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Pakistan eye
hat-trick as teens take centre stage
KUALA LUMPUR—Pakistan will bid for a third successive title when
cricket’s future stars take part in the under-19 World Cup, which starts
in Malaysia on Sunday.
The 16-nation tournament, featuring the most promising talent from
around the world, has in the past provided a fair indication of the
likely contenders for the big stage. Former Test captains Brian Lara of
the West Indies, Sanath Jayasuriya of Sri Lanka, Inzamam-ul Haq of
Pakistan and Nasser Hussain of England burst on the scene at the
inaugural event in 1988. West Indian Chris Gayle emerged when the
tournament was relaunched in 1998 and since then the two-yearly event
has thrown up stars such as Yuvraj Singh, Chris Cairns, Graeme Smith,
Michael Clarke and Mohammad Ashraful.
International Cricket Council chief executive Malcolm Speed said at
Friday’s opening ceremony that he was excited at the new talent the
tournament will unearth. “This event is designed to be a finishing
school for young cricketers,” he said. “It’s an opportunity for these
young players to test their skills against their peers from around the
world.
“But it is about more than that. It’s about receiving education on
matters of anti-corruption and anti-doping, it’s about learning how to
cope with questions from the media and generally being in the spotlight.
“It’s about managing to perform to the best of your ability in the midst
of all the necessary distractions that go along with events like this.
“In short, it’s about becoming well-rounded sportsmen.”
The competition has often been tougher and more unpredictable than at
the senior level, where Australia are the undisputed champions in both
Test and one-day cricket with three successive World Cup titles. At the
junior level, the young Aussies have won just one of the past five World
Cups since 1998. England and India have both taken it home once, while
Pakistan have been the dominant force of late.
They won the 2004 event in Bangladesh with a 25-run victory over the
West Indies, before conjuring a stunning upset over arch-rivals India
two years later in Sri Lanka. In a sensational final at Colombo’s
Premadasa stadium, the feisty Pakistanis defended a modest total of 109
by reducing India to 9-6 by the fourth over before skittling them for 71
in just 18.5 overs.
The three seamers who fashioned Pakistan’s win — Jamshed Ahmed (2-24),
Anwar Ali (5-35) and Akhtar Ayub (3-9) — have yet to play at the senior
level, but India gave its young talent an early break. Leg-spinner
Piyush Chawla, who took four wickets and scored an unbeaten 25 in the
final, was playing a Test against England a month later and captain
Rohit Sharma is now a one-day and Twenty20 regular.
Young guns are not daunted by reputations. In 2006, cricketing
non-entity Nepal stunned South Africa in the preliminary league and went
on to beat New Zealand in the Plate final — held for teams who failed to
qualify for the knockout stages.
Three cities, Kuala Lumpur, Johor and Penang, will host the tournament,
which ends on March 2. The 10 regular cricket nations — Australia,
England, India, Pakistan, the West Indies, Sri Lanka, South Africa, New
Zealand, Bangladesh and Zimbabwe — will be joined by five qualifiers and
hosts Malaysia.
The regional qualifiers are Namibia (Africa), Nepal (Asia), Papua New
Guinea (East Asia-Pacific), Ireland (Europe) and Bermuda
(Americas).—Agencies |