2002 Under-19 Cricket World Cup
Administrator(s) | International Cricket Council |
---|---|
Cricket format | One Day International |
Tournament format(s) | Round-robin and Knockout |
Host(s) | New Zealand |
Champions | Australia (2nd title) |
Participants | 16 |
Most runs | Cameron White (423) |
Most wickets | Xavier Doherty (16) |
The 2002 Under-19 Cricket World Cup[1] was played in New Zealand from 19 January-9 February 2002. In all 16 sides competed in the tournament with Australia defeating South Africa in the final. Zimbabwe's Tatenda Taibu was named Man of the Tournament.
Future players that featured for their national team in the tournament were:
Australia - Cameron White, George Bailey, Beau Casson, Daniel Christian, Xavier Doherty, Shaun Marsh and Mark Cosgrove
Bangladesh - Aftab Ahmed, Mohammad Ashraful, Nafees Iqbal, Talha Jubair and Mashrafe Mortaza
Canada - Ashish Bagai and Umar Bhatti
England - Tim Bresnan, Nick Compton and Samit Patel
India - Parthiv Patel, Irfan Pathan and Stuart Binny
Kenya - Hiren Varaiya, Rajesh Bhudia, Nehemiah Odhiambo, Alfred Luseno, Ragheb Aga, Morris Ouma and Kalpesh Patel
Namibia - Stefan Swanepoel and Burton van Rooi
Nepal - Basant Regmi, Kanishka Chaugai, Manoj Katuwal, Manjeet Shrestha, Sanjam Regmi and Shakti Gauchan
New Zealand - Ross Taylor, Michael Bates, Neil Broom, Rob Nicol and Jesse Ryder (Peter Borren also represented New Zealand but went on to play international cricket for Netherlands)
Pakistan - Salman Butt, Junaid Zia, Azhar Ali, Najaf Shah, Faisal Iqbal, Hasan Raza, Yasir Arafat, Irfan Fazil, Humayun Farhat, Mohammad Khalil and Umar Gul
Scotland - Kyle Coetzer and Moneeb Iqbal
South Africa - Hashim Amla, Ryan McLaren, Rory Kleinveldt, Stephen Cook and Imraan Khan
Sri Lanka - Jeewan Mendis, Upul Tharanga, Dhammika Prasad and Farveez Maharoof
West Indies - Dwayne Bravo, Ravi Rampaul, Darren Sammy, Narsingh Deonarine, Gavin Tonge, Donovan Pagon, Shane Shillingford and Lendl Simmons
Zimbabwe - Elton Chigumbura, Charles Coventry, Stuart Matsikenyeri, Brendan Taylor, Waddington Mwayenga, Tatenda Taibu, Sean Ervine and Hamilton Masakadza
References
External links
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