2019 Cricket World Cup
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
The 2019 ICC Cricket World Cup was the 12th Cricket World Cup, a big tournament for men's national teams that happens every four years. It was organized by the International Cricket Council. The tournament took place between 30 May and 14 July in England and Wales. This was the fifth time England hosted the World Cup, and the third time matches were played in Wales.
Ten teams took part in the tournament. The format was different, with all teams playing each other once. The top four teams then moved on to the knockout stage. After many exciting matches, India, Australia, England, and New Zealand were the top four teams.
England and New Zealand won their semi-final matches and met in the final at Lord's in London. The final ended in a tie, with both teams scoring the same number of runs. To decide the winner, a Super Over was played for the first time ever in a World Cup match. The Super Over also ended in a tie, but England won the tournament based on a special rule. Many fans watched the matches live, and videos of the tournament were watched many times around the world, making it one of the most-watched cricket competitions ever.
Hosting
The 2019 Cricket World Cup was hosted by England and Wales. England had hosted the tournament four times before, in 1975, 1979, 1983, and 1999. Wales also helped host matches in 1983 and 1999.
Qualification
Main article: 2018 Cricket World Cup Qualifier
The 2019 World Cup had 10 teams. England, as the host, and the top seven teams in the ICC One Day International rankings on 30 September 2017 automatically qualified. These teams were Australia, Bangladesh, England, India, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa, and Sri Lanka. The last two spots were decided in the 2018 Cricket World Cup Qualifier.
Some teams had to play in a qualifying tournament to earn their place. The West Indies secured their spot by beating Scotland. Afghanistan got the final spot by beating Ireland. This was the first World Cup since 1983 without Zimbabwe, and the first time Ireland didn’t qualify.
| Means of qualification | Date | Venue | Berths | Qualified |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Host nation | 30 September 2006 | — | 1 | |
| ICC ODI Championship | 30 September 2017 | Various | 7 | |
| 2018 Cricket World Cup Qualifier | 23 March 2018 | Zimbabwe | 2 | |
| Total | 10 | |||
Venues
The places for the matches were announced on 26 April 2018 after a meeting in Kolkata, India. At first, London Stadium was thought to be a place to play, but it was not chosen. All the matches were in England, except for one venue, Sophia Gardens, in Wales. The big final match was on 14 July 2019 at Lord's in London.
Squads
All the teams in the 2019 Cricket World Cup had to list their players by April 23, 2019. They could change players up until a week before the tournament started. New Zealand was the first team to share their list. The oldest player was South Africa's Imran Tahir, who was 40 years old. The youngest player was Afghanistan's spinner Mujeeb Ur Rahman, who was 18.
Match officials
In April 2019, the International Cricket Council chose 16 umpires and six match referees to help run the tournament. One of the umpires, Ian Gould, said he would stop being an umpire after the tournament ended.
Prize money
The International Cricket Council gave out US$10 million in prizes for the tournament. England, the winning team, got US$4 million. The runner-up received US$2 million. Teams that lost in the semi-finals earned US$800,000. Teams that didn't go past the league stage got US$100,000. Each team that won a league match also received US$40,000.
Warm-up matches
Before the main World Cup, teams played 10 warm-up matches from May 24 to May 28, 2019. These matches helped teams get ready, and they did not count as official games. This meant teams could use all their players.
- Pakistan won the toss and chose to bat.
- Sri Lanka won the toss and chose to field.
- England won the toss and chose to field.
- India won the toss and chose to bat.
- West Indies won the toss and chose to field.
- The match was shortened to 31 overs per side because of rain.
- No toss was made.
- No play happened because of rain.
- Sri Lanka won the toss and chose to bat.
- England won the toss and chose to field.
- New Zealand won the toss and chose to field.
- Bangladesh won the toss and chose to field.
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Hashim Amla 51* (46) |
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Opening ceremony
The opening ceremony took place on The Mall in central London on the evening of May 29, 2019, just one day before the World Cup started. Andrew Flintoff, Paddy McGuinness, and Shibani Dandekar hosted the event. Before the ceremony, the 10 team captains visited Buckingham Palace where they met Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Harry.
The ceremony had a fun 60-second challenge with special guests from each team, such as Viv Richards, Anil Kumble, Mahela Jayawardene, and Malala Yousafzai. England won this challenge, with Australia coming in second. Former Australian captain Michael Clarke brought the World Cup trophy on stage, joined by former England player Graeme Swann. The ceremony ended with the official World Cup song, “Stand By,” sung by Loryn and Rudimental.
Group stage
The first part of the tournament had all 10 teams play each other once. This made 45 matches in total. Teams got two points for a win and one point if the game ended in a tie or was stopped early because of rain. The top four teams after all these matches moved on to the next stage.
If teams had the same number of points, the number of wins and then something called the "net run rate" decided who moved on.
The tournament started on May 30 at The Oval in London, where England played South Africa. England won that match. Other early matches saw the West Indies beat Pakistan, New Zealand beat Sri Lanka, and Australia beat Afghanistan.
Later in the tournament, Australia beat India, and England beat Afghanistan. There were many exciting matches. The group stage ended with India finishing at the top of the table, and New Zealand taking the last spot in the semi-finals.
Fixtures
The schedule for all the matches was announced on April 26, 2018.
| Pos | Team | Pld | W | L | T | NR | Pts | NRR | Qualification |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 9 | 7 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 15 | 0.809 | Advanced to semi-finals | |
| 2 | 9 | 7 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 14 | 0.868 | ||
| 3 | 9 | 6 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 12 | 1.152 | ||
| 4 | 9 | 5 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 11 | 0.175 | ||
| 5 | 9 | 5 | 3 | 0 | 1 | 11 | −0.430 | Eliminated | |
| 6 | 9 | 3 | 4 | 0 | 2 | 8 | −0.919 | ||
| 7 | 9 | 3 | 5 | 0 | 1 | 7 | −0.030 | ||
| 8 | 9 | 3 | 5 | 0 | 1 | 7 | −0.410 | ||
| 9 | 9 | 2 | 6 | 0 | 1 | 5 | −0.225 | ||
| 10 | 9 | 0 | 9 | 0 | 0 | 0 | −1.322 |
Knockout stage
The knockout stage of the 2019 Cricket World Cup began with semi-finals at Old Trafford and Edgbaston. The winners moved on to the final at Lord's. Each game had a reserve day. If play couldn’t continue on the scheduled day, the match would restart on the reserve day. If no play was possible on either day, the team that finished higher in the group stage would advance. If a match ended in a tie, a Super Over would decide the winner. If the Super Over was also tied, the team with more boundaries scored would win.
Australia was the first team to qualify for the semi-finals by beating England at Lord's. India qualified next by defeating Bangladesh at Edgbaston. England then secured their spot by beating New Zealand at the Riverside Ground. New Zealand was the last team to qualify after Pakistan couldn’t improve their net run rate enough in their match against Bangladesh.
The first semi-final was between India and New Zealand at Old Trafford, and the second was between Australia and England at Edgbaston.
Semi-finals
The first semi-final between India and New Zealand was held at Old Trafford. New Zealand scored 239 runs, and India came close but did not reach the target, so New Zealand advanced to the final.
In the second semi-final, England faced Australia at Edgbaston. Australia scored 223 runs, and England chased down the target with eight wickets to spare, securing their place in the final.
Final
New Zealand won the toss and chose to bat first, scoring 241 runs. England struggled early but fought back. In the final over, Ben Stokes helped England tie the match. The game went to a Super Over, which also ended in a tie. England won the title by having more boundaries than New Zealand in both the match and the Super Over. This match is remembered as one of the most exciting in cricket history.
Statistics
India's Rohit Sharma scored the most runs with 648 in nine matches. He scored 140 runs against Pakistan. Australia's David Warner scored 647 runs, and Bangladesh's Shakib Al Hasan scored 606 runs. Australia's Mitchell Starc took the most wickets with 27, breaking the old record. New Zealand's Lockie Ferguson took 21 wickets. Bangladesh's Mustafizur Rahman and England's Jofra Archer each took 20 wickets.
Team of the tournament
The ICC announced its best team on 15 July 2019. Kane Williamson was named the best player and captain of that team.
| Runs | Player | Team |
|---|---|---|
| 648 | Rohit Sharma | |
| 647 | David Warner | |
| 606 | Shakib Al Hasan | |
| 578 | Kane Williamson | |
| 556 | Joe Root |
| Wickets | Player | Team |
|---|---|---|
| 27 | Mitchell Starc | |
| 21 | Lockie Ferguson | |
| 20 | Mustafizur Rahman | |
| 20 | Jofra Archer | |
| 18 | Jasprit Bumrah | |
| 18 | Mark Wood |
| Player | Role |
|---|---|
| Opening batsman | |
| Opening batsman | |
| Batsman/captain | |
| Batsman | |
| All-rounder | |
| All-rounder | |
| Wicket-keeper | |
| Bowler | |
| Bowler | |
| Bowler | |
| Bowler | |
| 12th man |
Broadcasting
The ICC made deals to show the tournament on television, radio, and online streaming. The ICC’s team worked with Sunset+Vine to create the main broadcast. This was part of a big agreement for many ICC events, but not the 2021 ICC T20 World Cup or the 2023 Cricket World Cup in India.
In the United Kingdom, you could watch all the live matches on the pay TV service Sky Sports, but they also shared short highlights on the free channel Channel 4. If England made it to the final, Sky agreed to show it on Channel 4 too. In New Zealand, Sky Sport showed the final on its free channel Prime.
In India and some other countries, Hotstar had the digital rights.
| 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 | 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 | WillowTv.com Hotstar.com | Hotstar Willow TV App |
In popular culture
A television show called The Test followed the Australian national cricket team. One of the episodes showed Australia playing in the 2019 Cricket World Cup.
Images
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