Has there been a tied Super Over decided by boundary count before the 2019 World Cup final?
And what's the record for most centuries scored by all players in a World Cup?
The only one I'm aware of before the epic 2019 World Cup final was an IPL match in 2014, between Rajasthan Royals and Kolkata Knight Riders in Abu Dhabi.
There was a total of 31 individual centuries in the 2019 World Cup, a record five of them by Rohit Sharma. The only tournament with more was the last one, in Australia and New Zealand in 2015, when there were 38. The fewest centuries in any World Cup was in 1979, when there were only two - by Gordon Greenidge against India at Edgbaston, and Viv Richards in the final at Lord's - but there were only 14 matches then, as opposed to 48 in 2015 and 2019 (although that includes three abandoned without a ball this time).
That Indian innings against New Zealand at Old Trafford, in which Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli and KL Rahul all departed for 1, was unique in all international cricket (including women's matches).
There were eight men who were officially part of a World Cup squad for all of part of the 2019 tournament who never actually appeared in a match (excluding any replaced before the start of the competition). Three of them were present on the day of the final at Lord's: Tom Curran and Liam Dawson for England, and New Zealand's Tom Blundell. Elsewhere, Abu Jayed never got a game for Bangladesh, while Mohammad Hasnain missed out for Pakistan. Dale Steyn started the tournament in South Africa's squad but failed to recover from a shoulder injury and was soon replaced. Two men who were called up as late replacements also never featured: the India batsman Mayank Agarwal, and Matthew Wade, who was added to the Australia squad on the eve of the semi-final but didn't play in it.
I had expected the answer here would be some long-ago county cricketer, who chalked up lots of appearances on obscure outgrounds - but that's not quite the case. As it happens, the record was broken around 18 months ago. Until then it had been shared by England's Tom Graveney and Pakistan's Mushtaq Mohammad, who both played first-class cricket on 115 different grounds. But in November 2017, Guyana visited the Brian Lara Academy in Tarouba to take on Trinidad & Tobago - and their side included 43-year-old Shivnarine Chanderpaul, who was turning out on his 116th ground. He didn't contribute much to Guyana's innings victory - he was out for 2 - but his son, Tagenarine, made 84.
Steven Lynch is the editor of the updated edition of Wisden on the Ashes