One of the oldest rivalries in sport adds another chapter as Australia take on England at Twickenham.
In a big year for both nations facing off against each other, the Wallabies will travel to London looking to replicate their heroics from last year after Max Jorgensen's extra-time winner.
Watch the Wallabies take on England live and on-demand via Stan Sport.
The Wallabies are coming off a narrow win over Japan in Tokyo to kick-start their Spring Tour, with England beginning their end-of-year tour with world ranking implications on the line.
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England (15-1): Freddie Steward, Tom Roebuck, Tommy Freeman, Fraser Dingwall, Immanuel Feyi-Waboso; George Ford, Alex Mitchell; Ben Earl, Sam Underhill, Guy Pepper; Ollie Chessum, Maro Itoje (capt); Joe Heyes, Jamie George, Fin Baxter
Replacements: Luke Cowan-Dickie, Ellis Genge, Will Stuart, Alex Coles, Tom Curry, Henry Pollock, Ben Spencer, Fin Smith
- George Ford beats out Fin and Marcus Smith to start at flyhalf.
- Tommy Freeman shifts to outside centre to partner Northampton teammate Fraser Dingw.all
- Guy Pepper starts ahead of Tom Curry in the backrow, who is one of six British & Irish Lions on the bench.
Australia (15-1): Andrew Kellaway, Max Jorgensen, Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, Hunter Paisami, Harry Potter, Tane Edmed, Jake Gordon, Harry Wilson (capt), Fraser McReight, Rob Valetini, Jeremy Williams, Taniela Tupou, Billy Pollard, Angus Bell
Replacements: Josh Nasser, Tom Robertson, Allan Alaalatoa, Lukhan Salakaia-Loto, Nick Champion de Crespigny, Ryan Lonergan, Hamish Stewart, Filipo Daugunu
- Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii, Max Jorgensen, Nick Frost and Taniela Tupou are among the fresh faces in the team from last week.
- Harry Wilson re-gains the captaincy after coming off the bench last week.
- Lukhan Salakaia-Loto (rib) has been cleared to play.
- England holds the narrow head-to-head advantage, claiming a 28-27 lead over Australia, with one draw.
- Australia won all 34 of their scrums in this year’s Rugby Championship, the only side to manage a 100% success rate on their own feed.
- England had the highest dominant carry (38%), tackle evasion (25%) and gainline success (65%) rates of any team in this year’s Six Nations.
Freddie Steward v Andrew Kellaway
England’s kick-first strategy is geared around taking advantage of Steward’s ability in the air - one of the best in the world.
It’s up to Kellaway and co to neutralise this if they are to control possession and territory and take George Ford out of the game.
Kellaway’s calm head was missed during the Bledisloe Cup series, filling the void left by Tom Wright’s long-term injury.
Australia by 3