England v New Zealand, 2019 men's World Cup final, Lord's
Super finale: A tie within a tie
Stalwarts in attendance: Steve Waugh, Clive Lloyd and Brian Lara posed for the cameras before the start of the 2019 Men's World Cup final•Getty Images
New Zealand, too, were well represented•Getty Images
Kane Williamson could only manage 30 runs having opted to bat•Getty Images
Defending 241, Matt Henry dealt the hosts a sizeable blow with Jason Roy's wicket•Getty Images
...stepped on the boundary line before he could relay it to Guptill!•Getty Images
... the match spilled into a Super Over with the scores tied at 241. •Getty Images
The equation reduced to two off the final delivery. Guptill, sprinting for the second run, however, was, caught short of his ground by wicketkeeper Jos Buttler•Getty Images
Neesham took care of the handshakes; Guptill, on his haunches, cut a sorry figure in the background•Getty Images
The moment: Morgan and Co lifted England's first World Cup trophy•Getty Images
England had now won back-to-back World Cups at home, the women's team winning the title in 2017•Getty Images
Supporters - mostly of the hosts - turned up in numbers at Trafalgar Square, to watch the match on giant screens•Getty Images
The visiting captain's corner in the Lord's dressing room was lit. Just about•Getty Images
James Neesham and Co wore worried looks as England dominated the major part of New Zealand's innings•Getty Images
Lockie Ferguson took a stunning low catch to dismiss Eoin Morgan •Associated Press
With nine needed off three balls, a throw to Stokes' end deflected off his bat and to the boundary, suddenly leaving England with a far more gettable three off two balls•Getty Images
Stokes couldn't seal the chase, but had another shot as he walked out in Jos Buttler's company to face the Super Over•Getty Images
A tied Super Over meant England edged past New Zealand on the count of boundaries from the regular 50-over innings; the World Cup was theirs•Getty Images
Hit hard by unpredictable workings of fate, Guptill was inconsolable when the enormity of the unaccomplished second run hit home•Getty Images
Sachin Tendulkar offered his congratulations to the Player of the Tournament•Getty Images
Henry Nicholls survived a barrage of bouncers en route to an enterprisining half-century•Getty Images
Ben Stokes obliged autograph-hunting, selfie-seeking fans•Getty Images
In a decisive phase of the match, Trent Boult caught a Stokes shot, but... •Getty Images
Fireworks wouldn't go off after 100 overs because...•Associated Press
New Zealand needed 16 to win, and Neesham smashed a six off the second ball in the Super Over•Getty Images
The man of the moment: Archer never conceded 16 runs in a single over in an ODI. Seventy-two days after his England debut, he defended 15 in the Super Over•Getty Images
Yet another so-near-yet-so-far story for New Zealand? Yes, for Williamson, too•Getty Images
The Player of the Final led England's victory lap•Getty Images