European Championships are back in England as the 2022 Women's Euros takes centre stage after last year's rescheduled Men's Pan-European tournament. The Lionesses are looking to make home advantage count as Sarina Wiegman eyes history after leading Holland to glory, four years ago.
The holders are among the outsiders for the latest edition of the competition. Spain and the hosts are the favourites and second favourites respectively with record-winners Germany priced at 7-1.
Arsenal's Leah Williamson is set to lead the Lionesses out in the opening match against Austria on July 6 at Old Trafford. Sixteen nations will be across the country as Manchester, London, Brighton, Southampton, Milton Keynes and Sheffield will host the matches.
READ MORE: Women's Euro 2022: Dates, groups, fixtures, stadiums and tickets
There will be a number of Premier League stadiums hosting women's matches with the final being held at the world-renowned Wembley stadium. Facilities used by Manchester United and Manchester City's youth and women's teams are also in use in Leigh and at the Etihad Academy centre.
In London, Brentford's Community Stadium will host a number of matches in front of a 17,250 capacity. On the coast, Brighton's AMEX Stadium will welcome the likes of England and Norway with Southampton's St Mary's hosting the second game of the tournament between Norway and Northern Ireland.
England came closest in 2009 but were soundly beaten by a resolute Germany side. Last time in the competition, they were edged out by Holland in the semi-final before finishing in fourth place, this time around they will be looking to go one better than Gareth Southgate's side who were beaten by Italy in last year's final.
What stadiums will be used at Women's Euro 2022?
- [Final] Wembley Stadium, London (90,000 capacity)
- Old Trafford, Manchester (74,879)
- The Amex, Brighton (31,800)
- Stadium MK, Milton Keynes (30,500)
- Brentford Community Stadium, London (17,250)
- New York Stadium, Rotherham (12,021)
- Bramall Lane, Sheffield (32,702)
- St Mary's Stadium, Southampton (32,505)
- Leigh Sports Village, Leigh (12,000)
- Etihad Academy Stadium, Manchester (7,000)
All Women's Euros fixtures
Group stage:
Wednesday 6 July
Group A: England v Austria (20:00, Old Trafford)
Thursday 7 July
Group A: Norway vs Northern Ireland (20:00, Southampton)
Friday 8 July
Group B: Spain vs Finland (17:00, Milton Keynes)
Group B: Germany vs Denmark (20:00, Brentford)
Saturday 9 July
Group C: Portugal vs Switzerland (17:00, Wigan & Leigh)
Group C: Netherlands vs Sweden (20:00, Sheffield)
Sunday 10 July
Group D: Belgium vs Iceland (17:00, Manchester)
Group D: France vs Italy (20:00, Rotherham)
Monday 11 July
Group A: Austria vs Northern Ireland (17:00, Southampton)
Group A: England v Norway (20:00, Brighton & Hove)
Tuesday 12 July
Group B: Denmark vs Finland (17:00, Milton Keynes)
Group B: Germany vs Spain (20:00, Brentford)
Wednesday 13 July
Group C: Sweden vs Switzerland (17:00, Sheffield)
Group C: Netherlands v Portugal (20:00, Wigan & Leigh)
Thursday 14 July
Group D: Italy vs Iceland (17:00, Manchester)
Group D: France vs Belgium (20:00, Rotherham)
Friday 15 July
Group A: Northern Ireland v England (20:00, Southampton)
Group A: Austria vs Norway (20:00, Brighton & Hove)
Saturday 16 July
Group B: Finland vs Germany (20:00, Milton Keynes)
Group B: Denmark vs Spain (20:00, Brentford)
Sunday 17 July
Group C: Switzerland vs Netherlands (17:00, Sheffield)
Group C: Sweden vs Portugal (17:00, Wigan & Leigh)
Monday 18 July
Group D: Iceland vs France (20:00, Rotherham)
Group D: Italy vs Belgium (20:00, Manchester)
Knockout phase
Quarter-finals:
Wednesday 20 July
QF1: Winners Group A v Runners-up Group B (20:00, Brighton & Hove)
Thursday 21 July
QF2: Winners Group B v Runners-up Group A (20:00, Brentford)
Friday 22 July
QF3: Winners Group C v Runners-up Group D (20:00, Wigan & Leigh)
Saturday 23 July
QF4: Winners Group D v Runners-up Group C (20:00, Rotherham)
Semi-finals:
Tuesday 26 July
SF1: Winners QF1 v Winners QF3 (20:00, Sheffield)
Wednesday 27 July
SF2: Winners QF2 v Winners QF4 (20:00, Milton Keynes)
Final:
Sunday 31 July
Winners SF1 v Winners SF2 (17:00, Wembley)