World Cup highs and lows

All the stats you need from the 2019 cricket World Cup.

Published : Jul 23, 2019 20:26 IST

The victorious England team.
The victorious England team.
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The victorious England team.

Winner: England

Runner-up: New Zealand

Losing semifinalists: India and Australia

Team records

Results and team position based on win percentage

Note: The result in the tied final is taken as a win for England and a loss for New Zealand in the table.

How the runs and boundaries were scored and conceded

By the batting side:

 

By the bowling side:

 

Total:

 

Team records

Highest team total: 397/6 (50 overs), England v Afghanistan at, Manchester), June 18, 2019

Highest team total batting second (losing side): 334/9 (50 overs), England v Pakistan at Nottingham, June 3, 2019

Highest successful run chase: 322/3 (41.3 overs), Bangladesh v West Indies at Taunton, June 17, 2019

Lowest team total: 105/10 (21.4 overs), Pakistan v West Indies at Nottingham, May 31, 2019

Highest match aggregate: 714/13 (100.0 overs), Australia (381/5) beat Bangladesh (333/8) at Nottingham, June 20, 2019 (World Cup record)

Lowest match aggregate: 213/13 (35.1 overs), Pakistan (105) lost to West Indies (108/3) at Nottingham, May 31, 2019

Lowest match aggregate (20 wickets): 353/20 (69.3 overs), Sri Lanka (201) beat Afghanistan (152) at Cardiff, June 4, 2019

Lowest match aggregate (100 overs): 482/18 (100 overs), New Zealand (241/8) lost to England (241) courtesy boundaries scored after the super over was also tied at Lord’s, June 14, 2019

Biggest victory (by runs): 150 runs, England beat Afghanistan at Manchester, June 18, 2019

Biggest victory (by wickets): 10 wickets, Sri Lanka lost to New Zealand at Cardiff, June 1, 2019

Biggest victory (by balls remaining): 218 balls, Pakistan lost to West Indies at Nottingham, May 31, 2019

Tied match: New Zealand (241/8) tied with England (241) at Lord’s, June 14, 2019. England won courtesy boundaries scored after the super over was also tied

Smallest victory (by runs): 5 runs, New Zealand beat West Indies at Manchester, June 22, 2019

Smallest victory (by wickets): 2 wickets, Bangladesh lost to New Zealand at the Oval, June 5, 2019

Smallest victory (by balls remaining): 2 balls, Afghanistan lost to Pakistan at Leeds, June 29, 2019

Most sixes in an innings (World Cup record): 25, England v Afghanistan at Manchester, June 18, 2019

Most fours in an innings: 37, Bangladesh v South Africa at the Oval, June 2, 2019

37, Australia v Sout Africa at Manchester, July 6, 2019

Most sixes in a match (World Cup record): 33, England (25) v Afghanistan (8) at Manchester, June 18, 2019

Most fours in a match: 64, Australia (34) v Bangladesh (30) at Nottingham, June 20, 2019

Individual records

Highest individual score: 166, David Warner, Australia v Bangladesh, at Nottingham, June 20, 2019

Highest individual score (batting second): 124 not out, Shakib Al Hasan, Bangladesh v West Indies at Taunton, June 17, 2019

Highest batting strike rate in an innings: 208.45, Eoin Morgan (148 in 71 balls), England v Afghanistan at, Manchester, June 18, 2019

Lowest batting strike rate in an innings: 59.60, Hashmatullah Shahidi (59 in 99 balls), Afghanistan v New Zealand at Taunton, June 8, 2019

Most sixes in an innings (ODI record): 17, Eoin Morgan (148), England v Afghanistan at Manchester, June 18, 2019

Most fours in an innings: 16, Shikhar Dhawan (117), India v Australia at the Oval, June 9, 2019

16, Shakib Al Hasan (124 not out), Bangladesh v West Indies at Taunton, June 17, 2019

Fastest fifty: 25 balls, Alex Carey (55 not out in 35 balls), Australia v India at the Oval, June 9, 2019

25 balls, Shimron Hetmyer (50 in 26 balls), West Indies v Bangladesh, at Taunton, June 17, 2019

Fastest hundred: 57 balls, Eoin Morgan (148 in 71 balls), England v Afghanistan at Manchester, June 18, 2019

Most hundreds (World Cup record): 5, Rohit Sharma, India

Most fifties (50-99): 5, Virat Kohli (India), Shakib Al Hasan (Bangladesh), Ben Stokes (England)

Most fifty-plus scores: 7, Shakib Al Hasan, Bangladesh

Most scores in the nineties (90-99): 1 by nine batsmen

Most ducks: 2 by 11 batsmen

Most sixes: 22, Eoin Morgan, England

Most fours: 67, Rohit Sharma (India), Jonny Bairstow (England)

Most runs: 648, Rohit Sharma (India) in nine matches

Highest batting average: 86.57, Shakib Al Hasan (Bangladesh), 606 runs in eight innings

Highest batting strike rate: 150.00, Glenn Maxwell (Australia), 177 runs in 118 balls in 10 innings.

Best bowling figures: 7/35 in 9.1 overs, Shaheen Shah Afridi, Pakistan v Bangladesh at Lord’s, July 5, 2019

Most economical bowling figures: 1.50, 6-1-9-2, Jasprit Bumrah, India v West Indies at Manchester, June 27, 2019

2.30, 10-0-23-2, Mohammad Nabi, Afghanistan v Pakistan at Leeds, June 29, 2019 (bowling full quota)

Most individual five-wicket hauls: 2, Mitchell Starc (Australia), Mustafizur Rahman (Bangladesh)

Most wickets (World Cup record): 27 in 10 matches, Mitchell Starc (Australia)

Best bowling average: 13.79, Mohammed Shami (India), 14 wickets in 35.1 overs in four matches

Best bowling strike rate: 15.07, Mohammed Shami (Ind), 14 wickets in 35.1 overs in four matches

Best bowling economy: 3.67, Kemar Roach (West Indies), six wickets in 33 overs in four matches

Hat-tricks: 2, Mohammed Shami, India v Afghanistan at Southampton, June 22, 2019

Trent Boult, New Zealand v Australia at Lord’s, June 29, 2019

Most dismissals by a wicketkeeper in a match: 5 (4 catches, 1 stumping), Alex Carey, Australia v Afghanistan at Bristol, June 1, 2019

5 (all catches), Tom Latham, New Zealand v Afghanistan at Taunton, June 8, 2019

Most dismissals by a wicketkeeper (equals World Cup record): 21 (all catches), Tom Latham (New Zealand) in 10 matches

Most catches by a fielder in a match (equals World Cup record): 4, Chris Woakes, England v Pakistan at Nottingham, June 3, 2019

Most catches by a fielder (World Cup record): 13, Joe Root (England) in 11 matches

Youngest player: 18 years, 65 days, Mujeeb Zadran, Afghanistan v Australia at Bristol, June 1, 2019

Oldest player: 40 years, 101 days, Imran Tahir, South Africa v Australia at Manchester, July 6, 2019

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