Jonny Wilkinson offered drop-goal guidance to Owen Farrell as England put the finishing touches to preparations for Saturday’s World Cup final against South Africa.

Romford Recorder: England's Jonny Wilkinson kicks the winning drop goal to clinch the Rugby World Cup for England in the final seconds of a thrilling final between Australia and England at Telstra Stadium in Sydney. 2/4/04: A piece of turf from the pitch is to go up for sale on auction website ebay. The 30cm square section is to be auctioned in aid of Great Ormond Street Hospital. Bidding begins today and ends on April 12.England's Jonny Wilkinson kicks the winning drop goal to clinch the Rugby World Cup for England in the final seconds of a thrilling final between Australia and England at Telstra Stadium in Sydney. 2/4/04: A piece of turf from the pitch is to go up for sale on auction website ebay. The 30cm square section is to be auctioned in aid of Great Ormond Street Hospital. Bidding begins today and ends on April 12. (Image: PA Archive/PA Images)

Wilkinson was present for the week's last training session at Tokyo's Fuchu Asahi Football Park on the eve of the Springboks clash at International Stadium Yokohama.

Dressed in a grey T-shirt, black tracksuit bottoms and orange boots, he watched and gave advice as Farrell and Ben Youngs practised drop-goals in expectation of a tight encounter between the sport's top two ranked teams.

Farrell leads England into the climax to Japan 2019 from inside centre having recovered the dead leg sustained against New Zealand with Youngs and George Ford forming the half-backs.

Wilkinson famously struck the extra-time drop goal that clinched a 20-17 victory over Australia in the 2003 final - the nation's only World Cup triumph - and also started the global showpiece four years later.

The 40-year-old works with Eddie Jones' squad on an consultancy basis, offering his technical expertise on kicking to the likes of Farrell, Ford, Youngs and full-back Elliot Daly.

It is believed that this is the first time he has been involved in an England training session in Japan and his wisdom has come as the clock ticks down on a seismic collision with South Africa.

And Farrell's World Cup favourites will enter the repeat of the 2007 final boosted by a good luck message from the Duke of Sussex that included a photo of his son Archie in a Red Rose jersey.

"As a group we've had a couple of messages from Prince Harry," Bath flanker Sam Underhill said.

"He sent us a nice message of support, which was nice to receive. He showed his little lad in an England shirt, so that was a nice touch. I'm still waiting on my personal message!"

Once on-field hostilities commence, Underhill will focus his attention on maintaining England's ongoing domination of the breakdown.

It is a department they have controlled at every stage of the World Cup, including the comprehensive knockout wins against Australia and New Zealand, but against South Africa they face ferocity and mayhem.

Tom Curry has been shortlisted for world player of the year partly on the strength of his expertise on the floor, but he has been ably assisted by Underhill.

"South Africa are a pretty big side - all over the park. They have some good ball carriers and are a big threat at the breakdown," Underhill said.

"They have guys who get over the ball as we saw against Wales, when they counter-rucked pretty well. Physically it's important we turn up and take that part of the game away from them.

"For us it's important in our attack to have speed of ball and that's what the opposition don't want. For any attack to function well you need good speed of ball.

"In defence there's not much you can do, for what they bring at you, apart from turn up physically.

"That's probably going to be a theme - a lot of what's underpinning a lot of aspects of the game is physicality. Get that right and hopefully we will be able to dictate the game.

"On top of the physicality, the thing to bring is accuracy and control. It's all very well being aggressive but the key is to have control of that."