News

Under 19 World Cup Day 6 – Scotland show plenty of fight but fall short against Australia.

Half-centuries by Charlie Tear and Tomas Mackintosh set Scotland’s Under-19s on the path to a decent total against Australia in Basseterre on Wednesday, but the Scottish attack could not prevent their opponents cruising to a comfortable seven-wicket victory with more than ten overs to spare.

Tear (54) and Oliver Davidson (33) gave their side a great start with an opening stand of 88 at four and a half an over, and after both had departed Mackintosh continued the good work in partnership first with Sam Elstone and then with Jack Jarvis.

There were almost eleven overs left when Mackintosh fell to Aidan Cahill, also for 54, and useful contributions from Jarvis (27) and Muhaymen Majeed (26 not out) enabled the Scots to finish with 236 for eight.

William Salzmann took two for 38 for Australia as well as being involved in two run-outs, while Cahill finished with two for 33.

The Australians were untroubled in their reply, however, with Teague Wyllie hitting an unbeaten 101 and sharing an opening partnership of 101 with Campbell Kellaway (47).

When Kellaway was trapped in front by Oliver Davidson, Wyllie proceeded to add a further 97 with Cahill before the latter was bowled by Davidson for 72, plundered from just 45 deliveries with seven four and four sixes. 26 of those runs came from a single over from Jarvis, in which Cahill smashed two fours and three sixes.

Charlie Peet had Australian skipper Cooper Connolly caught behind by Tear for 11, but now only eleven were needed for victory, and Isaac Higgins stayed to the end with Wyllie, who brought up his century with a six off Rafay Khan before Higgins completed the win with a boundary.

Wyllie faced 115 balls and hit eight fours and two sixes. Davidson finished with two for 45 from his ten overs.

Although competitive in two of their three games – all against seasoned Full Members – Scotland finish the Group stage winless and will now compete in the plate competition.

You’re reading Emerging Cricket — brought to you by a passionate group of volunteers with a vision for cricket to be a truly global sport, and a mission to inspire passion to grow the game.

Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, please subscribe for regular updates, and follow EC on TwitterFacebookLinkedIn and YouTube.

Don’t know where to start? Check out our features listcountry profiles, and subscribe to our podcast.

Support us from US$2 a month — and get exclusive benefits, by becoming an EC Patron.


Rod Lyall

Retired academic, now a journalist and commentator, mainly covering Dutch international and domestic cricket.

Recent Posts

Sharafu, Ayaan and Rohid shine in ILT20 but playing opportunities remain limited for UAE cricketers

"If you look at what we're doing in the UAE, we are investing heavily into…

1 week ago

EC Roundup – 09 February 2025 – Pathway events resume

Welcome to this week’s Emerging Cricket Roundup, condensing all the major news into one easy-to-digest…

2 weeks ago

EC Roundup – 02 February 2025 – Nigeria’s successful U19 World Cup and some reflections on the event

Welcome to this week’s Emerging Cricket Roundup, condensing all the major news into one easy-to-digest…

3 weeks ago

Joy for Associates at U19 World Cup

It has been a positive week for the associate cohort at the ongoing Women’s U19…

4 weeks ago

Dutch domestic competitions get big shake-up

Significant changes are afoot in Dutch domestic cricket, with the top three divisions reverting to…

1 month ago

U19 World Cup qualification a reward for Nigeria’s investment in women’s cricket

The Female Yellow Greens needed eight runs against their fancied opponent, the Victoria Pearls of…

1 month ago