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New Zealand vs England - Cricket World Cup 2019 Final

Arsalan

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Tomorrow on July 14 the world will have their new "FIRST TIME World Champion"

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Forty six days after cricket's most celebrated extravaganza began it will come to an end, in what many hope will be a memorable occasion, on Sunday at Lords, the iconic home of Cricket as the hosts England take on New Zealand in the final.

ROAD TO FINAL:
New Zealand have reached the cricket world cup final second time in a row after losing to Australia in 2015 final in at the MCG. Their road to 2019 final have been a bit shaky though, coming in to the semifinals as the fourth placed team and making it through only on Net-Run-Rate after being tied on points with Pakistan. New Zealand had an easier run of fixtures at start of the tournament and they took full advantage of it, starting the tournament with an emphatic 10 wicket win over Sri Lanka and following it up with wins over Bangladesh and Afghanistan. What would have been their first real test in the tournament ended up with one point after game against India was a wash-out, A point that may have played in crucial role in them being in the final tomorrow! Next match New Zealand were up against out of sort South Africa but had to work their way to the win nonetheless, same as they will have to do in their sixth match against West Indies. Again a crucial win. Seventh game of the unbeaten New Zealand was against Pakistan which as the saying goes were “Cornered” by then. The result was the first defeat for New Zealand in the running tournament. This was followed up by defeat against Australia making their final game sort of a Quarter Final against England. New Zealand lost again. Three loses in last three games left them tied with Pakistan on points but qualifying for the Semi Finals only on NRR and being the only team not to have beaten any of the fellow semifinalists.

Coming in as the fourth team they had to play against the Indian, tone of the per-tournament favorites with batting in red hot form and bowling looking threatening for a change. India were the favorites but Kiwis had other plans. In rain effect match that ended up as a two dayer, New Zealand struggled to a half decent total but then their pace attack blew Indian batting away. The fierce duo of Trent Boult and Matt Henry had Indian 6 for 3 in five overs and 24 for 4 in the first 10, worst start in the world cup 2019. Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli, KL Rahul managed to score one run each. The modest total of 239 became a daunting challenge. Some fight shown by Ravendra Jadeja and Dhoni made it looked closer than it actually was but the New Zealand’s place in finals were sealed hen their start batsman Martin Guptil made his first real contribution of the tournament and ran Dohni out with an excellent direct hit.


England in contrast to New Zealand have reached the World Cup final after a long wait of 27 years having last played in the final in 1992 against Pakistan. England have in fact not even qualified for the Semi Finals since then. On their way to finals had their own fair share of hick-ups as well and had the wait till their last game and victory in that game to secure a place in Finals. Host and among the pre-tournament finals thanks to their scintillating ODI form (number one ranked in the world), England also started the tournament on a high note, beating South Africa convincingly by 104 runs in the tournament opener. Their second game saw them up against Pakistan who though not being the figurative “cornered tiger” just yet were given a proper spanking in their own opener by West Indians and were on the hunt. England lost the game chasing 348. They bounced back strongly with another convincing win over Bangladesh when they beat them in their third game with 106 runs and then followed it up with thumping wins over West Indies and Afghanistan with 8 wickets and then 150 runs respectively. England’s sixth game saw them up against Sri Lanka who were not having the best tournament but managed to beat England blowing the tournament wide open. England lost the next game to Australia making their last two games “must wins” to keep their destiny in their own hands. In their second last game of round robin phase of the tournament England came up against India and managed to beat an ordinary looking Indian team lacking ambition on the day. A win in last game against New Zealand sealed their spot in the Semi Finals as they finished 1 point above the fourth placed New Zealand and fifth placed Pakistan.

As third placed team in the Semi Finals England were up against the old foes Australia who have beaten them already in the group stage of the tournament. With Australia having an edge because of their vast experience at this stage of the game while England had the home ground advantage. The game was evenly poised until Jofra Archer and Chris Woakes decided to change that. Australian captain was dismissed for a first ball duck and the explosive Warner was sent back by Woakes on 9, restricting the explosive Australian batting to 13 for 2 in first five overs and then 27 for 3 in 10 the momentum was with England and they were not going to let it go. Australian Steven Smith tried and anchor one end, forming partnerships with wicketkeeper Carey and then Maxwell while fast bowler Mitchelle Starc bowler joined him to add useful 59 runs in the end to take the team total to 223. The score was always going to be low but the Australian pace attack was not to be discounted for. Not until the England opening duo of Jason Roy and Jonny Bairstow decided to take the bowlers to the cleaners. An opening 124 runs stand between the two all but sealed the fate of Australia. Joe Root and Captain Eoin Morgan completed the formalities later and won England a spot in the World Cup finals with an eight wicket win in the Semi Finals.

FINAL'S SETTING:
The Sunday’s final will be the 12th of ODI format with the world having seen five champions to date. Australia have won it a record five times, Indian and West India twice each while Pakistan and Sri Lanka have won it once. Tomorrow on July 14 the world will have their new "FIRST TIME World Champion" with neither New Zealand nor England having won the tournament before. Their previous best performance in the World Cup have been an appearance in Final with New Zealand losing to Australia in 2015 and England losing to Pakistan back in 1992.

The final game is expected to be a high scoring one however the pressure of the occasion and the assistance the pitch usually offers to fast bowlers early in the day can have a say and result in a low scoring game.

STRENGTHS AND WEAKNESSES:
Both sides are well balanced with good batsmen and bowling. While New Zealand may claim a very slight edge in department of fast bowling with Trent Boult and Matt Henrey to open and followed by Ferguson, England will seek parity with Jofra Archer proving a hand full for most of the batsmen and joined by opening partner Woakes. England will also most likely play their spinner Adil Rashid who have proven himself in the tournament.

In batting England hold an advantage with their top order in the groove and kicking already. Jason Roy and Bairstow have taken the best bowling attacks apart recently and in this tournament and are followed by the likes of dependable Joe Root, reliable Eoin Morgan, arguably the best all-rounder in the game, Ben Stokes. New Zealand on other hand have lot of difficulties with the opening pair. The star man Guptill not clicking throughout the tournament and his opening partner changed once already. New Zealand will be depending heavily on Kane Williamson who is having an excellent tournament and also will want some support from Ross Taylor and Latham. If Martin Guptil can provide New Zealand with a good start then the batting line-ups of both will be relatively on par with each other.

VERDICT:
We can expect the team winning the toss to bat first and try to set a high total. The first few overs however can be tricky for batting side. England will want their bowlers and batsmen to continue doing pretty much the stuff they have been doing lately while New Zealand will want their opening batsman to rise up to the task and deliver at the biggest stage of world cricket.The home team will be playing at one of the most iconic grounds of the world, we all expect a lot of buzz and look forward to the entertaining final.

Written by Arsalan Aslam for defence.pk
 
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I assume most of our members here will be supporting New Zeland?

I personally will just like a good contest!!
 
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England face day of destiny in World Cup final against New Zealand

England face New Zealand in the World Cup final on Sunday knowing years of planning come down to a single day at Lord's.
When England exited the 2015 edition with an embarrassing defeat by Bangladesh, few were tipping them as potential champions in four years' time.

As England captain Eoin Morgan put it: "If you had offered us the position to play in a final the day after we were knocked out of the 2015 World Cup, I would have laughed at you."

One person not laughing was Andrew Strauss, the former England director of cricket.

Drafted into the newly created role, Strauss set about an overhaul that saw the former England captain appoint Australia's Trevor Bayliss as coach, and place greater emphasis on white-ball cricket.

The worth of all that work showed when Morgan's men, now top of the one-day international rankings, thrashed reigning champions Australia by eight wickets in the semifinal at Edgbaston on Thursday.

Many of the elements that made England the pre-tournament favourites were on show in Birmingham.

Pacemen Jofra Archer and Chris Woakes reduced Australia to 14-3, legspinner Adil Rashid took wickets in the middle and the dynamic duo of Jason Roy and Jonny Bairstow – statistically the most successful opening pair in ODI history – launched the run chase with a blistering century partnership.

'FEARLESS' CRICKET

The challenge for England is to embrace the hype surrounding Sunday's fixture without letting it inhibit them from playing their brand of "fearless" cricket.

By reaching the final, England have guaranteed an international match will be shown live on free-to-air television in Britain for the first time since the iconic 2005 Ashes series – a chance to inspire a new generation.

"I think Sunday's not a day to shy away from, it's a day to look forward to," said Morgan, an outrider in English cricket in becoming an ODI specialist when the steely Dubliner realised his test career had stalled.

It is perhaps appropriate that England are facing New Zealand in a final between two sides who have yet to win the World Cup.

For it was the Black Caps who showed England how to play the modern one-day game at the 2015 edition in Wellington four years ago.

They shot out England for just 123 and then overhauled that total in a mere 12.2 overs.

"It was as close to rock-bottom as I've been", said Morgan. "Certainly as a captain and as a player, being beaten off the park like that was humiliating."

England gained a measure of revenge with a 119-run thrashing of New Zealand in a group-stage match earlier in this World Cup.

But that is unlikely to count for much on Sunday.

All tournament long, the same comment has been made about New Zealand – they boast a well-balanced attack led by left-arm quick Trent Boult but are over-reliant on captain Kane Williamson and fellow senior batsman Ross Taylor for their runs.

The polite Kiwis have responded by continuing to "scrap", in the phrase of fast bowler Lockie Ferguson, their way to wins as demonstrated by their dramatic 18-run semifinal victory over India.

Boult and Matt Henry reduced one of the world's most powerful top orders to 5-3, before left-arm spinner Mitchell Santner, aided by superb fielding, backed them up after Williamson and Taylor had made battling fifties on a tricky pitch.

While many members of the home side were not even born when England made the last of three losing appearances in a World Cup final in 1992, the Black Caps have the experience of their heavy defeat by co-hosts Australia in the climax of the 2015 edition in Melbourne to call on.

"I'd be lying if I said we weren't a bit overawed by the change of scenery," said Taylor as he looked back to New Zealand's first and only match on Australian soil in that tournament.

"I think we know what to expect, the pressures that come with it, we've been there before. You just have to enjoy it, it's the 'Home of Cricket', I can't think of a better place to play a final."

https://www.supersport.com/cricket/...estiny_in_World_Cup_final_against_New_Zealand
 
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Want NZ to win but England team is likely to be the champions. They are way too formidable at the moment, seeing the way they played against Australia.
 
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Unfortunately 41% of the tickets for Sunday's Cricket world cup final were bought by Indians.
They were sure of India's place in the final.

Who they gone cheer for now?

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And so it all comes down to this. After 47 matches stretched across six weeks, after a rollercoaster of a group stage (which, like all the best big dippers, started tame before lurching into a series of gut-wrenching twists and turns), and after a pair of semi-finals that were as compelling as they were different, we're left with just two teams standing. World Cup virgins the pair of them, each with their own tales of heartbreak and regret to fall back on as they look to go that one step beyond.

England and New Zealand, eh? The nearly-est of nearly-men throughout the tournament's history. Three times runners-up in the first five editions on the one hand (followed by a three-decade bout of mourning that gives Queen Victoria a run for her money); eight semi-final appearances out of 12 on the other, a succession of doughty line-ups invariably greater than the sum of their parts, invariably found wanting in the final analysis. But at some stage on Sunday afternoon, someone's World Cup record is going to have to lurch into credit … at long, long last.

But it also had to be these two teams, didn't it? Fate plays a spurious hand in sporting contests - it's there for all to see when it suits the narrative but strangely takes a back seat on all other occasions - but these two teams have been locked in a special embrace for the past four years; from the shellacking that was meted out on Eoin Morgan's men at Wellington in the 2015 World Cup, to their stunning resurgence on home soil a couple of months later. And now onwards to the biggest stage of all.


New Zealand are the team on which Morgan modelled England's rebirth, and now they are the team that England must beat to achieve that ultimate fulfilment. It's a symmetry that was not lost on the captain in the build-up - not least when he caught up with Brendon McCullum, his closest of friends and de facto mentor, outside the Lord's pavilion in the moments before the pre-match press conference. When asked about that reunion, and the lessons he had gleaned from their often bruising encounters on the field, Morgan said that, above all, McCullum's stewardship had proved "you can get to the top by being yourself, not trying to be somebody else".

And with that in mind, the match-up in Sunday's final offers both sides the best opportunity of the tournament to be as true to their selves as they could wish to be. England arrive with their chests puffed out, their confidence spilling over, their key weapons fit and firing in every facet of their game - precisely the sort of cocksure attitude that would have set previous England sides up for disaster … except that in this team's case, Morgan has been conditioning them to embrace the role of favourites pretty much since that first flowering of competence against these same opponents four years ago.

It's a subtle positioning for any sporting team to achieve - on the cusp of arrogance, maybe, but in reality, it's just a matter of self-awareness - something that the great Australia dynasty from 1999 to 2007 knew better than any other side.

England know they are a good team, and they know they go into this contest as overwhelming favourites - a tag that Kane Williamson was all too happy to palm off in their direction on the eve of the contest. As such, now is not the time for the team or its individuals to start second-guessing themselves or their methods.

But England have learned also, from the pitfalls they've encountered in the tournament to date, that there are moments to push and moments to sit tight - never better demonstrated than in their dramatic explosion against Australia in the semi-final. From 6 for 0 after three overs to 50 for 0 after ten, and onwards to their date with destiny. It is an inadvertent benefit of those back-to-back defeats to Sri Lanka and Australia that England have been playing knock-out cricket since, as it were, the Last 16 - a fact that Morgan admitted had forced them to play with more positivity and smartness than perhaps had been the case in their carefree opening rounds.

As for New Zealand, they have no qualms whatsoever about assuming their habitual position of underdogs. "England rightly deserve to be favourites, but whatever dog we are, it's just important that we focus on the cricket that we play, any team can beat any team, regardless of the breed of dog," Williamson said.

They are a compelling story in their own right. A side with unfinished business on the one hand, after the crushing disappointment of their maiden World Cup final appearance at the MCG four years ago, and yet seemingly grateful to have another chance so soon to set the record straight. Not that they are seeking to project any confidence that they can do so, of course.

They are a vastly different outfit to the 2015 team, with just six survivors from that final still in the squad today. McCullum is gone of course, taking with him his hair-raising habit of charging the new ball and clobbering his team a fifty-run start before the bowlers have found their length. Now they sit deep, bat long, stay in the game with caution to the fore - that has been their method throughout a tournament in which they have yet to pass 300 with the bat, but have remained competitive thanks to a bowling attack with individual components that any team would envy.

They'll roll out that familiar canny game on Sunday - new-ball threat, old-ball savvy, and a senior statesman in Williamson whose batting has been like a barometer all World Cup long. And by the end of their measured, forensic display with bat and ball, we'll know for sure whether the formula that they shared with England four years ago is a World Cup-winning one, or just another cause for regret in a 44-year tale of woe.

Form guide
England WWWLL (last five completed matches, most recent first)
New Zealand WLLLW

In the spotlight
It perhaps wasn't as obvious as it should have been coming into this World Cup, but for a team that invests so much faith in the power and majesty of its batting, the poise and presence of Jason Roy at the top of the order is absolutely fundamental to their tempo. His fifty in the tournament opener against South Africa settled the nerves after the shock of Jonny Bairstow's first-over first-baller; his bruising century against Bangladesh in Cardiff set up the second-highest total of the World Cup to date. And his absence with a hamstring injury coincided with their headless chicken defeats to Sri Lanka and Australia. But it was his evisceration of Mitchell Starc at Edgbaston that really showed his worth. Tight in defence, lethal in attack. He played with respect when the delivery called for it, and furious aggression when Starc erred even fractionally in line. And given the potency of New Zealand's own attack, it's a template that his team will want him to replicate on the biggest stage of all.

Ross Taylor who did the needful with a superbly weighted 74 from 90 balls. Hindsight demonstrated that he had measured the conditions to perfection, and given that he had come into the tournament as one of the outstanding form players of the past 18 months, he is surely one of the men on whom New Zealand has to rely come Sunday.

WATCH on Hotstar (INDIA ONLY) - Taylor's innings against India

Team news
Bairstow appeared to tweak his groin while batting in the semi-final, but he was not sent for a scan and seems set to take his place in an unchanged XI. Given the green tinge on the pitch, it is highly improbable that England will sub out one of their seamers to accommodate Moeen Ali.

England (probable): 1 Jason Roy, 2 Jonny Bairstow, 3 Joe Root, 4 Eoin Morgan (capt), 5 Ben Stokes, 6 Jos Buttler (wk), 7 Chris Woakes, 8 Liam Plunkett, 9 Adil Rashid, 10 Jofra Archer, 11 Mark Wood

Henry Nicholls was to undergo a fitness test on Saturday after tweaking a hamstring against India, but no other changes are anticipated. The legspinner Ish Sodhi played in New Zealand's last visit to Lord's against Australia, but that was on a used deck.

New Zealand (probable): 1 Martin Guptill, 2 Henry Nicholls, 3 Kane Williamson (capt), 4 Ross Taylor, 5 Tom Latham (wk), 6 Jimmy Neesham, 7 Colin de Grandhomme, 8 Mitchell Santner, 9 Matt Henry, 10 Trent Boult, 11 Lockie Ferguson.

Pitch and conditions
It's perhaps an indication of the distance that England have come since the start of the tournament that Morgan did not raise more of an eyebrow at a remarkably green wicket that had more in keeping with a golf green than a cricket pitch two days out. Some of the colour had drained from the surface by preview day, but there's still going to be some live grass come the 10.30am start on Sunday. "It looks greener from afar than it is up close," said Morgan, diplomatically, adding that it'll go whiter and burn off when the sun comes out. Whether England would choose to bat or ball first "depends on how hard the wicket gets", he added.

Strategy punt
  • There's mode of attack in New Zealand's ranks that England will be unable to replicate (even allowing for Jofra Archer's ambidexterity in the nets). Left-arm seam has accounted for a staggering 39 wickets at 13.6 in the course of the four group games at Lord's - compared to 18 at 42.7 for the right-arm quicks. And that tally, of course, includes Trent Boult, who claimed a hat-trick in New Zealand's defeat against Australia. England, meanwhile, lost nine of their ten wickets to Mitchell Starc and Jason Behrendorff in their group-stage loss to the Aussies. If Boult can shape the new ball down the slope, into England's front pads, there could be fireworks.

  • England's recent prowess against spin will be tested by one of New Zealand's unsung heroes of the campaign. In the three matches where Mitchell Santner has conceded over 6 RPO, NZ has lost two and scraped through the third, by five runs against West Indies. Conversely, his first spell of 6-2-7-2 against India was instrumental in their successful defence of 239.
Stats and trivia
  • The importance of Roy and Bairstow's opening partnership extends beyond numbers. Their mere presence at the crease has been talismanic for England. On the seven occasions that England have not lost more than one wicket in the first Powerplay, they have won every time. On the three occasions they've lost more than one wicket in the same period (including of course with James Vince in the side for Roy) they've lost every time.

  • In keeping with the theme of this tournament, the team batting first has won seven out of the previous 11 World Cup finals. However, each of the last two has been won by the chasing team, India in Mumbai in 2011 and Australia at the MCG in 2015.

  • England have won seven of their last nine meetings in ODIs with New Zealand, including a 3-2 victory on their tour of New Zealand in February and March 2018. However, New Zealand have won both of their most recent encounters at Lord's - by 51 runs in 2008 and by five wickets in 2013.

  • Of the four World Cup finals played at Lord's, the team in the away dressing room has won all of them. England will be in the home dressing room on Sunday.
Quotes
"Whether having had experience in a final or not is a good thing, any final you get the opportunity to play in is a really positive thing. But at the same time, as we know, in this game nothing promises, so it does come down to putting a performance on the board that gives us the best opportunity to win."
Kane Williamson, New Zealand's captain plays down the benefits of making it to the 2015 final

"I haven't allowed myself to think about lifting the trophy. Cricket and sport, in particular, is very fickle. If you ever get ahead, it always seems to bite you in the backside, so for us to win it, I think around the country it would be awesome, great for the game.."
Eoin Morgan, England's captain, isn't getting ahead of himself just yet
 
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