Revisiting the 2000 CT final between India and New Zealand
What's the story
The 2000 ICC Champions Trophy, then known as the ICC KnockOut Trophy, saw New Zealand being crowned as champions.
It was the Kiwis' first win in a major ICC tournament and remains their only Champions Trophy triumph.
The final, held at Gymkhana Club Ground in Nairobi, Kenya, saw NZ beat India by four wickets to secure the trophy.
Let's revisit this iconic win.
Playing XI
Playing XIs of both teams for the finals
India: Sourav Ganguly (c), Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid, Yuvraj Singh, Vinod Kambli, Robin Singh, Ajit Agarkar, Vijay Dahiya (wk), Anik Kumble, Zaheer Khan, Venkatesh Prasad.
New Zealand: Craig Spearman, Nathan Astle, Stephen Fleming (c), Roger Twose, Chris Cairns, Craig McMillan, Chris Harris, Adam Parore (wk), Scott Styris, Shayne O'Connor, Geoff Allott.
Indian innings
India manage 264/6 after being asked to bat first
Sourav Ganguly's India lost the toss and were put to bat.
Ganguly led from the front, scoring 117 (130), as his 141-run opening stand with Sachin Tendulkar (69) pushed NZ on back foot.
However, poor decisions and run-outs triggered a collapse, restricting India to 264/6.
Rahul Dravid was the only other batter to score over 20 (22). Scott Styris picked up two wickets.
NZ's innings
Cairns' unbeaten ton leads NZ to maiden CT victory
New Zealand faced early trouble at 82/3 (15th over) while chasing 265.
However, Chris Cairns played a match-winning knock, smashing an unbeaten 102* off 113 balls, including eight fours and two sixes, to stabilize the innings despite wickets tumbling at the other end.
His century, combined with Chris Harris' vital 46-run contribution, powered NZ to a thrilling four-wicket victory with two balls remaining.
Journey
NZ's journey to the finals
As one of the top five teams in the 1999 World Cup seedings, New Zealand secured a direct spot in the knockout stages.
In the quarterfinals, they cruised to a commanding 64-run victory over Zimbabwe.
They then edged past Pakistan by four wickets in the semifinals.
Roger Twose emerged as the hero in both matches, delivering consecutive fifties to guide NZ to victory.
Journey
India's road to final
Unlike NZ, India had to face Kenya in the pre-quarterfinals, as they weren't among the top five seeds.
However, they dominated Kenya with an eight-wicket win, setting up a quarterfinal clash with Australia.
India then edged past the Aussies by 20 runs.
In the semifinals, Ganguly's century and a brilliant bowling effort helped India thrash South Africa by 95 runs.
Top performers - India
India's top performers in the tournament
India's skipper led from the front, finishing as the tournament's highest run-scorer.
As per ESPNcricinfo, Ganguly amassed 348 runs at an astonishing average of 116, including two centuries and a fifty.
Meanwhile, Venkatesh Prasad dominated with the ball, emerging as the leading wicket-taker in the tournament, claiming eight scalps in four innings (AVG: 21.37, ER: 5.23).
Top performer - NZ
New Zealand's top performers in the tournament
For the first-time champions, Roger Twose starred with the bat, finishing as their top scorer with two crucial fifties.
Twose amassed 203 runs at an impressive average of 67.66 and a strike rate of 82.18 in three innings, ranking third overall in the tournament.
Meanwhile, Shayne O'Connor led the bowling attack, claiming five wickets (three innings0 at 20.60 (ER: 4.82), including a five-wicket haul.