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Player of the Match
Player of the Match

Jaiswal, Ankolekar, Tyagi put India in semi-final as Under-19s show great character

Kartik Tyagi picked up two wickets in the first over of the Australia innings ICC via Getty

India Under-19s 233 for 9 (Jasiwal 62, Ankolekar 55*, Murphy 2-40) beat Australia Under-19s 159 (Fanning 75, Tyagi 4-24, Singh 3-30) by 74 runs

In their chase of 234, Australia received a punch to the gut right at the start, when their in-form opener Jake Fraser-McGurk was run-out for a diamond duck. After that India's right-arm quick Kartik Tyagi delivered three blows in his first two overs to put Australia down for the count which they couldn't ever recover from, eventually losing to the defending champions by 74 runs at the first quarter-final in Potchefstroom. India's win sets them up for a semi-final clash against the winners of the quarter-final between Afghanistan and Pakistan, while Australia can now, at best, finish fifth in the tournament.

Tyagi, consistently clocking speeds in upwards of 135kph, was given the responsibility of beginning India's defense. His first delivery was driven by Sam Fanning to mid-off, but he took off for a single while Fraser-McGurk was watching the ball and as a result was run-out without facing a ball. By the end of the over, Australia's misery had compounded thrice over, with their captain Mackenzie Harvey lbw to a full delivery - although it pitched outside leg stump - and Lachlan Hearne bowled for a first-ball duck to Tyagi's yorker.

Tyagi's second over was equally menacing albeit only half as rewarding, with the Australia batsmen playing and missing before No. 5 Oliver Davies edged a drive into the hands of Yashasvi Jaiswal in the slips. From 14 for 4, it was going to be a mammoth effort for Australia to win the game, especially after Tyagi struck again in his second spell, dismissing Patrick Rowe in the 21st over as his fourth scalp, to reduce the batting side to 68 for 5.

But Australia were not willing to give up just yet. Fanning and No. 7 Liam Scott - who wasn't in the XI but was batting as a concussion substitute following Corey Kelly's injury while fielding - put on 81 for the sixth wicket. The partnership made India nervous, with India captain Priyam Garg shouting "body language, guys" to keep his team-mates zoned into the game. Fanning held up one end while Scott played more freely, but soon after the latter hit a six over midwicket, he was out caught-behind by legspinner Ravi Bishnoi in the 41st over. The score of 149 for 6, however, soon became 155 for 9 following a team hat-trick.

In the 42th over, Fanning was dismissed by an Akash Singh short ball for 75. The next ball Australia were eight down as Tanveer Sangha's attempted jab-and-run didn't pay off. Wicketkeeper Dhruv Jurel picked the stray ball and aimed at the stumps with an underarm throw, effecting his fourth dismissal of the day, running Connor Sully out. Singh then cranked up the pace to No. 10 Todd Murphy to bowl him for a duck. It wasn't long before Australia folded for 159, igniting celebrations from the handful of India fans who were present at the ground.

In the first innings, India - asked to bat - had begun steadily but lost three wickets in the space of 21 runs to be reduced from 35 for 0 to 54 for 3 inside 16 overs. Seamers Kelly and Sully dismissed opener Divyaansh Saxena and Garg cheaply, while offspinner Murphy removed the No. 3 Tilak Verma.

A brief recovery from India followed. Opener Jaiswal, scoring his third fifty in four World Cup games, combined in a 48-run fourth-wicket with Siddhesh Veer, but he was bowled by Sangha's legspin just after the team crossed 100 in the 26th over. Murphy then deceived wicketkeeper-batsman Jurel with a loopy delivery that took his outside edge to take his second wicket, and when Veer's attempted pull was top-edged to third man, India were at 144 for 6 with 12 overs to go.

At that stage, it looked like India wouldn't last the full 50 overs with Australia's bowlers having exposed the lower order, but allrounder Atharva Ankolekar got together with Bishnoi to drag India past 200. Bishnoi, who made 30 in 31 balls, was eventually run-out in the 48th over with India searching for quick runs, but Ankolekar provided a flourishing finish for India, reaching his half-century with a six in the last over.

Ankolekar and Bishnoi ran their twos hard and found the occasional boundaries. Their 61-run stand for the seventh wicket came in 59 deliveries and raised India's run-rate significantly. In their last two overs, Ankolekar and the last two batsmen scored 24 runs and India finished on 233 for 9. India had wrested the momentum from Australia by the end of the innings and after Tyagi's three wickets in the first two overs of the chase, they always remained ahead in the game.

AUS Under-19 2nd innings Partnerships

WktRunsPlayers
1st0J Fraser-McGurkS Fanning
2nd4MW HarveyS Fanning
3rd0S FanningLD Hearne
4th13O DaviesS Fanning
5th51P RoweS Fanning
6th81L ScottS Fanning
7th6C SullyS Fanning
8th0C SullyT Sangha
9th0T SanghaT Murphy
10th4T SanghaM Willans

Under-19s World Cup

Super Sixes, Group 1
TeamMWLPTNRR
IND1922043.46
PAK1922040.288
BD1921121.008
IRE1921120.169
NEP192020-2.859
NZ192020-3.103
Super Sixes, Group 2
TeamMWLPTNRR
SA1922043.126
AUS1921034.583
WI1921030.067
ENG1921120.486
SL192020-1.223
ZIM192020-3.424
Group A
TeamMWLPTNRR
IND1933063.24
BD1932140.374
IRE193122-0.778
USA193030-3.244
Group B
TeamMWLPTNRR
SA1932141.11
ENG1932140.895
WI1932140.653
SCO193030-3.104
Group C
TeamMWLPTNRR
AUS1933062.606
SL1932140.898
ZIM193122-1.816
NAM193030-1.607
Group D
TeamMWLPTNRR
PAK1933062.18
NZ1932140.387
NEP193122-0.351
AFG193030-2.008