Sunday is the final day of pool play in the Paris women's water polo tournament. At the end of the day, the top four teams in each group will advance to the knockout round.

Since China, playing in Group A, has an off-day on Sunday and went winless in its four pool play games, it has already been eliminated from the knockout round. On the other hand, Group B will come down to the final game. France (1-2) and Greece (0-3) will face off at 2:05 p.m. ET, and the winner will get the final knockout spot. 

The U.S. also finished pool play on Friday, so they'll get a day off as they await their opponent in the knockout round. The Americans finished 3-1 in pool play, and locked up the No. 2 seed in Group B.

Here's a look at the other four games scheduled for Sunday.

Game 1: Hungary vs. Australia (8 a.m. ET)

Australia (3-0) is one of just two unbeaten teams in Paris, but since two of those wins came by penalty shootout the Australians are still ranked No. 3 in Group A. All of Australia, Hungary, and the Netherlands come into the final day with four points in the group. Australia can still clinch the top spot in the group with a win over Hungary and a loss by the Netherlands.

Hungary (2-1) is currently second in the group with their only loss coming to the Netherlands on Day 1 of play. Hungary has scored just as many goals as it has allowed (28, 9.3/game).

Australia has allowed fewer goals (26) than any other team in the tournament, and has the third best offense, having scored 32 goals in three games.

Game 2: Group B - Italy vs. Spain (9:35 a.m. ET)

Spain (3-0) has locked up the No. 1 spot in Group B. The Spanish squad are getting it done offensively (12.6 goals per game) and defensively (8.3 goals/game), and are the only team to have beat the U.S. so far in Paris.

They'll take on an Italian team that has just one win so far, a 12-8 victory over Greece on Friday after starting the tournament with two straight losses.

Game 3: Group A - Canada vs. The Netherlands (12:30 p.m. ET)

The Netherlands and Hungary are tied atop the Group A standings at 2-1. The Netherlands has the advantage with a win over Hungary on the first day of competition. So all it has to do now is defeat Canada to lock up the top spot.

Netherlands is one of the top scoring teams in Paris, but has also struggled defensively, allowing 11.3 goals per game.

Canada's defense has been strong, allowing 9.6 scores per game, but the offense hasn't been as efficient. Twice the Canadians have been held to fewer than 10 goals, and they're averaging just 8.6 per game.

Game 4: Group B - France vs. Greece (2:05 p.m. ET)

The most critical game of the day will see the home team fighting for a spot in the quarterfinals of the tournament it is hosting. France is playing in the Olympics for the first time, so moving on also means a first ever trip to the knockout round.

France and Greece are the two lowest scoring offenses in Paris, as neither team has scored more than nine goals in a single game. France is averaging 6.6 goals per game and Greece is putting up 7.3.