A rollercoaster Six Nations championship will come to an end on a mouth-watering Super Saturday where two big showdowns will decide the destiny of the trophy.
France are in pole position to retain their crown, knowing that a win in Paris over hapless England in the late kick-off will get them over the line, no matter how the early afternoon Ireland-Scotland tie plays out.
Even if the top prize is unlikely to be handed out to one of the teams in Dublin late on Saturday night, one of the teams will be celebrating a Triple Crown - unless it's a first draw since 1994!
The 27th renewal of the Six Nations is being heralded as one of the best ever tournaments with superb performances and huge shocks coming week by week.
France and England opened up with big wins in the first round, while Italy stunned Scotland.
The Scots then saw off England, while Ireland struggled to get past the Azzurri.
Round three saw Andy Farrell's men destroy England in Twickenham, while Wales pushed Scotland all the way.
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And last Saturday, Scotland and Italy both recorded incredible wins over France and England, respectively.
After all that's gone on, it's no wonder that pundits are wary about giving their Super Saturday verdicts as Gregor Townsend's side look to end an 11-game losing streak against the Irish that goes back to 2017.
"That's what makes the competition what it is," former Ireland captain Donal Lenihan said on RTÉ2's Against the Head last night.
"It's absolutely bizarre, so don't bother asking us who's going to win between Ireland and Scotland next weekend, because all the predictions have gone out of the window.
"That's why it's been the best championship in years and years. That's why we mentioned Southern Hemisphere [Rugby Championship] a couple of weeks ago.
"They just can't match this drama, the historic significance of the whole thing.

"Scotland coming to Dublin next week, we're in their heads.
"It's like the [Cranberries] Zombie song, we're in their heads, and we'd better start playing that [on the PA in Aviva Stadium] before the match.
"On the flip side of that, Scotland have recovered from a position where they were rock bottom after the opening weekend, and some of their rugby has been just majestic to watch, so it's going to be a brilliant day out in the Aviva next Saturday."
Follow a live blog on Ireland v Scotland in the Six Nations on Saturday from 2.10pm on the RTÉ News app and on rte.ie/sport. Listen to commentary on Saturday Sport on RTÉ Radio 1
Watch Wales v Italy (4.40pm) and France v England (8.10pm) in the Six Nations on Saturday. Follow a live blog on France v England on the RTÉ News app and on rte.ie/sport