Cricket World Cup 2019

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The ICC Cricket World Cup 2019 was the twelfth Cricket World Cup of the International Cricket Council . The World Cup was held in England and Wales between May 30th and July 14th 2019. After 1975 , 1979 , 1983 and 1999 the Cricket World Cup took place on British soil for the fifth time. In the final, the host England was able to prevail against New Zealand due to the higher number of boundaries after the game and the Super Over ended in a draw.

Host and history

England and Wales were chosen to host the event in April 2006 after they withdrew from the 2015 Cricket World Cup election . For a long time, a point of contention in the International Cricket Council was how many teams should participate in the tournament. In the run-up to the 2015 edition, the ICC decided that only ten instead of the previous 14 teams should take part in the 2019 and 2023 World Championships. This attracted great criticism, as the associate members of the ICC in particular feared that they would fall behind the test nations after qualifying for the World Cup . This step was justified with a better marketing opportunity for the competition, since all teams would then be competitive. In addition, after Afghanistan and Ireland were appointed test nations, full members of the ICC will not take part in the World Cup.

qualification

  • host
  • Qualified via ICC ODI Championship
  • Qualified via qualifier
  • Not qualified via qualifier
  • The qualification process was established in January 2015. It was decided that Afghanistan and Ireland could qualify directly for the tournament in addition to the ten test nations as part of the ICC ODI Championship . Both teams have since been given full membership of the ICC. The first eight teams of the ODI Championship as of September 30, 2017 will qualify directly, with England being the host. The remaining four teams played together with the best four teams of the ICC World Cricket League Championship 2015-17 and the best two teams of the ICC World Cricket League Division Two 2018 a qualifying competition. This competition, known as the ICC Cricket World Cup Qualifier 2018 , was originally supposed to take place in Bangladesh , but after a direct qualification of the host became foreseeable, it was initially awarded to Ireland and Scotland and finally held in Zimbabwe . The West Indies and Afghanistan prevailed . With Zimbabwe and Ireland , two full members of the ICC could not qualify for the Cricket World Cup for the first time.

    The following teams qualified directly:

    Two other teams qualify through the qualification.

    format

    The tournament was divided into a preliminary round and a knockout round, reverting to the 1992 Cricket World Cup format . In the preliminary round, each team played once against each other. There were two points for a win, one point for a draw or no result. The best four teams qualified for the semi-finals, the winners of which in turn played the final.

    Venues

    World Championship venues

    The English association ECB initially planned eleven stadiums for the competition in its 2014 plan. In addition, there was the plan that the London Stadium could be used for individual games if the world association gives its approval. The ICC gave its approval in January 2017, but a final decision, which was initially to be made in July 2017, was postponed. As part of the confirmation of the board was announced on 25 April 2018 that the ECB, because of uncertainties (first-time use of drop-in pitches in England, changing the floodlit angle, high cost of converting the outfields, Sonneneinstrahlwinkel) on sweeps in London Stadium waived. The following eleven stadiums were selected for the competition:

    Stadion city capacity Games
    Edgbaston Cricket Ground Birmingham 24,803 Preliminary round & semi-finals
    Bristol County Ground Bristol 17,500 Preliminary round
    Sophia Gardens Cardiff 15,643 Preliminary round
    Emirates Durham Chester-le-Street 17,000 Preliminary round
    Headingley Stadium Leeds 17,000 Preliminary round
    The oval London 23,500 Preliminary round & opening game
    Lord's Cricket Ground London 30,000 Preliminary round & final
    Old Trafford Cricket Ground Manchester 26,000 Preliminary round & semi-finals
    Trent Bridge Nottingham 15,350 Preliminary round
    Rose Bowl Southampton 25,000 Preliminary round
    County Ground Taunton 12,500 Preliminary round

    referee

    The ICC announced on April 26, 2019, the referee of the tournament. They selected six referees from the Elite Panel of ICC Match Referees, sixteen umpires from the Elite Panel of ICC Umpires and the International Panel of ICC Umpires. The match officials selected are:

    Surname country Function / panel
    David Boon AustraliaAustralia Australia Referee
    Chris Broad EnglandEngland England Referee
    Jeff Crowe New ZealandNew Zealand New Zealand Referee
    Ranjan Madugalle Sri LankaSri Lanka Sri Lanka Referee
    Andy Pycroft ZimbabweZimbabwe Zimbabwe Referee
    Richi Richardson Antigua and BarbudaAntigua and Barbuda Antigua and Barbuda Referee
    Aleem Dar PakistanPakistan Pakistan Umpire
    Kumar Dharmasena Sri LankaSri Lanka Sri Lanka Umpire
    Marais Erasmus South AfricaSouth Africa South Africa Umpire
    Chris Gaffaney New ZealandNew Zealand New Zealand Umpire
    Ian Gould EnglandEngland England Umpire
    Richard Illingworth EnglandEngland England Umpire
    Richard Kettleborough EnglandEngland England Umpire
    Nigel Llong EnglandEngland England Umpire
    Bruce Oxenford AustraliaAustralia Australia Umpire
    Sundaram Ravi IndiaIndia India Umpire
    Paul Reiffel AustraliaAustralia Australia Umpire
    Rod Tucker AustraliaAustralia Australia Umpire
    Joel Wilson Trinidad and TobagoTrinidad and Tobago Trinidad and Tobago Umpire
    Michael Gough EnglandEngland England Umpire
    Ruchira Palliyaguruge Sri LankaSri Lanka Sri Lanka Umpire
    Paul Wilson AustraliaAustralia Australia Umpire

    Team squad

    A provisional squad had to be named by April 24, 2019, and the squad could still be adjusted by May 23, 2019. After that, players could only be nominated for injuries. New Zealand named their roster on April 3, Australia and India on April 15, Bangladesh on April 16, England on April 17, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and South Africa on April 18, Afghanistan on April 22 and the West Indies on April 24, 2019.

    Afghanistan Afghanistan Australia Australia BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh England England India India
    • Gulbadin Naib ( K )
    • Mohammad Shahzad ( wk )
    • Asghar Afghan
    • Aftab Alam
    • Hamid Hassan
    • Rashid Khan
    • Mohammad Nabi
    • Mujeeb ur Rahman
    • Rahmat Shah
    • Samiullah Shinwari
    • Hasmatullah Shahidi
    • Dawlat Zadran
    • Najibullah Zadran
    • Noor Ali Zadran
    • Hazratullah Zazai
    • Aaron Finch ( K )
    • Alex Carey ( VK , wk )
    • Pat Cummins ( UK )
    • Jason Behrendorff
    • Nathan Coulter-Nile
    • Usman Khawaja
    • Nathan Lyon
    • Shaun Marsh
    • Glenn Maxwell
    • Kane Richardson
    • Steve Smith
    • Mitchell Starc
    • Marcus Stoinis
    • David Warner
    • Adam Zampa
    • Mashrafe Mortaza ( K )
    • Shakib Al Hasan ( UK )
    • Tamim Iqbal
    • Liton Das ( wk )
    • Mushfiqur Rahim ( wk )
    • Mahmudullah
    • Mohammad Mithun ( wk )
    • Sabbir Rahman
    • Mehedi Hasan Miraz
    • Soumya Sarkar
    • Rubles Hossain
    • Mohammad Saifuddin
    • Mosaddek Hossain
    • Mustafizur Rahman
    • Abu Jayed
    • Eoin Morgan ( K )
    • Jos Buttler ( VK , wk )
    • Moeen Ali
    • Jofra Archer
    • Jonny Bairstow ( wk )
    • Tom Curran
    • Liam Dawson
    • Liam Plunkett
    • Adil Rashid
    • Joe Root
    • Jason Roy
    • Ben Stokes
    • James Vince
    • Chris Woakes
    • Mark Wood
    • Virat Kohli ( K )
    • Rohit Sharma ( UK )
    • Shikhar Dhawan
    • KL Rahul
    • Vijay Shankar
    • MS Dhoni ( wk )
    • Kedar Jadhav
    • Dinesh Karthik ( wk )
    • Yuzvendra Chahal
    • Kuldeep Yadav
    • Bhuvneshwar Kumar
    • Jasprite Bumrah
    • Hardik Pandya
    • Ravindra Jadeja
    • Mohammed Shami
    New Zealand New Zealand Pakistan Pakistan Sri Lanka Sri Lanka South Africa South Africa West Indies cricket team West Indies
    • Kane Williamson ( K )
    • Tim Southee ( UK )
    • Tom Blundell ( wk )
    • Trent Boult
    • Colin de Grandhomme
    • Lockie Ferguson
    • Martin Guptill
    • Matt Henry
    • Tom Latham ( wk )
    • Colin Munro
    • James Neesham
    • Henry Nicholls
    • Mitchell Santner
    • Ish Sodhi
    • Ross Taylor
    • Sarfraz Ahmed ( K , wk )
    • Shoaib Malik ( UK )
    • Asif Ali
    • Babar Azam
    • Fakhar Zaman
    • Haris Sohail
    • Hasan Ali
    • Imad Wasim
    • Imam-ul-Haq
    • Mohammad Amir
    • Mohammad Hafeez
    • Mohammad Hasnain
    • Shadab Khan
    • Shaheen Afridi
    • Wahab Riaz
    • Dimuth Karunaratne ( K )
    • Avishka Fernando
    • Lahiru Thirimanne
    • Kusal Mendis ( wk )
    • Kusal Perera ( wk )
    • Angelo Mathews
    • Dhananjaya de Silva
    • Thisara Perera
    • Isuru Udana
    • Jeffrey Vandersay
    • Jeevan Mendis
    • Milinda Siriwardana
    • Lasith Malinga
    • Suranga Lakmal
    • Nuwan Pradeep
    • Faf du Plessis ( K )
    • Quinton de Kock ( UK , wk )
    • Hashim Amla
    • Aiden Markram
    • Rassie van der Dussen
    • David Miller
    • JP Duminy
    • Andile Phehlukwayo
    • Dwaine Pretorius
    • Dale Steyn
    • Kagiso Rabada
    • Chris Morris
    • Lungi Ngidi
    • Imran Tahir
    • Tabraiz Shamsi
    • Jason Holder ( K )
    • Chris Gale
    • Evin Lewis
    • Shai Hope ( wk )
    • Darren Bravo
    • Shimron Hetmyer
    • Andre Russell
    • Fabian Allen
    • Sheldon Cottrell
    • Kemar Roach
    • Shannon Gabriel
    • Carlos Brathwaite
    • Ashley Nurse
    • Nicholas Pooran
    • Oshane Thomas

    Warm up games

    As is usual before major tournaments, warm-up games for the participants take place before the World Cup so that they have the opportunity to adjust to the conditions. Each team plays two games. These games do not have ODI status.

    May 24th
    scorecard
    Bristol Pakistan Pakistan
    262 (47.5)
    - Afghanistan Afghanistan
    263-7 (49.4)
    Afghanistan wins with 3 wickets
    May 24th
    scorecard
    Cardiff South Africa South Africa
    338-7 (50)
    - Sri Lanka Sri Lanka
    251 (42.3)
    South Africa wins with 87 runs
    May 25
    scorecard
    Southampton Australia Australia
    297-9 (50)
    - England England
    285 (49.3)
    Australia wins with 12 runs
    May 25
    scorecard
    London (oval) India India
    179 (39.2)
    - New Zealand New Zealand
    180-4 (37.1)
    New Zealand wins with 6 wickets
    May 26th
    scorecard
    Bristol South Africa South Africa
    95-0 (12.4 / 31)
    - West Indies cricket team West Indies
    No result
    May 26th
    scorecard
    Cardiff Pakistan Pakistan
    - BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh
    Called off
    May 27th
    scorecard
    Southampton Sri Lanka Sri Lanka
    239-8 (50)
    - Australia Australia
    241-5 (44.5)
    Australia wins with 5 wickets
    May 27th
    scorecard
    London (oval) Afghanistan Afghanistan
    160 (38.4)
    - England England
    161-1 (17.3)
    England wins with 9 wickets
    May 28
    scorecard
    Bristol West Indies cricket team West Indies
    421 (49.2)
    - New Zealand New Zealand
    330 (47.2)
    West Indies wins with 91 runs
    May 28
    scorecard
    Cardiff India India
    359-7 (50)
    - BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh
    264 (49.3)
    India wins with 95 runs

    Preliminary round

    At the beginning of the preliminary round, the teams from Australia, England, India and New Zealand quickly emerged as favorites. South Africa, which was also previously rated as strong, was unable to meet expectations. New Zealand and India in particular were able to remain without defeat for a long time. The second week was dominated by rainfall, which meant that four games were canceled. While the top four continued to establish themselves at the top of the table with wins, it was Bangladesh that gave themselves chances to reach the semi-finals. In the fourth week there were several close games, the most notable result of which was England's defeat against Sri Lanka, which opened up the prospect that the hosts could not make it to the semi-finals with the difficult remaining program for England. With Pakistan's victory over New Zealand, they were now the most promising candidates for England's place in the semi-finals. After clearly beating England, Australia became the first team to qualify for the semi-finals. England managed to gain good chances of reaching the semi-finals by beating the previously unbeaten India. India secured participation in the semi-finals with a victory against Bangladesh and ensured that the losers no longer had a chance to qualify for the same. England won their last game against New Zealand and also qualified, while Pakistan needed a win with over 300 runs in their last game against Bangladesh to push New Zealand out of the semifinals. Failing to achieve this, New Zealand was the last team to qualify for the semi-finals.

    table

    Preliminary round Sp. S. N NO P NRR
    India India 9 7th 1 1 15th   +0.809
    Australia Australia 9 7th 2 0 14th   +0.868
    England England 9 6th 3 0 12   +1,152
    New Zealand New Zealand 9 5 3 1 11   +0.175
    Pakistan Pakistan 9 5 3 1 11   -0.430
    Sri Lanka Sri Lanka 9 3 4th 2 8th   -0.919
    South Africa South Africa 9 3 5 1 7th   -0.030
    BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh 9 3 5 1 7th   -0.410
    West Indies cricket team West Indies 9 2 6th 1 5   -0.225
    Afghanistan Afghanistan 9 0 9 0 0   -1,322

    Games

    May 30th
    scorecard
    London (oval) England England
    311-8 (50)
    - South Africa South Africa
    207 (39.5)
    England wins with 104 runs

    England won the coin toss and decided to start as a batting team. Four players ( Ben Stokes (89 runs), Eoin Morgan (57), Jason Roy (54) and Joe Root (51)) scored a fifty in the English innings . The best South African bowler was Lungi Ngidi with three wickets . In the South African innings, Quinton de Kock and Rassie van der Dussen scored a fifty with 68 and 50 runs respectively. The best English bowler was Jofra Archer with three wickets.

    May 31
    scorecard
    Nottingham Pakistan Pakistan
    105 (21.4)
    - West Indies cricket team West Indies
    108-3 (13.4)
    West Indies wins by 7 wickets

    The West Indies won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the Pakistani innings, Fakhar Zaman and Babar Azam were the best batsman with 22 runs each. The best West Indian bowlers were Oshane Thomas with four and Jason Holder with three wickets. In the Pakistani innings, Chris Gayle scored 50 runs. The best Pakistani bowler was Mohammad Amir with three wickets.

    June 1st
    scorecard
    Cardiff Sri Lanka Sri Lanka
    136 (29.2)
    - New Zealand New Zealand
    137-0 (16.1)
    New Zealand wins with 10 wickets

    New Zealand won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the Sri Lankan innings, Dimuth Karunaratne scored a fifty with 52 runs. The best New Zealand bowlers were Matt Henry and Lockie Ferguson with three wickets each. In the New Zealand innings, Martin Guptil (73 runs) and Colin Murno (58) each scored a fifty.

    June 1st
    scorecard
    Bristol Afghanistan Afghanistan
    207 (38.2)
    - Australia Australia
    209-3 (34.5)
    Australia wins with 7 wickets

    Afghanistan won the coin toss and chose to start as a batting team. In the Afghan innings, Najibullah Zadran scored a fifty with 51 runs. The best Australian bowlers were Pat Cummins and Adam Zampa with three wickets each. In the Australian innings, David Warner and Aaron Finch scored a fifty with 86 and 66 runs respectively. The best Afghan bowlers were Mujeeb Ur Rahman , Gulbadin Naib and Rashid Khan , each with one wicket.

    June 2nd
    scorecard
    London (oval) BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh
    330-6 (50)
    - South Africa South Africa
    309-8 (50)
    Bangladesh wins with 21 runs

    South Africa won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. in the Bangladeshi innings, Mushfiqur Rahim and Shakib Al Hasan scored a fifty with 78 and 75 runs respectively. The best South African bowlers were Andile Phehlukwayo , Chris Morris and Imran Tahir with two wickets each. In the South African innings, Faf du Plessis scored a fifty with 62 runs. The best Bangladeshi bowler was Mustafizur Rahman with three wickets.

    June 3
    scorecard
    Nottingham Pakistan Pakistan
    348-8 (50)
    - England England
    334-9 (50)
    Pakistan wins with 14 runs

    England won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the Pakistani innings, Mohammad Hafeez (84 runs), Babar Azam (63) and Sarfaraz Ahmed (55) each achieved a fifty. The best English bowlers were Chris Woakes and Moeen Ali with three wickets each. In the English innings, Joe Root and Jos Buttler achieved a century with 107 and 103 runs respectively. The best Pakistani bowler was Wahab Riaz with three wickets.

    June 4th
    scorecard
    Cardiff Sri Lanka Sri Lanka
    201 (36.5 / 41)
    - Afghanistan Afghanistan
    152 (32.4 / 41)
    Sri Lanka wins with 34 runs ( D / L method )

    Afghanistan won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the Sri Lankan innings, Kusal Perera managed a fifty with 78 runs. The best Afghan bowler was Mohammad Nabi with four wickets. In the Afghan innings, Najibullah Zadran was the best batsman with 35 runs. The best Sri Lankan bowlers were Nuwan Pradeep with four and Lasith Malinga with three wickets.

    June 5th
    scorecard
    Southampton South Africa South Africa
    227-9 (50)
    - India India
    230-4 (47.3)
    India wins with 6 wickets

    South Africa won the coin toss and decided to start as a batting team. In the South African innings, Chris Morris was the best batsman with 42 runs. The best Indian bowler was Yuzvendra Chahal with four wickets. In the Indian innings, Rohit Sharma scored a Century with 122 runs. The best South African bowler was Kagiso Rabada with two wickets.

    June 5th
    scorecard
    London (oval) BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh
    244 (49.2)
    - New Zealand New Zealand
    248-8 (47.1)
    New Zealand wins with 2 wickets

    New Zealand won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the Bangladeshi innings, Shakib Al Hasan managed a fifty with 64 runs. Best New Zealand bowler was Matt Henry with four wickets. In the New Zealand innings, Ross Taylor scored a fifty with 82 runs. Mehidy Hasan Miraz , Shakib Al Hasan, Mohammad Saifuddin and Mosaddek Hossain each scored two wickets for Bangladesh .

    June 6th
    scorecard
    Nottingham Australia Australia
    288 (49)
    - West Indies cricket team West Indies
    273-9 (50)
    Australia wins with 15 runs

    The West Indies won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the Australian innings, Nathan Coulter-Nile scored a fifty with 92 and Steven Smith with 73 runs. The best West Indian bowler was Carlos Brathwaite with three wickets. In the West Indian innings, Shai Hope scored a fifty with 68 runs and Jason Holder with 51 runs. The best Australian bowler was Mitchell Starc with five wickets.

    June 7th
    scorecard
    Bristol Pakistan Pakistan
    - Sri Lanka Sri Lanka
    Called off

    The game was canceled due to prolonged rainfall.

    June 8th
    scorecard
    Cardiff England England
    386-6 (50)
    - BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh
    280 (48.5)
    England wins with 106 runs

    Bangladesh won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the English innings, Jason Roy scored a Century with 153 runs and Jos Buttler scored a Fifty with 64 runs. The best Bangladeshi bowlers were Mohammad Saifuddin and Mehidy Hasan Miraz , each with two wickets. In the Bangladeshi innings, Shakib Al Hasan scored a Century with 121 runs. The best English bowlers were Jofra Archer and Ben Stokes with three wickets each.

    June 8th
    scorecard
    Taunton Afghanistan Afghanistan
    172 (41.1)
    - New Zealand New Zealand
    173-3 (32.1)
    New Zealand wins with 7 wickets

    New Zealand won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the Afghan innings, Hashmatullah Shahidi managed a fifty with 59 runs. Best New Zealand bowler was James Neesham with five wickets, while Lockie Ferguson took four wickets. In the New Zealand innings, Kane Williamson scored a fifty with 79 runs. Aftab Alam scored three wickets for Bangladesh .

    June 9th
    scorecard
    London (oval) India India
    352-5 (50)
    - Australia Australia
    316 (50)
    India wins with 36 runs

    India won the coin toss and chose to start as a batting team. In the Indian innings, Shikhar Dhawan managed a century with 117 runs, while Virat Kohli (82 runs) and Rohit Sharma (57 runs) each managed a fifty. The best Australian bowler was Marcus Stoinis with two wickets. In the Australian innings, Steve Smith (69 runs), David Warner (56 runs) and Alex Carey (55 runs) each scored a fifty. The best Indian bowlers were Bhuvneshwar Kumar and Jasprit Bumrah with three wickets each.

    June 10th
    scorecard
    Southampton South Africa South Africa
    29-2 (7.3)
    - West Indies cricket team West Indies
    No result

    The game was canceled due to the onset of rain.

    June 11th
    scorecard
    Bristol BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh
    - Sri Lanka Sri Lanka
    Called off

    The game was canceled due to persistent rain.

    June 12th
    scorecard
    Taunton Australia Australia
    307 (49)
    - Pakistan Pakistan
    266 (45.4)
    Australia wins with 41 runs

    Pakistan won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the Australian innings, David Warner managed a Century with 107 runs and Aaron Finch made a Fifty with 82 runs. The best Pakistani bowler was Mohammad Amir with five wickets. In the Pakistani innings, Imam-ul-Haq scored a fifty with 53 runs. The best Australian bowler was Pat Cummins with three wickets.

    June 13
    scorecard
    Nottingham India India
    - New Zealand New Zealand
    Called off

    The game was canceled due to persistent rain.

    June 14th
    scorecard
    Southampton West Indies cricket team West Indies
    212 (44.4)
    - England England
    213-2 (33.1)
    England wins with 8 wickets

    England won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the West Indian innings, Nicholas Pooran managed a fifty with 63 runs. The best English bowlers were Jofra Archer and Mark Wood with three wickets each. In the English innings, Joe Root managed a century with 100 runs. The best West Indian bowler was Shannon Gabriel with two wickets.

    June 15
    scorecard
    London (oval) Australia Australia
    334-7 (50)
    - Sri Lanka Sri Lanka
    247 (45.5)
    Australia wins with 87 runs

    Sri Lanka won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the Australian innings, Aaron Finch scored a Century with 153 runs, while Steve Smith (73 runs) scored a Fifty. The best Sri Lankan bowlers were Isuru Udana and Dhananjaya de Silva , each with two wickets. In the Sri Lankan innings, Dimuth Karunaratne (97) and Kusal Perera (52) each scored a fifty. The best Australian bowler was Mitchell Starc with four wickets.

    June 15
    scorecard
    Cardiff Afghanistan Afghanistan
    125 (34.1 / 48)
    - South Africa South Africa
    131-1 (28.4 / 48)
    South Africa wins with 9 wickets

    South Africa won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the Afghan innings, Rashid Khan scored 35 runs. The best South African bowler was Imran Tahir with four wickets. In the South African innings, Quinton de Kock scored a fifty with 68 runs. The best Afghan bowler was Gulbadin Naib with a wicket.

    June 16
    scorecard
    Manchester India India
    336-5 (50)
    - Pakistan Pakistan
    212-6 (40/40)
    India wins with 89 runs ( D / L method )

    Pakistan won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the Indian innings, Rohit Sharma scored a Century with 140 runs and Virat Kohli scored a Fifty with 77 runs. The best Pakistani bowler was Mohammad Amir with three wickets. In the Pakistani innings, Fakhar Zaman scored a fifty with 62 runs. The best Indian bowlers were Vijay Shankar , Hardik Pandya and Kuldeep Yadav with two wickets.

    June 17th
    scorecard
    Taunton West Indies cricket team West Indies
    321-8 (50)
    - BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh
    322-3 (41.3)
    Bangladesh wins with 7 wickets

    Bangladesh won the coin toss and chose to start as a field team. In the West Indian innings, Shai Hope (96 runs), Evin Lewis (70 runs) and Shimron Hetmyer (50 runs) each scored a fifty. The best Bangladeshi bowlers were Mohammad Saifuddin and Mustafizur Rahman , each with three wickets. In the Bangladeshi Over, Shakib Al Hasan scored a Century with 124 runs and Liton Das with 94 runs a Fifty. The best West Indian bowlers were Andre Russell and Oshane Thomas , each with a wicket.

    June 18
    scorecard
    Manchester England England
    397-6 (50)
    - Afghanistan Afghanistan
    247-8 (50)
    England wins with 150 runs

    England won the coin toss and decided to start as a batting team. In the English innings, Eoin Morgan scored a Century with 148 runs and Jonny Bairstow with 90 and Joa Root with 88 runs each a Fifty. The best Afghan bowlers were Dawlat Zadran and Gulbadin Naib , each with three wickets. In the Afghan innings, Hashmatullah Shahidi scored a fifty with 76 runs. The best English bowlers were Jofra Archer and Adil Rashid with three wickets each.

    June 19
    scorecard
    Birmingham South Africa South Africa
    241-6 (49/49)
    - New Zealand New Zealand
    245-6 (48.3 / 49)
    New Zealand wins with 4 wickets

    New Zealand won the coin toss and chose to start as a batting team. In the South African innings, Rassie van der Dussen scored a fifty with 67 runs and Hashim Amla with 55 runs. Best New Zealand bowler was Lockie Ferguson with three wickets. In the New Zealand innings, Kane Williamson scored a Century with 100 runs and Colin de Grandhomme scored a Fifty with 60 runs. Best South African bowler was Chris Morris with three wickets.

    June 20
    scorecard
    Nottingham Australia Australia
    381-5 (50)
    - BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh
    333-8 (50)
    Australia wins with 48 runs

    Australia won the coin toss and decided to start as a batting team. In the Australian innings, David Warner scored a Century with 166 runs and Usman Khawaja (89 runs) and Aaron Finch (53 runs) each a Fifty. The best Bangladeshi bowler was Soumya Sarkar with three wickets. In the Bangladeshi innings, Mushfiqur Rahim scored a Century with 102 runs and Mahmudullah (69 runs) and Tamim Iqbal (62 runs) both a Fifty. The best Australian bowlers were Mitchell Starc , Nathan Coulter-Nile and Marcus Stoinis with two wickets each.

    June 21
    scorecard
    Leeds Sri Lanka Sri Lanka
    232-9 (50)
    - England England
    212 (47)
    Sri Lanka wins with 20 runs

    Sri Lanka won the coin toss and chose to start as a batting team. In the Sri Lankan innings, Angelo Mathews scored a fifty with 85 runs. The best English bowlers were Jofra Archer and Mark Wood with three wickets each. In the English innings, Ben Stokes (82 runs) and Joe Root (53 runs) each scored a fifty. The best Sri Lankan bowlers were Lasith Malinga with four wickets and Dhananjaya de Silva with three wickets.

    June 22nd
    scorecard
    Southampton India India
    224-8 (50)
    - Afghanistan Afghanistan
    213 (49.5)
    India wins with 11 runs

    India won the coin toss and chose to start as a batting team. In the Indian innings, Virat Kohli (67 runs) and Kedar Jadhav (52 runs) each scored a fifty. The best Afghan bowlers were Gulbadin Naib and Mohammad Nabi , each with two wickets. In the Afghan innings, Mohammad Nabi scored a fifty with 52 runs. The best Indian bowler was Mohammed Shami .

    June 22nd
    scorecard
    Manchester New Zealand New Zealand
    291-8 (50)
    - West Indies cricket team West Indies
    286 (49)
    New Zealand wins with 5 wickets

    The West Indies won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the New Zealand innings, Kane Williamson scored a Century with 148 runs and Ross Taylor scored a Fifty with 69 runs. Best West Indian bowler was Sheldon Cottrell with four wickets. In the West Indian innings, Carlos Brathwaite scored a Century with 101 runs and Chris Gayle (87 runs) and Shimron Hetmyer (54 runs) each a Fifty. The best New Zealand bowlers were Trent Boult with four and Lockie Ferguson with three wickets.

    June 23
    scorecard
    London (Lord's) Pakistan Pakistan
    308-7 (50)
    - South Africa South Africa
    259-9 (50)
    Pakistan wins with 49 runs

    Pakistan won the coin toss and chose to start as a batting team. In the Pakistani innings, Haris Sohail scored a fifty with 89 runs and Barbar Azam with 69 runs. The best South African bowler was Lungi Ngidi with three wickets. In the South African innings, Faf du Plessis scored a fifty with 63 runs. The best Pakistani bowlers were Wahab Riaz and Shadab Khan with three wickets each.

    June 24th
    scorecard
    Southampton BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh
    262-7 (50)
    - Afghanistan Afghanistan
    200 (47)
    Bangladesh wins with 62 runs

    Afghanistan won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the Bangladeshi innings, Mushfiqur Rahim scored a fifty with 83 runs and Shakib Al Hasan with 51 runs. The best Afghan bowler was Mujeeb Ur Rahman with three wickets. In the Afghan innings, Samiullah Shinwari was the top batsman with 49 runs. The best Bangladeshi bowler was Shakib Al Hasan with five wickets.

    June 25th
    scorecard
    London (Lord's) Australia Australia
    285-7 (50)
    - England England
    221 (44.4)
    Australia wins with 64 runs

    England won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the Australian innings, Aaron Finch scored a Century with 100 runs and David Warner scored a Fifty with 53 runs. Best English bowler was Chris Woakes with two wickets. In the English innings, Ben Stokes scored a fifty with 89 runs. The best Australian bowlers were Jason Behrendorff with five wickets and Mitchell Starc with 4 wickets.

    June 26th
    scorecard
    Birmingham New Zealand New Zealand
    237-6 (50)
    - Pakistan Pakistan
    241-4 (49.1)
    Pakistan wins with 6 wickets

    New Zealand won the coin toss and chose to start as a batting team. In the New Zealand innings, James Neesham (97 runs) and Colin de Grandhomme (64 runs) each scored a fifty. The best Pakistani bowler was Shaheen Afridi with three wickets. In the Pakistani innings, Babar Azam scored a Century with 101 runs (not out) and Haris Sohail scored a Fifty with 68 runs. Best New Zealand bowlers were Trent Boult , Lockie Ferguson and Kane Williamson with one wicket each.

    June 27th
    scorecard
    Manchester India India
    268-7 (50)
    - West Indies cricket team West Indies
    143 (34.2)
    India wins with 125 runs

    India won the coin toss and chose to start as a batting team. In the Indian innings, Virat Kohli (72 runs) and MS Dhoni (56 runs not out) each scored a fifty. The best West Indian bowler was Kemar Roach with three wickets. In the West Indian innings, Sunil Ambris was the most successful batsman with 36 runs. The best Indian bowler was Mohammed Shami with four wickets.

    June 28
    scorecard
    Chester-le-Street Sri Lanka Sri Lanka
    203 (49.3)
    - South Africa South Africa
    206-1 (37.2)
    South Africa wins with 9 wickets

    South Africa won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the Sri Lankan innings, Kusal Perera and Avishka Fernando scored the most runs with 30 runs each. The best South African bowlers were Chris Morris and Dwaine Pretorius , each with three wickets. In the South African innings, Faf du Plessis (96 runs) and Hashim Amla (80 runs) each scored a fifty. The most successful Sri Lankan bowler was Lasith Malinga with a wicket.

    June 29
    scorecard
    Leeds Afghanistan Afghanistan
    227-9 (50)
    - Pakistan Pakistan
    230-7 (49.4)
    Pakistan wins with 3 wickets

    Afghanistan won the coin toss and chose to start as a batting team. In the Afghan innings, Asghar Afghan and Najibullah Zadran were the most successful batsman with 42 runs each. Best Pakistani bowler was Shaheen Shah Afridi . In the Pakistani innings, Imad Wasim was the most successful batsman. The best Afghan bowlers were Mujeeb Ur Rahman and Mohammad Nabi , each with two wickets.

    June 29
    scorecard
    London (Lord's) Australia Australia
    243-9 (50)
    - New Zealand New Zealand
    157 (43.4)
    Australia wins with 86 runs

    Australia won the coin toss and decided to start as a batting team. In the Australian innings, Usman Khawaja (88 runs) and Alex Carey (71 runs) each scored a fifty. Best New Zealand bowler was Trent Boult with four wickets, including a hat trick. In the New Zealand innings, Kane Williamson was the most successful batsman with 40 runs. The best Australian bowler was Mitchell Starc with five wickets.

    June 30th
    scorecard
    Birmingham England England
    337-7 (50)
    - India India
    306-5 (50)
    England wins with 31 runs

    England won the coin toss and decided to start as a batting team. In the English over, Jonny Bairstow scored a Century with 111 runs and Ben Stokes (79 runs) and Jason Roy (66 runs) each a Fifty. The best Indian bowler was Mohammed Shami with five wickets. In the Indian innings, Rohit Sharma scored a Century with 102 runs and Virat Kohli scored a Fifty with 66 runs. The best English bowler was Liam Plunkett with three wickets.

    July 1st
    scorecard
    Chester-le-Street Sri Lanka Sri Lanka
    338-6 (50)
    - West Indies cricket team West Indies
    315-9 (50)
    Sri Lanka wins with 23 runs

    The West Indies won the coin toss and decided to start as a field team. In the Sri Lankan innings, Avishka Fernando scored a Century with 104 runs and Kusal Perera a Fifty with 64 runs. Best West Indian bowler was Jason Holder with two wickets. In the West Indian innings, Nicholas Pooran scored a Century with 118 runs and Fabian Allen scored a Fifty with 51 runs. The best Sri Lankan bowler was Lasith Malinga with three wickets.

    July 2nd
    scorecard
    Birmingham India India
    314-9 (50)
    - BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh
    286 (48)
    India wins with 28 runs

    India won the coin toss and chose to start as a batting team. In the Indian innings, Rohit Sharma scored a Century with 104 runs and KL Rahul scored a Fifty with 77 runs. The best Bangladeshi bowler was Mustafizur Rahman with five wickets. In the Bangladeshi innings, Shakib Al Hasan (66 runs) and Mohammad Saifuddin (51 runs not out) each scored a fifty. The best Indian bowlers were Jasprit Bumrah with four and Hardik Pandya with three wickets.

    July 3
    scorecard
    Chester-le-Street England England
    305-8 (50)
    - New Zealand New Zealand
    186 (45)
    England wins with 119 runs

    England won the coin toss and decided to start as a batting team. In the English innings, Jonny Bairstow scored a Century with 106 runs and Jason Roy scored a Fifty with 60 runs. The best New Zealand bowlers were Trent Boult , Matt Henry and James Neesham with two wickets each. In the New Zealand innings, Tom Latham scored a fifty with 57 runs. The best English bowler was Mark Wood with three wickets.

    July 4th
    scorecard
    Leeds West Indies cricket team West Indies
    311-6 (50)
    - Afghanistan Afghanistan
    288 (50)
    West Indies wins with 23 runs

    The West Indies won the coin toss and decided to start as a batting team. In the West Indian innings, Evin Lewis and Nicholas Pooran scored a fifty with 58 runs each. The best Afghan bowler was Dawlat Zadran with two wickets. In the Afghan innings, Ikram Alikhil (86 runs) and Rahmat Shah (62 runs) each scored a fifty. The best West Indian bowlers were Carlos Brathwaite with four wickets and Kemar Roach with three wickets.

    July 5th
    scorecard
    London (Lord's) Pakistan Pakistan
    315-9 (50)
    - BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh
    221 (44.1)
    Pakistan wins with 94 runs

    Pakistan won the coin toss and chose to start as a batting team. In the Pakistani innings, Imam-ul-Haq scored a Century with 100 runs and Babar Azam a Fifty with 96 runs. The best Bangladeshi bowlers were Mustafizur Rahman with five and Mohammad Saifuddin with three wickets. In the Bangladeshi innings, Shakib Al Hasan scored a fifty with 64 runs. The best Pakistani bowler was Shaheen Shah Afridi with six wickets.

    July 6th
    scorecard
    Leeds Sri Lanka Sri Lanka
    264-7 (50)
    - India India
    265-3 (43.3)
    India wins with 7 wickets

    Sri Lanka won the coin toss and chose to start as a batting team. In the Sri Lankan innings, Angelo Mathews scored a Century with 113 runs and Lahiru Thirimanne a Fifty with 53 runs. The best Indian bowler was Jasprit Bumrah with three wickets. In the Indian innings, KL Rahul (111 runs) and Rohit Sharma (103 runs) each achieved a century. The best Sri Lankan bowlers were Lasith Malinga , Kasun Rajitha and Isuru Udana , each with one wicket.

    July 6th
    scorecard
    Manchester South Africa South Africa
    325-6 (50)
    - Australia Australia
    315 (49.5)
    South Africa wins with 10 runs

    South Africa won the coin toss and decided to start as a batting team. In the South African innings, Faf du Plessis scored a Century with 100 runs and Rassie van der Dussen (95 runs) and Quinton de Kock (52 runs) each scored a Fifty. The best Australian bowlers were Mitchell Starc and Nathan Lyon with two wickets each. In the Australian innings, David Warner scored a Century with 122 runs and Alex Carey scored a Fifty with 85 runs. The best South African bowler was Kagiso Rabada with three wickets.

    Semifinals

    9/10 July
    scorecard
    Manchester New Zealand New Zealand
    239-8 (50)
    - India India
    221 (49.3)
    New Zealand wins with 18 runs

    New Zealand won the coin toss and chose to start as a batting team. In the New Zealand innings, New Zealand started with a low run rate and lost Martin Guptill's first wicket early . Then they were able to stabilize, and Kane Williamson with 67 runs and Ross Taylor with 74 runs each scored a fifty. However, the run rate was still considered to be too low and when it started raining after 46.1 overs at 211/5, India was the favorite. The rain did not end in time for the game to start again that day, so the reserve day was claimed. New Zealand scored 30 runs in the remaining overs, losing three more wickets. The best Indian bowler was Bhuvneshwar Kumar with three wickets. In the Indian innings, the first three Indian batsman were eliminated with only one run. Only after the fourth wicket fell after 10 overs India was able to stabilize. It was MS Dohni (50 runs) and Ravindra Jadeja (77 runs) who, with their partnership of 116 runs, gave India a chance to win. But when Jadeja's punch was caught in the 48th over and Dohni suffered a run out in the 49th over due to a direct hit from Guptill's stumps, the defeat could no longer be averted. The best bowler was Matt Henry with three wickets, who had scored them at the beginning of the inning and was ultimately named Man of the Match .

    July 11th
    scorecard
    Birmingham Australia Australia
    223 (49)
    - England England
    226-2 (32.1)
    England wins with 8 wickets

    Australia won the coin toss and chose to start as a batting team. Australia lost their two opening batsmen Aaron Finch and David Warner in the first three overs . After the third wicket fell, it was Steven Smith and Alex Carey who stabilized the Australian game with a partnership of 104 runs. With Carey's departure, Australia came under further pressure. When Smith lost the eighth wicket to a run out after 85 runs and a fifty, the other batsman of the Australians could not add anything substantial. Best English bowlers were Chris Woakes and Adil Rashid with three wickets each. In the English innings, Jason Roy and Jonny Bairstow opened with a partnership of 124 runs. Roy scored a total of 85 runs a fifty before losing his wicket in a controversial decision. Then it was Joe Root (49 runs) and Eoin Morgan (44 runs) who led England in the 33rd over into the first final since the 1992 Cricket World Cup . The best Australian bowlers were Mitchell Starc and Pat Cummins , each with a wicket. Chris Woakes was named Man of the Match.

    final

    July 14th
    scorecard
    London (Lord's) New Zealand New Zealand
    241-8 (50) / 15-1 (1)
    - England England
    241 (50) / 15-0 (1)
    England won with a higher number of boundaries (26-17)

    New Zealand won the coin toss and chose to start as a batting team. After New Zealand inaugural batsman Martin Guptill was eliminated after 19 runs, Kane Williamson and Henry Nicholls were able to build a partnership of 74 runs. This was broken by the English bowler Liam Plunkett , who got three wickets between the 23rd and 39th over. Nicholls scored a fifty with 55 runs. Then the coming Tom Latham was able to contribute 47 runs until he lost his wicket in the 49th over by Chris Woakes , who also scored three wickets. In the English innings, Jason Roy and Jonny Bairstow opened , with Roy losing his wicket in the 6th over. Even with Joe Root , who then came in , no long partnership could be established and so England had scored 86 runs by the 24th over, when Eoin Morgan's fourth wicket fell, and was clearly behind the New Zealanders in run rate. The turning point came with Ben Stokes and Jos Buttler . In their partnership they achieved 110 runs until Buttler lost his wicket in the 45th over after 59 runs and a fifty. Ben Stokes stayed in the game but New Zealand kept the pressure up and scored several wickets. In the final over, England had 15 runs to score. Stokes scored two sixes before England lost two wickets to run outs and could only level the score. The best New Zealand bowlers were Lockie Ferguson and James Neesham with three wickets each. In the Super Over, England began batting with Stokes and Buttler, while New Zealand nominated Trent Boult as their bowler. England scored two boundaries and achieved 15 runs without losing a wicket. New Zealand nominated Guptill and Neesham while England nominated Jofra Archer as their bowler. Archer started with a wide. The third ball hit Neesham a six and the next two balls each ended with two runs for New Zealand. After another run, it was up to Guptill to score two runs in the last ball. However, this suffered a run out after a run and so England became world champions for the first time, as it scored more boundaries than New Zealand in the entire game. Ben Stokes was named Man of the Match.

    statistics

    ODIs
    Batting
    player team Games Innings Runs Average HS 100s 50s
    Rohit Sharma India India 9 9 648 81.00 140 5 1
    David Warner Australia Australia 10 10 647 71.88 166 3 3
    Shakib Al Hasan BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh 8th 8th 606 86.57 124 * 2 5
    Kane Williamson New Zealand New Zealand 10 9 578 74.96 148 2 2
    Joe Root England England 11 11 556 61.77 107 2 3
    bowling
    player team Games Overs Wickets Average BBI 5W 10W
    Mitchell Starc Australia Australia 10 92.2 27 18.59 5/26 2 0
    Lockie Ferguson New Zealand New Zealand 9 83.4 21st 19.47 4/37 0 0
    Jofra Archer England England 11 100.5 20th 23.05 3/27 0 0
    Mustafizur Rahman BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh 8th 72.1 20th 24.20 5/59 2 0
    Jasprite Bumrah India India 9 84.0 18th 20.61 4/55 0 0
    Mark Wood England England 10 89.4 18th 25.72 3/18 0 0

    Organization and environment

    Corruption Prevention

    Since betting fraud in cricket is a permanent danger, the corruption unit of the world association has developed measures to counter this. Before the tournament, the unit announced that it had contacted around a dozen known betting fraudsters directly and advised them to stay away from the tournament. There were no entry bans for the persons in question.

    tickets

    After the tournament schedule was announced on April 26, 2018, the formalities for ticket sales were announced. In total there were around 800,000 tickets for all games, which were distributed in several rounds of raffles for the right to buy tickets. In the final, tickets were sold for up to £ 395. In total, the organizers hoped to raise 40 million GBP with ticket sales.

    Prize money

    A total of 10 million US dollars will be distributed as prize money. The division is as follows:

    Goal achieved Prize money (US dollars)
    winner $ 4,000,000
    finalist $ 2,000,000
    Loser semifinals $ 800,000
    Winning a preliminary round game $ 40,000
    Team eliminated in the preliminary round $ 100,000

    Broadcast rights

    The world association announced the following broadcast rights:

    place TV broadcast Web streaming Mobile
    AfghanistanAfghanistan Afghanistan Radio Television Afghanistan
    Arab world OSN OSN, Wavo OSN, Wavo
    Caribbean ESPN Caribbean ESPN Play Caribbean
    South America ESPN Play North & ESPN Play South, Watch ESPN Brazil
    AustraliaAustralia Australia Fox Sports, 9GEM Foxtel, Kayosports Foxtel GO, Foxtel Now, Kayo Sports
    BangladeshBangladesh Bangladesh GTV, Maasranga & BTV Rabbithole Rabbithole
    SingaporeSingapore Singapore , Malaysia , Brunei , Hong KongMalaysiaMalaysia 
    BruneiBrunei Hong KongHong Kong 
    Star cricket
    CanadaCanada Canada Willow TV Hot star Hot star
    China People's RepublicPeople's Republic of China People's Republic of China , Thailand , Japan , Indonesia , South KoreaThailandThailand 
    JapanJapan IndonesiaIndonesia 
    Korea SouthSouth Korea 
    Fox Sports, Star Sports Fox Sports Asia Fox +
    Europe (excluding UK & Ireland) Yupp TV Yupp TV Yupp TV
    United KingdomUnited Kingdom United Kingdom , IrelandIrelandIreland  Sky Sports Sky Sports Sky Go
    South pacific TVWAN Play Go
    IndiaIndia India Doordarshan, Star Sports Hot star Hot star
    NepalNepal Nepal , Maldives , BhutanMaldivesMaldives BhutanBhutan  Star Sports Hot star Hot star
    Central Asia Yupp TV Yupp TV Yupp TV
    New ZealandNew Zealand New Zealand Sky Sports, Prime Fan Pass, Sky Go Fan Pass
    PakistanPakistan Pakistan PTV Sports, Ten Sports PTV, SonyLiv PTV, SonyLiv
    Sri LankaSri Lanka Sri Lanka SLRC Channeleye Rupavahini
    Africa SuperSport SuperSport SuperSport, Dstv
    United StatesUnited States United States Willow TV Willow TV, hotstar Willow TV, hotstar

    The ICC announced the following mostly former players as commentators on May 16, 2019:

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