So the Under 19 World Cup is finished for us now. We finished 11th. Definitely not our best ever Under 19 cohort but there were some significant mitigating factors including 4 of our better players not being available due to COVID and us being stuck in the group of death. Without a couple of dropped catches against Sri Lanka we might have made it to the quarter finals. But we then went and spoilt that with a brainless batting display against the UAE spinners (who in fairness were very impressive).
Still, thanks to Cricket West Indies upping it's game on the tech front, I have managed to watch more of this group than any others via live streams. So I can make fairly well informed assessments on a few of them.
Firstly, the Under 19 team management are not immune to crazy selection calls. They dropped their third best batter Anderson Amurdan (a guy who made the most runs at trials) at the last minute for Shaq Parris. Having watched both of them, I'm still not sure why.
The Positives:
Ackeem Auguste played one innings before getting COVID, a wonderful 50 against Australia when all the others struggled to time the ball. He is the most naturally gifted of this group, lets hope he learns to consistently construct an innings rather than play the shot or cameo of the day.
Teddy Bishop has been the most consistent batsman across all the trials, Youth ODI's and World Cup, scoring 2 hundreds. After all those matches he averages 46 with a strike rate in the mid 80's. Both he and Auguste are in the Windward Islands FC squad and I can't wait to see how they do.
Kevin Wickham came in as a COVID replacement, having missed most of the trials with injury. In 4 innings he averaged 80, scoring one hundred and 2 50's. He's a tall, elegant middle order batsman and just looked like he knew how to score runs. He has been scoring in Barbados senior club cricket since he was 16, so I hope he gets some FC exposure soon.
Matthew Nandu didn't have the World Cup we thought he would, but you could see during the England tour and the 128 versus PNG that he is like a mini Shiv. Definitely something to work with.
Isaiah Thorne did not take many wickets but if you watched him you would see a big, tall 17 year old already bowling up to the mid 80mph range and swinging the ball prodigiously both ways when he gets it right. He has a lot to work with but for now is a bit wild.
Shiva Shankar and Johann Layne are decent new ball swing bowlers of no great pace but good skill and accuracy. Layne is also a freakishly big hitter, like a young Pollard.
The negatives:
Rivaldo Clarke and Givonte Depeiza were two of the standouts from the trials, scoring lots of runs quickly. But both struggled at Youth ODI level. Clarke played a really good knock against Sri Lanka, but that's about it. Givonte has barely scored a run. I also thought our spinners Mahase and Amory looked ordinary compared to some of the other teams, although in fariness Amory missed quite a few matches with COVID. McKenney Clarke also looked good in the trials, bowling quickly and accurately, but was very inconsistent in the matches that followed.
I guess overall it's a slightly odd feeling because 11th is disappointing but I have a feeling quite a few of this batch might eventually make decent FC and even international players, which I guess is the whole point of the process!