Five-time champions Australia edged out gallant New Zealand by just five runs in the highest-scoring World Cup game in history on Saturday. Australia piled up 388 all out as Travis Head top scored with 109 and fellow opener David Warner made 81.New Zealand battled hard with Rachin Ravindra making 116, Daryl Mitchell adding 54 and Jimmy Neesham supplying late fireworks with a 33-ball fifty before they finished on 383-9 in 50 overs.With a total of 771 runs, it was the highest scoring game at a World Cup, beating the 754 scored in South Africa’s win against Sri Lanka earlier in the tournament.“That was awesome. Sometimes I have to remember I’m out in the field, not a spectator. A fantastic game, they kept coming at us,” said Australia skipper Pat Cummins.In a dramatic final over played out in the shadow of the Himalayas, New Zealand needed 19 to win.Trent Boult scampered for a single before Mitchell Starc donated five wides.Neesham, one of the stars of the 2019 final which New Zealand lost to England, then took six runs off the next three balls.However, attempting another two, he was run out from a fine throw by Marnus Labuschagne from the fence.That left Lockie Ferguson, who had injured his Achilles in the field, needing to perform the heroics off the last ball.Starc fired the ball in on a full length and Ferguson could only push it to the covers, leaving the Kiwis heartbroken.“It was a fantastic game of cricket. There were ebbs and flows throughout the 100 overs,” said New Zealand captain Tom Latham. “To get so close hurts. It was a fantastic game.”The result left both sides with four wins and two defeats each and well-placed for the semi-finals.Earlier, Head, playing his first match of the tournament after being sidelined with a broken hand, reached his fourth one-day international hundred off 59 balls with 10 fours and six sixes. The 29-year-old had brought up his 50 off 28 balls and then made the most of being dropped on 70 and 75.He was eventually clean-bowled by off-spinner Glenn Phillips with Australia reaching 206-2 at the halfway stage.With Warner, Head had put on 175 in the first 20 overs before his veteran partner was dismissed.Warner, who turned 37 on Friday, had been looking for a third successive century but eventually fell for 81 when he chipped a catch back to Phillips.Phillips then accounted for Steve Smith (18) as he claimed career-best figures of 3-37 before fellow spinner Mitchell Santner got in on the act.Santner beat the defences of Mitchell Marsh (36) and the left-armer then dismissed Labuschagne (18) after the batsman had been dropped on one.Neesham had middle-order dangerman Glenn Maxwell caught at long-off by Trent Boult for a 24-ball 41. Maxwell had come into the match fresh from a World Cup record 40-ball hundred against the Netherlands.Josh Inglis raced to a 28-ball 38, putting on 62 for the seventh wicket with skipper Pat Cummins (37).In reply, New Zealand, runners-up in the last two World Cups, saw Will Young (32) and Devon Conway (28) put on 61 for the first wicket before both fell to Josh Hazlewood.Mitchell hit his third fifty of the tournament to follow his 130 last time out against India but fell on 54 when leg-spinner Adam Zampa had him holing out to long-on with his team on 168-3 after 24 overs.Mitchell put on 96 for the third wicket with Ravindra.The 23-year-old Ravindra, who scored 123 in the opening win over England, reached three figures from 77 balls with seven fours and five sixes.But with New Zealand needing 97 to win off 60 balls, Ravindra was caught in the deep off Australian skipper Pat Cummins for a fine 116.That left the Kiwis on 293-6 but they battled hard to take the game to the final over thriller.Pakistan fined for slow over ratePakistan were fined 20 per cent of their match fee for maintaining a slow over-rate against South Africa in their World Cup clash in Chennai, the International Cricket Council said on Saturday. Pakistan narrowly lost by one wicket on Friday, their fourth straight defeat after two wins in six matches.“The ICC match referee Richie Richardson imposed the sanction after the Pakistan team was ruled to be four overs short of the target after time allowances were taken into consideration,” the ICC said in a release. As per the ICC code, players are fined five per cent of their match fee for every over short.Pakistan next face Bangladesh in Kolkata on Tuesday.SCOREBOARDAustraliaD. Warner c & b Phillips 81T. Head b Phillips 109M. Marsh b Santner 36S. Smith c Boult b Phillips 18M. Labuschagne c Ravindra b Santner 18G. Maxwell c Boult b Neesham 14J. Inglis c Phillips b Boult 38P. Cummins lbw b Boult 37M. Starc c Neesham b Henry 1A. Zampa b Boult 0J. Hazlewood not out 0Extras (b1, nb2, w6) 9Total (all out; 49.2 overs) 388Fall of wickets: 1-175 (Warner), 2-200 (Head), 3-228 (Smith), 4-264 (Marsh), 5-274 (Labuschagne), 6-325 (Maxwell), 7-387 (Inglis), 8-388 (Cummins), 9-388 (Zampa), 10-388 (Starc)Bowling: Henry 6.2-0-67-1 (2w, 2nb), Boult 10-0-77-3 (3w), Ferguson 3-0-38-0, Santner 10-0-80-2 (1w), Phillips 10-0-37-3, Ravindra 8-0-56-0, Neesham 2-0-32-1)New ZealandD. Conway c Starc b Hazlewood 28W. Young c Starc b Hazlewood 32R. Ravindra c Labuschagne b Cummins 116D. Mitchell c Starc b Zampa 54T. Latham c Hazlewood b Zampa 21G. Phillips c Labuschagne b Maxwell 12J. Neesham run out (Labuschagne/Inglis) 58M. Santner c Maxwell b Zampa 17M. Henry c Hazlewood b Cummins 9T. Boult not out 10L. Ferguson not out 0Extras: (lb4, w22) 26Total (9 wkts; 50 overs) 383Fall of wickets: 11-61 (Conway), 2-72 (Young), 3-168 (Mitchell), 4-222 (Latham), 5-265 (Phillips), 6-293 (Ravindra), 7-320 (Santner), 8-346 (Henry), 9-383 (Neesham)Bowling: Starc 9-0-89-0 (9w), Hazlewood 9-0-70-2 (1w), Cummins 10-0-66-2 (3w), Maxwell 10-0-62-1, Zampa 10-0-74-3, Marsh 2-0-18-0 (1w)Result: Australia won by five runs.