New Zealand have made it to the top four in 1975, 1979, 1992, 1999, 2007, 2011, and 2015 – seven out of eleven editions including the last three.
There will be a total of 48 matches in the 2019, World Cup, between May 30 and July 14.
Old Trafford will host six matches in the World Cup, while five each will be played at Lord's and The Oval.
South Africa's batting lacks experience, but they take the major teams down if their bowling unit is fully fit.
A batting-heavy side, West Indies go into the World Cup with a lot of hope – more than they have had in recent tournaments.
Jos Buttler has most dismissals as a wicketkeeper, while Virat Kohli has most catches as a fielder.
Before the World Cup, India and New Zealand will play a warm-up match at The Oval.
While more or less all teams have retained their provisional squads, England and Pakistan have made three changes each.
Kuldeep has most wickets and four-wicket hauls; he is also second in average and strike rate.
New captain, old players, no regulars – plenty has changed for Sri Lanka, and the hope is that’ll spark them to something good.