris Kendall

Televised: Channel Seven – Live Coverage from 7pm.

NRL.com predicts: We've already seen one skipper named Smith slay the English in Brisbane this week, and we're tipping Cameron to join his cricket counterpart with a man-of-the-match showing as Australia win the World Cup by 16 points.

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Cronulla-Sutherland Sharks respect and honour the Traditional Custodians of the land and pay our respects to their Elders past, present and future. We acknowledge the stories, traditions and living cultures of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples on the lands we meet, gather and play on.

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