12th edition of the Cricket World Cup
The
2019 ICC Cricket World Cup
was the 12th
Cricket World Cup
, a quadrennial
One Day International
(ODI)
cricket
tournament contested by men's national teams and organised by the
International Cricket Council
(ICC). The tournament was hosted between 30 May and 14 July across 10 venues in
England
and a single venue in
Wales
. It was the fifth time that England had hosted the World Cup, while for Wales it was their third.
The tournament was contested by 10 teams, a decrease from 14 teams in the previous edition, with the format of the tournament changing to a single round-robin group with the top four teams qualifying through to the knockout stage. After six weeks of round-robin matches, which saw four games not have a
result
,
India
,
Australia
,
England
, and
New Zealand
finished as the top four, with
Pakistan
missing out on
net run rate
.
In the knockout stage, England and New Zealand won their respective semi-finals to qualify for the
final
, which was played at
Lord's
in London. The final ended in a
tie
after the match ended with both teams scoring 241
runs
, followed by the first
Super Over
in an ODI; England won the title, their first, on the boundary countback rule after the Super Over also finished level. The total attendance throughout the 2019 ICC Cricket World Cup was 752,000.
[1]
Overall, videos of the group stages amassed over 2.6 billion views from around the world, making it the most-watched cricket competition as of 2019.
[update]
[2]
Hosting
[
edit
]
The hosting rights were awarded in April 2006, after England and Wales withdrew their bid to host the
2015 Cricket World Cup
, which was played in Australia and New Zealand. It was the fifth Cricket World Cup played in England, following the
1975
,
1979
,
1983
and
1999
World Cups. Wales also hosted matches at the 1983 and 1999 tournaments, the latter also seeing matches played in Scotland, Ireland and the Netherlands.
[3]
[4]
Qualification
[
edit
]
The 2019 World Cup featured 10 teams, a decrease from previous World Cups in 2011 and 2015, which each featured 14 teams.
[5]
The hosts (England) and the top seven other teams in the
ICC One Day International rankings
on 30 September 2017 earned an automatic qualification.
[6]
Results from 19 September 2017 confirmed that these teams were Australia, Bangladesh, England, India, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa and Sri Lanka.
[7]
The remaining two spots were decided by the
2018 Cricket World Cup Qualifier
.
[6]
At the time of the announcement of the qualification structure,
ICC Associate and Affiliate Members
, who were guaranteed four spots in the previous two World Cup tournaments, could now only be represented by at most two teams, and possibly none at all if they were beaten by the lowest-ranked
Full Members
in the Qualifier.
[6]
It also meant that at least two of the ten Test-playing nations at the time of the announcement would have to play in the qualifying tournament, and could miss the World Cup finals entirely. Thus, this was the first World Cup to be contested without all of the Full Member nations being present.
[8]
The final stage of the tournament was a "Super Six" group, from which the top two teams qualified for the 2019 World Cup. The West Indies were guaranteed a spot after defeating
Scotland
in the penultimate round.
[9]
Afghanistan
joined them after defeating
Ireland
in the final over of their match.
[10]
This was the first time since 1983 that Zimbabwe had failed to qualify for a World Cup.
[11]
Ireland also missed the competition for the first time since
2007
,
[12]
and, for the first time, no Associate nation participated.
[13]
Venues
[
edit
]
The fixture list for the tournament was released on 26 April 2018 after the completion of an ICC meeting in
Kolkata
, India.
London Stadium
had been named as a possible venue in the planning stages,
[16]
[17]
and in January 2017, the ICC completed an inspection of the ground, confirming that the pitch dimensions would be compliant with the requirements to host ODI matches.
[18]
However, when the fixtures were announced, London Stadium was not included as a venue.
[19]
[20]
All of the venues used are in England except for
Sophia Gardens
, which is in Wales. The final was scheduled for 14 July 2019 at
Lord's
in London.
[21]
Birmingham
|
Bristol
|
Cardiff
|
Chester-le-Street
|
Edgbaston
|
Bristol County Ground
|
Sophia Gardens
|
Riverside Ground
|
Capacity: 25,000
[20]
|
Capacity: 17,500
[20]
|
Capacity: 15,643
[20]
|
Capacity: 17,000
[20]
|
Matches: 5 (including semi-final)
|
Matches: 3
|
Matches: 4
|
Matches: 3
|
|
|
|
|
Leeds
|
London
|
Venues in England and Wales
|
Headingley
|
Lord's
|
The Oval
|
Capacity: 18,350
[20]
|
Capacity: 30,000
[20]
|
Capacity: 25,500
[22]
|
Matches: 4
|
Matches: 5 (including final)
|
Matches: 5
|
|
|
|
Manchester
|
Nottingham
|
Southampton
|
Taunton
|
Old Trafford
|
Trent Bridge
|
Rose Bowl
|
County Ground
|
Capacity: 26,000
[20]
|
Capacity: 17,500
[20]
|
Capacity: 25,000
[20]
|
Capacity: 12,500
[20]
|
Matches: 6 (including semi-final)
|
Matches: 5
|
Matches: 5
|
Matches: 3
|
|
|
|
|
Squads
[
edit
]
All the participating teams had to submit the names of their respective World Cup squads by 23 April 2019.
[23]
The teams were allowed to change players in their 15-man squad anytime up to seven days before the start of the tournament.
[24]
New Zealand was the first team to announce their World Cup squad.
[25]
The oldest player of the tournament was South African player
Imran Tahir
, who was 40 years old, while the youngest was Afghan spinner
Mujeeb Ur Rahman
, who was 18.
[26]
[27]
Match officials
[
edit
]
In April 2019, the ICC named the officials for the tournament, 16 umpires and six match referees.
[28]
Ian Gould
announced that he would retire as an umpire following the conclusion of the tournament.
[29]
Prize money
[
edit
]
The International Cricket Council declared a total prize money pool of US$10 million for the tournament, the same as the 2015 edition.
[30]
England, the winning team, received US$4,000,000, the runner-up $2,000,000 and the losing semi-finalists $800,000. Teams that did not progress past the league stage received $100,000 and the winner of each league stage match received $40,000.
[31]
Warm-up matches
[
edit
]
Before the World Cup, the participating nations competed in 10 warm-up matches, which were played from 24 to 28 May 2019. These matches did not have either
One Day International
(ODI) status or
List A
status as teams were allowed to field all 15 members of their squad.
[32]
[33]
[A]
Warm-up matches
- Pakistan won the toss and elected to bat.
- Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to field.
- England won the toss and elected to field.
- India won the toss and elected to bat.
- West Indies won the toss and elected to field.
- The match was reduced to 31 overs per side due to rain.
- No toss.
- No play was possible due to rain.
- Sri Lanka won the toss and elected to bat.
- England won the toss and elected to field.
- New Zealand won the toss and elected to field.
- Bangladesh won the toss and elected to field.
Opening ceremony
[
edit
]
The opening ceremony took place on
The Mall
in central London during the evening of 29 May 2019, a day before the start of the World Cup.
[37]
Andrew Flintoff
,
Paddy McGuinness
and
Shibani Dandekar
hosted the event. Prior to the opening ceremony, the 10 captains met at
Buckingham Palace
where they were greeted by
Queen Elizabeth II
and
Prince Harry
.
[38]
A 60-second challenge took place among the 10 participating 'teams', with each side represented by two guest figures, including
Viv Richards
,
Anil Kumble
,
Mahela Jayawardene
,
Jacques Kallis
,
Brett Lee
,
Kevin Pietersen
,
Farhan Akhtar
,
Malala Yousafzai
,
Yohan Blake
,
Damayanthi Dharsha
,
Azhar Ali
,
Abdur Razzak
,
Jaya Ahsan
,
James Franklin
and
Steven Pienaar
, while
David Boon
was the umpire for the game. England won the game by scoring 74 points, and Australia came second with 69 points.
[39]
Michael Clarke
, who captained Australia to the title in 2015, took the World Cup trophy to the stage, accompanied by former England spin bowler
Graeme Swann
. The ceremony concluded with the official World Cup song, "Stand By", performed by Loryn and
Rudimental
.
[39]
Group stage
[
edit
]
The initial stage of the tournament saw the 10 teams grouped together for a single round-robin, in which each team played the other nine once for a total of 45 matches. Teams earned two points for a win and one for a tie or no-result (a minimum of 20 overs per side was needed to constitute a result).
[40]
Matches in this stage had no reserve day set aside in the event of bad weather. After four games in seven days were rained off and complaints were made about the lack of reserve days, the ICC chief executive,
Dave Richardson
, said that trying to include reserve days "would significantly increase the length of the tournament and practically would be extremely complex to deliver".
[41]
The top four teams from the group stage progressed to the knockout stage. If teams were tied on points, then the number of wins and then the
net run rate
was used to separate them. A similar format was previously used in the
1992 Cricket World Cup
, though that tournament featured nine teams instead of ten.
[42]
Following the
2019 Pulwama attack
, several former Indian players and the
Board of Control for Cricket in India
(BCCI) called for the boycott of the group match fixture between India and Pakistan. They also wanted to have the Pakistan team banned from playing in the tournament.
[43]
[44]
[45]
However, after conducting a board meeting in Dubai, the ICC rejected the BCCI's proposal and confirmed that the scheduled match would go ahead as planned, at
Old Trafford
in Manchester, despite the
ongoing standoff between the two nations
.
[46]
[47]
Points table
[
edit
]
Source:
ICC
,
ESPNcricinfo
Rules for classification: 1) Points; 2) Wins; 3)
Net run rate
; 4) Results of games between tied teams; 5) Pre-tournament seeding
(H)
Host
Summary
[
edit
]
Week 1
[
edit
]
The tournament began on 30 May at
The Oval
in London, between the host nation,
England
, and
South Africa
. England batted first and, despite losing their first wicket to the second ball of the tournament, went on to score 311/8, with
Ben Stokes
top-scoring with 89 runs. South Africa were bowled out for 207, following a collapse of eight wickets for 78 runs, to give England a victory by 104 runs.
[49]
The next three matches were one-sided: in the first, the
West Indies
bowled Pakistan out for just 105, which was the lowest score of the tournament.
[50]
The target of 106 was chased down in only 13.4 overs, the quickest successful run chase in the tournament.
[51]
The first double-header of the group stage saw comfortable wins for
New Zealand
and
Australia
, as they won by 10 and 7 wickets respectively over
Sri Lanka
and Afghanistan.
[52]
[53]
At The Oval, in the fifth match of the group stage,
Bangladesh
made their highest score in an ODI, with 330/6.
Mushfiqur Rahim
top-scored for Bangladesh with 78, as he and
Shakib Al Hasan
had a 142-run partnership for the third wicket.
[54]
In reply, the South Africans could not sustain a partnership with wickets falling regularly throughout their innings.
Mustafizur Rahman
took three wickets for Bangladesh as South Africa fell short by 22 runs.
[55]
The following day saw Pakistan cause an upset over one of the tournament favourites, as they beat England by 14 runs at
Trent Bridge
. This was despite
Joe Root
(107) and
Jos Buttler
(103) both scoring centuries in the chase, as they became the first and second batsmen to score hundreds at the tournaments.
[56]
In Cardiff, three wickets in five balls from Afghanistan's
Mohammad Nabi
provided the catalyst for a Sri Lankan collapse, as they fell from 144/1 to 201 all out.
Kusal Perera
top-scored for Sri Lanka with 78, while Nabi took another wicket to finish with four for the innings. After rain reduced Afghanistan's innings to 41 overs, they were unable to reach the revised target of 187 as they lost by 34 runs.
Najibullah Zadran
top-scored for Afghanistan with 43, while Sri Lanka's
Nuwan Pradeep
took four wickets.
[57]
Wednesday saw a double-header being played at the
Rose Bowl
and
The Oval
. At the Rose Bowl,
India
started their campaign with a six-wicket win over
South Africa
.
Yuzvendra Chahal
took four wickets as he helped restrict the batsmen to a total of 227. In reply,
Rohit Sharma
scored 122
not out
to help India chase the target with 15 balls to spare.
[58]
The other match on the Wednesday saw Bangladesh give New Zealand a scare, as the Black Caps went from 160/2 to 191/5 chasing 245, before getting home with three overs to spare.
Ross Taylor
top-scored for New Zealand with 82, while
Matt Henry
was the pick of the bowlers with four wickets.
[59]
Week 2
[
edit
]
The second week began with Australia having an early batting collapse to fall to 38/4 in their innings against the West Indies at Nottingham. Half-centuries from
Steve Smith
and
Nathan Coulter-Nile
helped Australia recover before they were bowled out for 288. In response,
Chris Gayle
had two overturned decisions go his way before he was dismissed for 21. Despite a 68 from
Shai Hope
, Australia won by 15 runs off the back of a
five-wicket haul
by
Mitchell Starc
.
[60]
After the Friday match between Pakistan and Sri Lanka in Bristol was abandoned due to rain,
[61]
the Saturday matches were played in nearby Cardiff and Taunton. At Cardiff,
Jason Roy
made the highest score of the tournament so far, with 153, as he was named
man of the match
in England's 106-run victory over Bangladesh.
[62]
In Taunton, a five-wicket haul from Kiwi bowler
James Neesham
led New Zealand to their third consecutive win, with a seven-wicket victory over Afghanistan.
[63]
The final completed match of the week saw India defeat Australia by 36 runs at The Oval. Batting first, India targeted
Marcus Stoinis
and
Adam Zampa
's bowling with a combined total of 113 runs coming from their 13 overs, as India scored 352/5.
Shikhar Dhawan
(pictured)
top-scored for India with 117, while Stoinis was the only bowler to take more than one wicket. In the run chase, Australia were behind the required run rate for much of their innings, despite half-centuries from
David Warner
, Steve Smith and
Alex Carey
, and were bowled out for 316,
Bhuvneshwar Kumar
and
Jasprit Bumrah
taking three wickets each.
[64]
The following two games of the week were washed out. Only 7.2 overs of play was possible in the fixture between South Africa and the West Indies,
[65]
while the match between Bangladesh and Sri Lanka was abandoned without the
toss
taking place.
[66]
The following day at Taunton saw Australia open with a 146-run stand between
David Warner
and
Aaron Finch
, with Warner going on to get a century. Pakistan fought back into the innings, with
Mohammad Amir
taking five wickets, which restricted Australia to 307.
[67]
In response, Pakistan could not get a partnership established with regular wickets coming from Australia;
Pat Cummins
finished his 10 overs with figures of 3/33.
Sarfaraz Ahmed
and
Wahab Riaz
tried to get Pakistan the victory with a quick-fire 64-run partnership, but it was not enough, with Starc taking two of the final three wickets in the 41-run victory.
[68]
Week 3
[
edit
]
After a wash-out of the match between India and New Zealand in Nottingham to open up the third week, the fourth wash-out in the World Cup,
[69]
Joe Root scored his second century of the tournament and took two wickets in England's eight-wicket victory over the West Indies at Southampton.
[70]
However, the English victory was soured as Jason Roy had to leave the field in the eighth over with hamstring injury that ruled him out of the next two games.
[71]
South Africa recorded their first win of the tournament at Cardiff against Afghanistan, with
Imran Tahir
taking four wickets as Afghanistan were bowled out for 125. In reply, South Africa chased down their target for the loss of just one wicket.
[72]
The other match on Saturday at The Oval saw Aaron Finch and Mitchell Starc guide Australia to an 87-run victory over Sri Lanka that sent them to the top of the table with eight points from five games.
[73]
The following day saw rivals India and Pakistan face each other at
Old Trafford
. India scored 336/5 from their 50 overs, which included a man-of-the-match performance of 140 runs from Rohit Sharma. In response, Pakistan got off to a good start and were 117/1 at one stage before
Kuldeep Yadav
took two wickets in three balls to turn the tide for India, helping them to an 89-run victory via the
Duckworth?Lewis?Stern method
.
[74]
Monday saw Bangladesh beat the West Indies by seven wickets at the
County Ground
in Taunton. In the West Indies' innings, Shai Hope top-scored with 96 runs from 121 balls as he and
Evin Lewis
(70) got the West Indies to 321/8 from their 50 overs. In the run chase, Bangladeshi all-rounder Shakib Al Hasan scored 124 from 99 balls as aided Bangladesh in chasing the target of 322 and recording Bangladesh's highest successful run chase in their ODI history.
[75]
At Manchester,
Eoin Morgan
hit 17 sixes, a new world record in ODIs, as he top-scored for England with 148, leading the hosts to a total of 397/6, the highest total of the tournament.
[76]
Afghanistan's
Rashid Khan
conceded 110 runs without taking any wickets, the most expensive bowling spell in Cricket World Cup history, and the second-most expensive of all time.
Hashmatullah Shahidi
managed 76 in response for Afghanistan, but they were always behind the required rate and fell 151 runs short, managing 247 from their 50 overs.
[77]
Wednesday saw South Africa taking on New Zealand at
Edgbaston
. With the match reduced to 49 overs each due to a wet outfield, South Africa posted a total of 241/6 with some late hitting from
Rassie van der Dussen
, who was unbeaten on 67, while
Lockie Ferguson
was the best of the bowlers with three wickets. In response, New Zealand were 137/5 at one stage, before a partnership from
Kane Williamson
(who went on to score a century) and
Colin de Grandhomme
guided New Zealand to their fourth victory of the tournament.
[78]
Week 4
[
edit
]
Week four saw David Warner score 166, the highest individual score of the tournament,
[79]
as Australia's total of 381/5 proved out of reach for Bangladesh, despite
Mahmudullah
and
Mushfiqur Rahim
getting them within 48 runs of the target.
[80]
Friday saw
Lasith Malinga
dismantle the English top order, as his four wickets helped Sri Lanka defend a total of 232 for their second win of the tournament. Despite the best efforts of Stokes, who was left stranded on 82 not out, England fell 21 short.
Angelo Mathews
top-scored for the Sri Lankans with an unbeaten 85, while
Mark Wood
was the best of the English bowlers with 3/40.
[81]
The Saturday games saw the first elimination of the tournament, with Afghanistan's loss to India at Southampton meaning they could no longer qualify for the knockout stage. Despite limiting India to 224 from their 50 overs, a
Mohammed Shami
hat-trick
saw Afghanistan fall 12 runs short.
[82]
The other match on the Saturday saw a close game between New Zealand and the West Indies at Manchester. After New Zealand scored 291/8, including 148 from
Kane Williamson
, they had the West Indies reeling at 164/7 after 27 overs. The momentum, though, was swung to the West Indies, with
Carlos Brathwaite
making 101 (including five sixes and nine fours) as he led them to within six runs of the target; however, his attempt to finish off the game with a six saw him caught by
Trent Boult
at
long on
, as New Zealand won by five runs.
[83]
The following day saw South Africa eliminated from the World Cup after an 89-run performance from
Haris Sohail
got Pakistan to 308/7 before
Shadab Khan
took three wickets in the South African run chase to give Pakistan a 49-run victory.
[84]
Monday saw Bangladesh record their third win of the tournament; a 62-run victory over Afghanistan at the
Rose Bowl
. The match also saw Bangladesh's Shakib Al Hasan become the second player in World Cup history to take five wickets and score a half-century in the same match.
[85]
[B]
Australia became the first team to qualify for the semi-finals as a century from
Aaron Finch
, a five-wicket haul from
Jason Behrendorff
and another four from
Mitchell Starc
guided them to a 64-run victory over England at
Lord's
, with only Stokes (89) showing any resistance to Australia's bowling. The result left England needing to win both of their remaining two games to guarantee qualification for the semi-finals.
[87]
Pakistan caused New Zealand's first loss of the World Cup at
Edgbaston
with a
Babar Azam
century guiding them to a victory by six wickets.
[88]
Week 5
[
edit
]
The fifth week of the tournament started with India defeating the West Indies by 125 runs at Old Trafford, with
Mohammed Shami
taking four wickets as they bowled the West Indies out for 143. The result also knocked the West Indies out of the World Cup.
[90]
The following day saw play suspended in the match between South Africa and Sri Lanka when bees swarmed the
Riverside Ground
pitch.
Faf du Plessis
and
Hashim Amla
led the run chase with a partnership of 175 runs, taking South Africa to a nine-wicket victory.
[91]
Saturday saw two matches played. At
Lord's
, Starc became the first player to take three
five-wicket hauls at a World Cup
as he guided Australia to an 86-run victory over New Zealand. This was after Australia were 92/5 in the 22nd over before a century partnership between
Usman Khawaja
and Alex Carey got the total to 243/9. New Zealand managed 157 in response, with Kane Williamson top-scoring with 40.
[92]
The other match, played at Headingley, saw Afghanistan set 227 against Pakistan, with
Shaheen Afridi
taking four wickets. The run chase got off to a shaky start with
Fakhar Zaman
getting out LBW to
Mujeeb Ur Rahman
for a duck from the second ball of the innings.
Babar Azam
and
Imam-ul-Haq
made a partnership of 72, but Pakistan's progress was once again throttled by regular wickets, leaving them needing 46 runs from the last five overs.
Imad Wasim
immediately hit 18 runs in the 46th over, and despite losing Shadab Khan to a run out in the 47th, Wasim and Wahab Riaz saw Pakistan home to a three-wicket victory with two balls to spare.
[93]
The return of opener Jason Roy from injury helped England escape their slump as they emerged victorious by 31 runs against the hitherto unbeaten India in a crucial must-win game for the hosts. An opening partnership between Roy (66) and
Jonny Bairstow
(111) was the key factor in the victory, while Stokes scored 79 runs off 54 balls for his third consecutive half-century, to help England reach 337/7. The score proved too much for India, despite
Rohit Sharma
and
Virat Kohli
scoring 102 and 66 respectively, while the returning England bowler
Liam Plunkett
took 3/55.
[94]
Sri Lanka won the dead rubber against the West Indies at Chester-le-Street, where both
Avishka Fernando
and
Nicholas Pooran
scored their maiden ODI centuries.
[95]
Bangladesh's
Shakib Al Hasan
made history against India, as he became the first man to score 500 runs and take 10 wickets in a single World Cup.
[96]
This performance was not enough, though, with a Rohit Sharma century leading India into the semi-finals at their opponents' expense.
[97]
Week 6
[
edit
]
The final round started with England taking on New Zealand, with the winner guaranteed a semi-final position. Another Jonny Bairstow hundred saw England win by 119 runs and qualify for the semi-finals for the first time since
1992
.
[98]
After the West Indies won the dead rubber against Afghanistan at Leeds,
[99]
Pakistan needed to win their final match against Bangladesh by a record margin of over 300 runs at Lord's. They won, but only by 94 runs, allowing New Zealand to take the fourth and final semi-final berth.
[100]
The match saw Pakistan's Shaheen Afridi, aged 19 years and 76 days, become the youngest player to take a five-wicket haul at a Cricket World Cup with the tournament's best bowling figures of 6/35.
[100]
[101]
[102]
Despite Bangladesh losing the match,
Shakib Al Hasan
finished his tournament with 606 runs, surpassing
Sachin Tendulkar
's record for the most runs in the group stage of a World Cup.
[89]
Shakib's record would very soon be surpassed by
Rohit Sharma
and
David Warner
by the end of the group stage, with former top-scoring in the group stage with 647 runs.
[103]
The final two matches of the group stage were played on the Saturday to determine who would finish top of the group. At Leeds, India cruised to a seven-wicket victory over Sri Lanka off the back of centuries from
K. L. Rahul
and Rohit Sharma as they chased down a target of 265 runs.
[104]
This was Sharma's fifth century of the tournament, the most in a single World Cup.
[105]
Angelo Mathews
scored his third ODI century for Sri Lanka, all of which had come against India.
[106]
With South Africa defeating Australia by 10 runs, India finished top of the table, sending Australia to a semi-final against England. A century from
Faf du Plessis
and a further 95 from
Rassie van der Dussen
saw South Africa set the Australians a target of 326. In response, Australia lost Usman Khawaja early on to a hamstring injury; he later returned but was dismissed for 18, before being ruled out for the rest of the tournament. David Warner scored 122, his third century of the tournament, and Alex Carey scored a career-best 85 but crucial wickets in the middle of the innings gave South Africa the victory.
[107]
Fixtures
[
edit
]
The ICC released the fixture details on 26 April 2018.
[108]
Knockout stage
[
edit
]
The knockout stage started with semi-finals at Old Trafford and Edgbaston, the winners of each progressing to the final at
Lord's
. All three knockout games were allotted a reserve day.
[109]
If a reserve day came into play, the match would not be restarted but instead resumed from the previous day's play, if there was any.
[110]
In the event of no play on the scheduled day or the reserve day, in the semi-finals, the team that finished higher in the group stage progressed to the final, and if no play were possible in the final, the trophy would be shared.
[110]
If any match ended in a
tie
, a
Super Over
would be used to determine the winner. If the scores in the Super Over were also tied, the winner would be determined by the two teams' overall boundary count, including both the match itself and the Super Over.
[111]
On 25 June 2019, Australia became the first team to qualify for the semi-finals after beating England at
Lord's
.
[87]
India became the second team to qualify after they defeated Bangladesh at
Edgbaston
on 2 July 2019.
[97]
The following day saw tournament hosts England become the third team to qualify after they beat New Zealand at the
Riverside Ground
.
[98]
After Pakistan were unable to increase their
net run rate
sufficiently enough in their match against Bangladesh at Lord's New Zealand were the fourth and final team to qualify for the semi-finals.
[112]
The first semi-final was played between India and New Zealand at
Old Trafford
, while the second semi-final was played between Australia and England at
Edgbaston
.
[113]
- England won the Final match on the boundary count back rule (26?17).
Semi-finals
[
edit
]
The first semi-final between India and New Zealand was played at Old Trafford in Manchester. Batting first, New Zealand lost opener
Martin Guptill
in the fourth over, having scored just one run. However, the Indians found wickets hard to come by after that, as Kane Williamson combined with
Henry Nicholls
and Ross Taylor for partnerships of 68 and 65 respectively. Williamson managed 67 runs before he was the third man out in the 36th over, a score matched by Taylor when rain stopped play in the 47th over with New Zealand at 211/5 following the wickets of Neesham and De Grandhomme. No further play was possible on the day, so the match went into its reserve day.
[114]
Taylor managed another seven runs to top-score for the Kiwis, who managed to get the score to 239/8 at the end of their 50 overs. The Indian chase got off to a poor start with India falling to 5/3 in the fourth over, with the top three batsmen all going for one run each, then 24/4 after 10 overs. After a small partnership of 47 runs for the fifth wicket between
Rishabh Pant
and
Hardik Pandya
,
Ravindra Jadeja
was joined by
MS Dhoni
for a century partnership for the seventh wicket that left India needing 37 runs from the final three overs. This game turned out to be MS Dhoni's final game for India, he retired from all formats in August 2020. Once Dhoni had gone (run out), a late-order collapse saw New Zealand take the last four wickets for just 13 runs, sending them into their second consecutive World Cup final.
[115]
The second semi-final saw England take on Australia at Edgbaston. Australia took the unusual move of walking barefoot around the pitch before the match in a bid to create "positive energy".
[116]
Australia won the toss and chose to bat first, but lost three of their top four batsmen for single-figure scores, two of them to
Chris Woakes
, to reduce them to 14/3 into the seventh over. Wicket-keeper Alex Carey was promoted up the order due to his recent form, and, after getting his helmet knocked off by a
Jofra Archer
bouncer,
[117]
he scored 46 before being caught by
Adil Rashid
. As wickets continued to tumble at the other end, Steve Smith held his wicket to top-score with 85 as Australia were bowled out for 223 with Woakes and Rashid being the best of the bowlers with three wickets apiece.
[118]
England took their time to get going in the run chase but were soon making progress, reaching 124 before Jonny Bairstow was trapped
LBW
by Starc for the first wicket. Quick-hitting Jason Roy went two overs later to a controversial decision, caught behind off a bouncer that appeared not to touch his bat, but England had already used their review on Bairstow's wicket, and Roy departed for 85 off 65 balls, including five sixes. Nevertheless, England were well over halfway to their target by this point, and an unbroken partnership of 79 between Joe Root and captain Eoin Morgan saw them home to an eight-wicket victory and their first World Cup final since
1992
.
[119]
- New Zealand won the toss and elected to bat.
- Australia won the toss and elected to bat.
Final
[
edit
]
After New Zealand won the toss and chose to bat first, Henry Nicholls' first half-century of the tournament and a further 47 from wicket-keeper
Tom Latham
helped the Kiwis to a total of 241/8 from their 50 overs, as Chris Woakes and
Liam Plunkett
each secured three wickets for the hosts.
[120]
Defending a middling score, the New Zealand bowlers bowled effectively, hampering England's top order, with only Jonny Bairstow managing more than a start with 36. With the loss of their top order, England fell to 86/4 in the 24th over, however, a century partnership between Ben Stokes and Jos Buttler for the fifth wicket got them back into the game before Buttler was caught on 59. However, with five overs to play, England still required another 46 runs, and the bottom order were forced to bat more aggressively. Stokes managed to farm the strike and, more crucially, score runs, leaving England needing 15 to win from the final over, two wickets still in hand. After two
dot balls
, Stokes first planted a six into the stands at deep mid-wicket; on the next ball, the fielder's throw deflected off Stokes' bat as he was coming back for a second run and went to the boundary for an additional four; umpire Kumar Dharmasena awarded six runs for that delivery, although one interpretation of
Laws of Cricket
was that it should have resulted in only five runs being awarded as one of the runs should have not counted as the batsmen had not crossed during the attempted second run at the moment the fielder threw the ball in.
[121]
The final two deliveries of the over saw England get a run each, but losing their last two wickets going for a second run each time, leaving the scores tied at 241 with Stokes left unbeaten with 84.
[122]
With the scores tied, the match went to a
Super Over
. England returned Stokes and Buttler to the crease, and they handled Trent Boult's bowling to accumulate 15 runs without loss. For New Zealand, Martin Guptill and James Neesham went in to face Jofra Archer needing at least 16 runs to claim the title. After a steady accumulation of runs, including a wide and a six, left New Zealand needing two from the final delivery, Guptill hit the ball out to deep mid-wicket and tried to scamper back for the winning run, but Roy's throw in to Buttler was a good one with Guptill being well short of his crease. New Zealand finished with 15 runs to tie the Super Over, but England's superior boundary count in the match and Super Over combined (26 to New Zealand's 17) meant they claimed the World Cup title for the first time after three previous final defeats in
1979
,
1987
and 1992.
[123]
This game has gone down in history as one of the greatest ever finals, and games, in cricketing history. Ben Stokes was named man of the match; referring to the controversial overthrows that deflected off his bat, he said he would be "apologising to [New Zealand captain Kane Williamson] for the rest of [his] life", and later said England's first World Cup victory was "written in the stars".
[124]
- New Zealand won the toss and elected to bat.
- Super Over: England 15/0, New Zealand 15/1.
- England won the match on the boundary count back rule (26?17).
Statistics
[
edit
]
India's Rohit Sharma ended the tournament as the leading run scorer with 648 runs from nine matches which featured a 140 against Pakistan at Old Trafford.
[74]
He finished ahead of Australia's David Warner (647 runs) and Bangladesh's Shakib Al Hasan (606 runs).
[125]
Australian bowler Mitchell Starc ended up as the leading wicket-taker with 27 wickets, which surpassed the record set by
Glenn McGrath
in
2007
.
[126]
Second was Lockie Ferguson from New Zealand with 21 wickets, while Mustafizur Rahman (Bangladesh) and Jofra Archer (England) were tied for third place with 20 wickets.
[127]
Most runs
[
edit
]
Most wickets
[
edit
]
Team of the tournament
[
edit
]
The ICC announced its team of the tournament on 15 July 2019 with Kane Williamson being named as
player of the tournament
and captain of the team.
[128]
Broadcasting
[
edit
]
The ICC agreed deals for broadcast and digital distribution on a range of platforms, including
television
,
radio
and
online streaming
.
[129]
The in-house ICC TV served as host broadcasters of the world feed, in collaboration with
Sunset+Vine
(as part of a new long-term agreement covering all ICC events, excluding the
2021 ICC T20 World Cup
and
2023 Cricket World Cup
in India).
[130]
In the United Kingdom, live coverage of the tournament was exclusive to pay television service
Sky Sports
, with
free-to-air
highlights packages sub-licensed to
Channel 4
. Sky later agreed to sub-license a simulcast of the final to Channel 4 if England reached the final.
[131]
Sky Sport (New Zealand)
also decided to air the final on its co-owned free-to-air channel
Prime
.
[132]
Hotstar
held digital rights to the tournament in India and several other markets. Hotstar surpassed 100 million daily users during the group match between India and Pakistan, and reached a record 25.3 million concurrent viewers during the semi-final between India and New Zealand.
[133]
Location
|
Television broadcaster(s)
|
Radio broadcaster(s)
|
Web streaming
|
Mobile
|
Afghanistan
|
Cable/satellite
Afghanistan National Television
|
|
Hotstar.com
|
Hotstar
|
Australia
|
Cable/satellite (pay):
Fox Sports
Free-to-air:
Nine Network
(only Australia matches, selected matches, both semi-finals and the final)
|
ABC Grandstand
1116 SEN
Macquarie Sports Radio
|
foxsports.com.au
cricket.com.au
|
Kayo
|
Middle East
|
Cable/satellite
OSN
Sports Cricket, Eleven Sports
|
Radio 4 89.1 FM & Gold FM 101.3 (UAE)
|
OSN.com/PlayWavo.com
|
OSN
, Wavo
|
Bangladesh
|
Cable/satellite
Bangladesh Television
,
Gazi TV
and
Star Sports
|
Bangladesh Betar
|
Rabbitholebd.com
|
Rabbithole App
|
Brunei and Malaysia
|
Star Cricket
|
|
astrogo.astro.com.my
|
Astro Go
|
Canada
|
Cable/Satellite (pay):
ATN Network
|
|
Hotstar.com
|
Hotstar
|
Central America and the Caribbean
|
ESPN
|
|
espn.co.uk Caribbean
|
ESPN Play
Caribbean
|
Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan
|
|
|
Hotstar.com
|
Hotstar
|
Europe
(except UK and Ireland)
|
|
|
Hotstar.com
|
Hotstar
|
Hong Kong
|
Star Cricket
|
|
nowtv.now.com
|
Now TV
App
|
Mainland China and South Korea
|
Star Sports
|
|
|
|
United Kingdom and Ireland
|
Cable/satellite
(pay)
:
Sky Sports
Channel 4
(highlights, final)
|
BBC Radio
|
Skysports.com
|
Sky Go
|
India, Nepal, Maldives and Bhutan
|
Cable/satellite
(pay)
:
Star Sports
Terrestrial television and
DD Free Dish
:
DD Sports
(
India matches, Semi-finals and Final only
)
|
Sports Flash
[134]
|
Hotstar.com
, Jio.com
|
Hotstar
,
Jio
|
Fiji and Papua New Guinea
|
Digicel
|
|
www.digicelplay.com.pg/Sports/
|
Digicel Play
|
New Zealand
|
Cable/satellite (pay):
Sky Sport
|
Radio New Zealand
|
Sky.co.nz
skygo.co.nz/livetv
|
Fan Pass
|
Pakistan
|
Cable/satellite
:
Ten Sports Pakistan
&
PTV Sports
|
Hum FM 106.2
|
Sonyliv.com
sportslive.ptv.com.pk
|
SonyLIV
Goonj
|
Philippines
|
Sky Cable
|
|
|
|
Singapore
|
Star Cricket
|
|
Starhubgo.com
|
Starhub Go
|
Sri Lanka
|
Star Sports
,
Dialog TV
|
|
Channeleye.lk
Hotstar.com
|
Hotstar
|
South America
|
|
|
ESPN.com
ESPN.com/watch
|
Watch ESPN Brazil
ESPN Play South
ESPN Play North
|
Africa
|
Cable/satellite:
SuperSport
|
|
SuperSport.com
|
SuperSport App
|
Indonesia and Thailand
|
Fox Sports
|
|
|
|
United States and associated territories
|
Willow TV
[135]
|
|
WillowTv.com
Hotstar.com
|
Hotstar
Willow TV App
|
- Source: icc-cricket.com
[136]
(unless otherwise stated)
In popular culture
[
edit
]
An Australian
docu-series
-
The Test
was produced, following the
Australian national cricket team
in the aftermath of the
Australian ball tampering scandal
.
[137]
The sixth episode of Season 1 featured Australia at the tournament.
Notes
[
edit
]
- ^
One unofficial warm-up match was held between Australia and the West Indies on 22 May at the
Nursery Ground
in
Hampshire
. The West Indies requested the match to give those players who had been playing in the
IPL
additional time to prepare for the tournament.
[34]
Australia won the match by seven wickets.
[35]
[36]
- ^
The other player was
Yuvraj Singh
in 2011.
[86]
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External links
[
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