Published on 04:09 PM, February 11, 2015

World Cup-winning benchwarmers

5 players who didn't get a game in their teams' winning campaigns

Mitchell Johnson was Australia's fifth-choice fast bowler in the 2007 squad. Photo: AFP

Malcolm Marshall, 1979

Twenty-one-year-old Marshall couldn't break into the XI, as West Indies played unchanged through the tournament. With Andy Roberts, Joel Garner, Michael Holding and Colin Croft forming the pace machine, Marshall had to wait for his time in the limelight.

Mitchell Johnson, 2007

Much like with Marshall in 1979, the 2007 tournament came in the early days of Johnson's career. It didn't help that Australia put together the most dominant World Cup campaign of all. Even with Brett Lee out injured, Australia could call on Glenn McGrath, Shaun Tait and Nathan Bracken.

Brad Haddin, 2007

Adam Gilchrist went from the start to the finish of his 96-Test career without missing a game, and there was little chance of him missing a match in the 2007 World Cup, in which he signed off with a brutal 149 in the final. Haddin's first World Cup game came in 2011.

Collis King, 1975

King was part of two World Cup squads, and on both occasions he ended up as a winner. His contributions varied vastly, however. In the 1979 final, King was in such scintillating form that he left even Viv Richards in the shade. In 1975, he was yet to make his international debut, and watched the whole of the first World Cup from the bench.

Larry Gomes, 1979

Like King, Gomes would play a pivotal role in a World Cup four years after he carried drinks all through one. In 1983, he made three steady fifties to average 64.50 besides filling in the fifth-bowler's slot. In 1979, he, like Marshall, couldn't get a game.