It has been a transformation akin to one of those TV architecture shows, where some utter carbuncle of a 1950s bungalow is dramatically turned into a modern family home that suddenly sits as the envy of the entire street. England, if you have remained behind the sofa ever since their pitiful World Cup exit in 2015, go into the tournament on home soil (whisper it) as favourites, having spent the past four years under Eoin Morgan’s flint-eyed leadership soaring to the top of the rankings in a blaze of fours and sixes. No team has clubbed the white Kookaburra ball past or over the boundary rope more times than Morgan’s hell-raisers during this period, nor can anyone match their run-rate of 6.29. In 88 ODIs since March 2015 they have put 300-plus runs on the board 38 times – 16 more than the next best, India – and claimed 15 wins and one draw from 19 bilateral series along the way. Morgan is the key, having held on to his job as captain after the 2015 catastrophe and – along with the head coach, Trevor Bayliss – persuaded a talented group of ball-strikers there truly are no limits. He has…