Postpublished at 13:31 British Summer Time 22 June 2019
This is a brilliant ball first up, speared in at the toes, and Martin Guptill misses it completely.
NZ all but through to semi-finals after five-run win; WI all but eliminated
Carlos Brathwaite hits 101 from 82 balls but is last out as WI fall short
Chris Gayle 87 (including six sixes) - dropped on 15, 58 and 59
Williamson 148 (154 balls) hits second century of World Cup; Taylor 69 (95)
WI's Sheldon Cottrell takes 4-56, three catches and a run-out
In-play clips available to UK users only
Amy Lofthouse and Jack Skelton
This is a brilliant ball first up, speared in at the toes, and Martin Guptill misses it completely.
MY WORD!
Have West Indies got Martin Guptill first up? Jason Holder likes the look of it...
Sheldon Cottrell will open the bowling for West Indies.
Decent crowd in at Old Trafford, a sea of maroon in one of the stands. Here we go...
James Anderson
England bowler on BBC Test Match Special
People were talking about what sort of semi-final England want, but you've got to qualify for that top four first.
I mean obviously, with the cricket about to start, the sun has gone in, but still.
West Indies have a huddle, Jason Holder giving one last team talk, before Martin Guptill and Colin Munro make their way out to the middle.
Bryan Waddle
BBC Test Match Special
I noticed that yesterday.
James Anderson
England bowler on BBC Test Match Special
It is always warm and sunny in Manchester. Always.
National anthems time.
Two absolute bangers to get us going.
Both matches to have already taken place at Old Trafford so far at the World Cup have seen sides successfully defend a total - India doing so after being forced to bat against Pakistan whilst England secured a comprehensive 150-run victory there against Afghanistan.
BBC Test Match Special
TMS are ready and waiting at Old Trafford - Fazeer Mohammed, Kevin Howells and Bryan Waddle are joined by Jeremy Coney, Michael Vaughan, James Anderson and Sir Curtly Ambrose.
Click the big ol' button at the top of the page to listen.
West Indies and New Zealand have been involved in 57 completed ODIs - the Windies have won 30 to New Zealand's 27.
New Zealand, however, have beaten West Indies four times at the World Cup - and they've recorded victories in each of the last three such encounters in the tournament.
Hold all cricket in Manchester from now on.
So West Indies have left out Darren Bravo, Shannon Gabriel and the injured Andre Russell.
They bring in Carlos Brathwaite, Ashley Nurse and Kemar Roach in their stead.
A reminder that when these two sides met in a World Cup warm-up, West Indies piled on 421, with Shai Hope scoring 101.
New Zealand were bowled out for 330 in response.
What I'm saying is, expect runs.
New Zealand: Martin Guptill, Colin Munro, Kane Williamson (capt), Ross Taylor, Tom Latham (wk), Jimmy Neesham, Colin de Grandhomme, Mitchell Santner, Matt Henry, Lockie Ferguson, Trent Boult.
West Indies:Chris Gayle, Evin Lewis, Shai Hope (wk), Nicholas Pooran, Shimron Hetmyer, Jason Holder (capt), Carlos Brathwaite, Ashley Nurse, Kemar Roach, Sheldon Cottrell, Oshane Thomas.
Sunshine!
Allow X content?
This article contains content provided by X. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read X’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.
Brendon McCullum reckons this is the best pitch we've seen in this World Cup...
New Zealand captain Kane Williamson: "We know without a doubt the threat West Indies pose. They can beat anybody. They've got some world class players. It's about focusing on the cricket we want to play. We've played on a varitey of surfaces already."
Three changes for West Indies - there's no Andre Russell or Shannon Gabriel.
New Zealand, unsurprisingly, are unchanged.
West Indies captain Jason Holder: "We're going to field first, it looks a good wicket and we back ourselves to chase whatever they get. We've got to bring our A game, we've not been consistent with the bat, ball or in the field. We've made three changes."