Postpublished at 10:36 British Summer Time 14 July 2019
Jonathan Agnew
BBC cricket correspondent
There is no way that still fits him.
England become men's world champions for first time after incredible final goes to super over
Eoin Morgan's men victorious by virtue of having scored more boundaries (super over was tied)
England batted first in super over - Stokes (8*) and Buttler (7*) post 15-0
New Zealand post 15-1 - Neesham 13, Guptill 1
Wood run out off final ball of England's innings, meaning scores were tied
Stokes (84*) and Buttler (59) put on 110 after England fell to 86-4 in chase of 242
Latham's punchy 47 lifts NZ to 241-8; Nicholls only NZ batsman to pass 50
Jack Skelton, Tom Rostance and Matthew Henry
Jonathan Agnew
BBC cricket correspondent
There is no way that still fits him.
James Anderson
England bowler on BBC Test Match Special
I've just seen Derek Pringle and he says he's wearing his actual 1992 final shirt.
A rigorous warm-up for Jason Roy...
Text 81111
My 15 year old nephew witnessed Ben Stokes' catch of the century at The Oval on the opening day and is now playing for his local club. World Cup legacy in action.
Chiddas, Devon
James Anderson
England bowler on BBC Test Match Special
I'd want to bowl first here. New Zealand will think if they get something on the board they can defend it.
It's tricky at Lord's - the grass doesn't necessarily mean it will do loads and the pitch is dry underneath.
Two young lads are holding the World Cup trophy high as the pre-match paraphernalia comes together.
Jonathan Agnew
BBC cricket correspondent
Eoin Morgan was not unhappy at losing the toss. Captains hate making the decision only to lose the game - people tend to remember that for years to come.
Text 81111
My wife took me to help at a family church service which I have now been ejected from for following you guys.
Tom
If you're just dialling in looking for play - it's been delayed until 10:45 BST thanks to some pesky overnight rain.
Go and put the kettle on. New Zealand won the toss and are batting.
So you can get in for the price of a sandwich and a coffee in London. A bargain.
Stephan Shemilt
BBC Sport at Lord's
I've just been told that the going rate for a ticket outside the ground is £2,000.
England: Jason Roy, Jonny Bairstow, Joe Root, Eoin Morgan(c), Ben Stokes, Jos Buttler(w), Chris Woakes, Liam Plunkett, Jofra Archer, Adil Rashid, Mark Wood
NZ: Martin Guptill, Henry Nicholls, Kane Williamson(c), Ross Taylor, James Neesham, Tom Latham(w), Colin de Grandhomme, Mitchell Santner, Matt Henry, Trent Boult, Lockie Ferguson
Michael Vaughan
Ex-England captain on BBC Test Match Special
I was at Wimbledon yesterday and everyone was talking about the cricket. It's great everyone can turn on a TV screen today and watch it for free.
Text 81111
Bacon Butty done, Cappuccino ready, beers in fridge for later. Right, I've done my bit - over to you, lads.
Mark in Willaston
Stephan Shemilt
BBC Sport at Lord's
These two have been everywhere and I'm starting to think they have nothing to do with cricket. A cricket-themed living statue stormed past them, absolutely fuming.
Remember the lift operator in Delhi, who was watching the semi-final between floors?
Allow Twitter content?
This article contains content provided by Twitter. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read Twitter’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.
Only once has the side batting first in an ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup final scored more than 300 runs (Australia 359/2 v India, 2003)
Text us on 81111
I'm quietly a little pleased with that toss. Having to leave the pub I'm watching the game at early (I've made poor life decisions), but this might mean England win early enough for me to see it?
Xav in Ealing
England have won only two of their last nine ODIs at Lord's when bowling first (L6, T1).
England captain Eoin Morgan: "Not at all bothered by losing the toss - it was a bit of a 50/50 call and with the overhead conditions I might have leaned towards bowling first. Whichever team plays well with lift the trophy.
"We played on a fantastic pitch against Australia at Edgbaston and our strongest part was our bowling. Our openers got their line and length spot on and created opportunities in the first 10 overs then the bowlers that came after bowled beautifully. Hopefully we can create chances like that again.
"I'm extremely proud and everyone has put a huge amount of hard work in over the last four years to create this opportunity. Even if we don't do, we've created a different level of expectation around 50-over cricket in England.
"Throughout the tournament we've embraced the pressure - the semi-final epitomised us and how we want to play."