Harman Patil (Editor)

1988 Youth Cricket World Cup

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Administrator(s)
  
ICC

Tournament format(s)
  
Round-robin, finals

Champions
  
Australia (1st title)

Cricket format
  
U19 ODI (50-over)

Host(s)
  
Australia

Dates
  
28 February – 13 March 1988

The 1988 McDonald's Bicentennial Youth World Cup was an international cricket tournament played in Australia from 28 February to 13 March 1988. Sponsored by McDonald's, it was the inaugural edition of what is now the Under-19 Cricket World Cup, and formed part of the celebrations for the Australian Bicentenary.

Contents

The tournament was primarily organised by the Australian Cricket Board (ACB), with only limited oversight from the International Cricket Conference (ICC). Eight teams participated, with the seven Test-playing ICC members joined by a composite team of players from ICC associate members. Australia defeated Pakistan in the final by five wickets, with England and the West Indies being the losing semi-finalists. The tournament play-offs were held at Adelaide Oval, with the other matches held at country venues in the states of New South Wales, South Australia, and Victoria. Australia's Brett Williams was the leading run-scorer at the tournament, while his teammate Wayne Holdsworth and Pakistan's Mushtaq Ahmed were the joint leading wicket-takers.

Squads

Players at the tournament had to be 18 years or younger on 1 January 1987, restricting participation to those born after 1 January 1968.

Points table

  • Note: run rate (adjusted to a team's full allocation of overs if all out) was used as a tiebreaker if teams finished on an equal number of points, rather than net run rate (as is now common).
  • Most runs

    The top five runscorers are included in this table, ranked by runs scored and then by batting average.

    Source: CricketArchive

    Most wickets

    The top five wickettakers are listed in this table, ranked by wickets taken and then by bowling average.

    Source: CricketArchive

    References

    1988 Youth Cricket World Cup Wikipedia