The Wallaroos will be looking to make the semi-finals of a World Cup for the first time since 2010 when they face England in Auckland.
Jay Tregonning's side booked their place in the knock-out stages with a 13-7 win over Wales in Whangarei, the first time they have built back-to-back wins in 2022.
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However, a tough task awaits, drawn to face world number one England.
The Red Roses have built a 28-game winning streak and are looking to continue their unbeaten streak against Australia.
Here is everything you need to know about Wallaroos v England
The Wallaroos' clash with E will be shown LIVE on Stan Sport and Channel Nine
Coverage will be live and ad-free on Stan Sport, slated to start at 11:00 am AEDT.
It will be also shown on Channel 9 (NSW, Victoria, Queensland) and 9Gem (WA), with coverage also set to start at 11:00 am AEDT
The Wallaroos and England will kick off at 11:35 am AEDT at Waitakere Stadium on Sunday, October 30.
Coverage will be ad-free from 11:00 am AEDT and continue throughout the game on Stan Sport and Channel Nine
The Wallaroos will headline the opening day of the Rugby World Cup against the Black Ferns on October 8.
It will be played as part of a triple-header at Eden Park, with South Africa and France to open the tournament before red-hot favourites England face newcomers Fiji.
Australia will then head north to Whangarei, set to play Scotland (15th September) and Wales (22nd September) at Semenoff Stadium.
They will play their quarter-final match against England in Auckland on October 30.
*All times local
Saturday 8 October – First Pool Matches
South Africa 5 def by France 40 (2:15 pm, Eden Park, Auckland, Pool C)
Fiji 19 def by England 84 (4:45 pm, Eden Park, Auckland, Pool C)
Australia 17 def by New Zealand 41 (7:15 pm, Eden Park, Auckland, Pool A)
Sunday 9 October – First Pool Matches
USA 10 def by Italy 22 (12:45 pm, Northland Events Centre, Whangarei, Pool B)
Japan 5 def by Canada 41 (3:15 pm, Northland Events Centre, Whangarei, Pool B)
Wales 18 def by Scotland 15 (5:45 pm, Northland Events Centre, Whangarei, Pool A)
Saturday 15 October – Second Pool Matches
Scotland 12 def by Australia 14 (3 pm, Northland Events Centre, Whangarei, Pool A)
USA 30 def Japan 17(5:30 pm, Northland Events Centre, Whangarei, Pool B)
France 7 def by England 13 (8 pm, Northland Events Centre, Whangarei, Pool C)
Sunday 16 October – Second Pool Matches
Italy 12 def by Canada 22 (12:45 pm, Waitakere Stadium, Auckland, Pool B)
Wales 12 def by New Zealand 56 (3:15 pm, Waitakere Stadium, Auckland, Pool A)
Fiji 21 def South Africa 17 (5:45 pm, Waitakere Stadium, Auckland, Pool C)
Saturday 22 October – Third Pool Matches
Australia 13 def Wales 7 (2:15 pm, Northland Events Centre, Whangarei, Pool A)
New Zealand 57 def Scotland 0 (4:45 pm, Northland Events Centre, Whangarei, Pool A)
France 44 def Fiji 0 (7:15 pm, Northland Events Centre, Whangarei, Pool C)
Sunday 23 October – Third Pool Matches
Japan 8 def by Italy 21 (12:45 pm, Waitakere Stadium, Auckland, Pool B)
Canada 29 def USA 14 (3:15 pm, Waitakere Stadium, Auckland, Pool B)
England 75 def South Africa 0 (5:45 pm, Waitakere Stadium, Auckland, Pool C)
Saturday 29 October – Quarter-finals
France v Italy (4:30 pm, Northland Events Centre, Whangarei)
New Zealand v Wales (7:30 pm, Northland Events Centre, Whangarei)
Sunday 30 October – Quarter-finals
England v Australia (1.30 pm, Waitakere Stadium, Auckland)
Canada v USA (4:30 pm, Waitakere Stadium, Auckland)
Saturday 5 November – Semi-finals
Semi-final 1 (4:30 pm, Eden Park, Auckland)
Semi-final 2 (7:30 pm, Eden Park, Auckland)
Saturday 12 November – Final
Final (7:30 pm, Eden Park, Auckland)
WALLAROOS (15-1): TBC
RESERVES: TBC
ENGLAND (15-1): TBC
RESERVES: TBC
World Rugby and tournament organisers have opened up on the reason why the tournament remains 'Rugby World Cup 2021' despite being played in 2022.
COVID forced the tournament to be delayed by 12 months, leaving the unique situation where it is labelled the wrong year as World Rugby moves away from having either men's or women's in front of their respective events.
This led to tournament organisers retaining the name, with the caveat of 'playing in 2022' thrown into marketing in the build-up