The historypublished at 00:52 Greenwich Mean Time 28 February 2015

India beat UAE by nine wickets in Pool B
Ind 104-1 (18.5 overs); Rohit 57 not out
UAE 102 all out (won toss); Ashwin 4-25
NZ beat Australia by one wicket in Pool A
NZ 152-9 (23.1 overs); Starc 6-28
Aus 151 (32.2 overs): Boult 5-27
Phil Dawkes and Michael Emons
New Zealand skipper Brendon McCullum: "We would have bowled first anyway.
"We've got two good teams going at it and it's a big scalp with the Chappell-Hadlee Trophy on the line too.
"We're very much focused on this game. We've gone with the same team - that's the beauty of playing some good cricket."
Statistics correct as of 13 February.
Statistics correct as of 13 February.
New Zealand field the same side they have for their previous three matches.
It's a tough school being in the Australia team. George Bailey has batted once in this tournament, scored 55 against England and is then dropped. He is out, meaning Michael Clarke comes in, as expected, to captain the side after recovering from a hamstring injury. Pat Cummins also comes in to replace Josh Hazlewood.
New Zealand: Martin Guptill, Brendon McCullum (capt), Kane Williamson, Ross Taylor, Grant Elliott, Corey Anderson, Luke Ronchi (wk), Daniel Vettori, Tim Southee, Adam Milne, Trent Boult.
Australia: David Warner, Aaron Finch, Shane Watson, Michael Clarke (capt), Steve Smith, Glenn Maxwell, Mitchell Marsh, Brad Haddin, Mitchell Johnson, Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins.
Returning Australia captain Michael Clarke: "The wicket looks fantastic. Whether we bat first or bowl first is irrelevant.
"We're sick of training so everybody is really excited. Let's hope we can entertain the people who are watching."
Australia win the toss and will bat first. Brendon McCullum then says his side would have bowled first anyway. Early mind games from the New Zealand captain?
Good morning. Hope you are well. Thank you for joining us for live text commentary of the New Zealand v Australia match.
The World Cup has been a test of your staying power already, but if there ever was a match worth throwing an all-nighter for then this surely is it.
New Zealand v Australia. Two of the best teams in the world, both in stunning form. Get comfortable. This is going to be good.
Since then, things have been a bit feisty between the two sides.
Now, the two sides are strongly tipped as potential World Cup winners and the co-hosts meet in New Zealand. It is one of the biggest rivalries in world cricket. And there can only be one winner.
It was one of the most controversial moments in cricket history.
With New Zealand needing six runs to win their one-day game against Australia in Melbourne in 1981, Australia bowler Trevor Chappell (pictured), following instructions from his brother and captain Greg, bowled the last ball underarm, external to deny the Kiwis a victory.
New Zealand's Prime Minister Robert Muldoon said it was "the most disgusting incident in the history of cricket".