The Arnold Clark Cup was won by England Women after they beat Germany Women.
The Lionesses knew that a two-goal victory would see them edge Spain for the title, but it was difficult against teams they had never beaten before.
The opening quarter of the clash was dominated by the hosts, and it showed in the fact that Sarina Wiegman's side would never have a better opportunity against a weakened Germany team.
England Women: Roebuck (7), Bronze (8), Bright (8), Carter (7), Greenwood (7), Stanway (7), Williamson (8), Walsh (7), Kirby (7), White (8), Hemp (9)
Subs: Toone (6), Daly (6), Parris (7), Russo (6)
Germany: Frohms (6), Kleinherne (6), Rall (8), Schuller (6), Feldkamp (6), Dabritz (7), Gwinn (6), Anyomi (6), Buhl (6), Magull (8), Dongus (6)
Subs: Hagel (6), Brand (6), Dallmann (6), Cerci (6)
Player of the match: Laura Hemp
The Lionesses made a deserved 15th-minute breakthrough thanks to Ellen White's well-taken effort after good approach play by Georgia Stanway and Kirby - the strikers' 49th goal for her country seeing her draw level with Sir Bobby Charlton in the England goal scoring record.
The two sides were level at the break after Germany's Lina Magull scored with a wonderful 41st-minute free-kick.
The second period was scrappier as both managers made changes, perhaps with this summer's European championship in mind, and it was when England went to three at the back that they re-took the lead.
The second goal may have been aided by the absence of a Video Assistant Referee, who would have ruled that Bright was in fact in an ineligible position.
England boss Sarina Wiegman made six changes for the Arnold Clark Cup match against Germany at Molineux. The adjustments from Sunday's 0-0 draw with Spain included Leah Williamson returning to the starting XI and assuming the captain's armband. Fran Kirby, Lauren Hemp, Keira Walsh, Millie Bright and goalkeeper Ellie Roebuck were the others coming in, with Nikita Parris, Beth Mead, Rachel Daly, Jordan Nobbs, Jill Scott and Hannah Hampton dropping to the bench.
As for the visitors, both skipper Lina Magull and midfielder Giuila Gwinn started, but Jule Brand missed out.
The centre back, who was playing as a makeshift forward, was not aware that she was in an offside position when the ball fell kindly at her feet eight yards out.
The Lionesses finally got one over Germany for the first time at home to win the Arnold Clark Cup when Kirby sealed the win in the fourth and final minute of injury time after a sensational solo run that began on halfway and ended with a calm finish.
Sue Smith is on Sky Sports.
It is a huge lift for England and Sarina. The manager gambled with the formation and subs at the end of the game. It worked.
You can see the belief and confidence in this side. They went out and attacked it, knowing they had to win it.
England played against three top-quality sides with different strengths and won the tournament.
A huge boost for their home.
The England manager is on the show.
The whole tournament was just as expected, with three very different opponents and three top level games.
We saw different players and different starting lineups. We've seen different styles from them.
When I first arrived, the team had a lot of experience and some young players.
The eagerness, the commitment and the willingness to learn is immense. We have grown so fast that it is nice to work with. It has been enjoyable so far.
The defender for England is on the show.
It's massive, it keeps us going. Coming into the tournament, it was about exposing people to top teams. We did that well.
We have taken our game to another level and shown that we can win.
The captain of England is on the show.
I'm really proud. We did it because we wanted to win the tournament.
Even as soon as we won it, Sarina highlighted that it probably wasn't our best game on the ball. It was sloppy. It may have been a theme, so going forward that is something to work on.
To fight ugly against a German side is not easy, but I thought it was good in the end.
Today we learned how to win. Even when things aren't going your way or you need a bit of quality, our players delivered that and that is good for people to take away. They have that in their locker.
I don't think you could say that we outplayed them in all three games.
England Women will face North Macedonia Women on April 8 in a World Cup qualification match.