The two finalists, Cambridgeshire and the Isle of Man, will kick-off at 3pm, with entry to the Abbey Stadium £3 for adults while children and senior citizens are free.

Cambridgeshire, who lost to the Mid Cheshire League in last year's inaugural final, reached this year's showpiece event after edging past Guernsey in a dramatic penalty shoot-out after the semi final finished 3-3 after extra-time.

In a wonderful battle, it was Guernsey who took the lead with just five minutes left in the first half when a speculative cross from Matt Warren deceived the entire Cambridgeshire defence and ended up in the net, via the crossbar.

Warren doubled the Guernsey lead eight minutes after half-time with a simple tap-in, but the goalscorer was left to rue a missed chance two minutes later when he shot over from close range. A third goal would probably have sealed the game for the Channel Island side.

Cambridge pulled a goal back in the 57th minute when Lee James raced clear before drawing the keeper and shooting home.

But Cambridge's hopes looked doomed when they gave away a penalty. But Warren, with another golden chance to send his side to the final, fired wide from the spot.

Buoyed by the miss, Cambridge piled forward in search of an equaliser and they were rewarded when Finney broke into the box and his cross-shot was deflected in.

The ding-dong affair continued to enthrall, with Guernsey regaining the lead through Le Page. However, Bruges responded for Cambridge, firing home from six yards to send the game to penalties.

Moore, Andrew Palazon and Dave Smith all netted for Cambridge leaving Richardson to slot home gloriously and book a place in the final.

"This is a brilliant competition and the bonus of competing in the UEFA Regions Cup is a huge spur to the team," said Palazon, the Cambridge skipper. "The team want to win The Final and compete in Europe, this is every player’s dream."

Cambridge will face the Isle of Man who became the first offshore team at any level to make The Final of an FA Cup competition following their 2-1 victory over the Kent County League at Chatham Town.

In a game where defences dominated, it was two strikes from Nick Hurt which decided the outcome of the tie.

The deadlock was broken on the 68th minute when Hurt found himself unmarked in the area and fired home from close range.

Dean Flood then made up for his two earlier misses - one hit the crossbar - by tapping home from close range to bring Kent level.

The game ebbed from end to end and with the game heading towards extra-time, Hurt slid home the winner to the delight of his team-mates, officials and supporters.

Victorious manager Kenny Manning said: "I am delighted to be in The Final and be a step nearer to wearing the England shirt in Europe. This is a fantastic opportunity for the players."