ENGLAND won the Women's World Cup after centre Emily Scarratt inspired a 21-9 victory over Canada at Stade Jean-Bouin in Paris.

Katy McLean, who plays for Darlingwon Mowden Park Sharks, became only the second English woman to hoist the World Cup trophy aloft after a hard-fought contest.

Lichfield centre Scarratt scored 16 points from a try, conversion and three penalties, with her 74th-minute solo touchdown securing world title glory following Bristol full-back Danielle Waterman's first-half score.

Wing Magali Harvey kicked three penalties for Canada, but England were not to be denied, being crowned world champions for the first time since 1994 and ending a run of three successive World Cup final defeats, all against New Zealand.

 The game was inevitably tense, given the stakes, but Scarratt's contribution was significant.

She missed only one kick at goal, and then displayed a superb piece of skill when it mattered to unlock Canada's defence just as the match hung in the balance during its closing moments.

England fielded 11 survivors from the team that started the 2010 World Cup final against New Zealand in London, and the pain of that 13-10 loss had been a motivating factor for captain Katy Mclean and her players.

Canada gave it everything, especially their forwards, yet England possessed the dominant individual in Scarratt, and her try sealed the deal to spark wild scenes of celebration.

England head coach Gary Street made two changes from the side that destroyed semi-final opponents Ireland, with scrum-half Natasha Hunt replacing La Toya Mason and flanker Marlie Packer also handed a start.

Waterman and prop Rochelle Clark, meanwhile, both featured in a World Cup final for the third time, but Canada made their debut in the showpiece fixture after they knocked out hosts France five days ago.

A cagey opening burst into life when Hunt's sharp break from the forward base caught Canada napping, and England opened their account when Scarratt kicked a 10th-minute penalty.

Both teams were eager to move possession wide, and a sharp break by Canada centre Andrea Burk was rapidly followed by England launching a thrilling counter-attack that was only thwarted when Canadian flanker Karen Paquin hauled down Kat Merchant.

Hunt went even closer five minutes later, darting to within inches of Canada's line, but she was also denied by Paquin - who prevented the Lichfield number nine from touching down.

It was a breathless contest, and England continued to dominate in terms of territory, with a second Scarratt penalty doubling their advantage 15 minutes before half-time.

England did not lack confidence, and their adventurous approach reaped a spectacular reward when the combined approach work of wing Kay Wilson, Mclean, lock Tamara Taylor and flanker Maggie Alphonsi delivered a try for Waterman.

Scarratt could not add the touchline conversion attempt, yet England were excellent value for their interval lead, even though Harvey cut it to 11-3 when she kicked a penalty on the stroke of half-time.

A second Harvey penalty four minutes after the restart gave England food for thought, and with Canada's scrum starting to exert a degree of dominance, Mclean's team came under escalating pressure.

Harvey then completed her penalty hat-trick with a strike from just inside England's half, which cranked up the pressure and tension as the game moved into its closing quarter, but not before another Scarratt penalty restored a five-point advantage.

And then Scarratt provided the clinching score, taking Mclean's pass before beating one tackler and then running clear of two more Canadian defenders on a 30-metre dash to the line.

Her conversion put England 12 points clear, and with Canada's admirable resistance finally broken, England knew the party could begin.