India’s Under-19 side delivered a commanding batting display in the ICC Under-19 World Cup final at Harare Sports Club, amassing a formidable 411 for 9 in their allotted 50 overs against England. The innings was defined by a breathtaking exhibition of power-hitting from 14-year-old Vaibhav Suryabanshi, whose record-breaking performance not only propelled India to a tournament-defining total but also rewrote several pages of youth World Cup history.
Opening with fearless intent, Suryabanshi dismantled England’s bowling attack from the outset. He reached his century from just 55 deliveries, striking eight fours and eight sixes on the way, an extraordinary acceleration on the grandest stage of age-group cricket. The milestone made him the fastest centurion in an Under-19 World Cup final and the second-fastest in the tournament’s overall history. Unmoved by the occasion, he pressed on relentlessly, bringing up 150 in only 71 balls—an astonishing rate in a final, where pressure often tempers aggression.
Suryabanshi’s innings eventually ended at 175 from 80 balls, dismissed by Manny Lumsden, but not before he had struck 15 fours and 15 sixes. Those numbers alone would be remarkable in any limited-overs match; in a World Cup final they assume historic significance. His score is the highest individual total ever recorded in an Under-19 World Cup final and sets a new benchmark for power-hitting in the competition. The 15 sixes in a single innings also represent a tournament record, underlining the scale of his dominance.
The teenager became only the third Indian to score a century in an Under-19 World Cup final, joining Unmukt Chand and Manjot Kalra in an elite club. Beyond the immediate records, the innings carried broader significance. It showcased the modern evolution of youth cricket, where technical foundations are increasingly paired with fearless stroke-play and advanced physical conditioning. For India’s development system, the performance was a ringing endorsement of the depth and readiness of its next generation.
India’s total of 411 placed England under immediate and immense pressure in the chase, setting up a final defined by one of the most explosive individual performances the Under-19 World Cup has witnessed. While team efforts are ultimately decisive in finals, this match will be remembered foremost for Suryabanshi’s extraordinary assault and the four major records he dismantled in a single evening.
Fastest Under-19 World Cup Centuries (by balls faced)
| Balls | Player | Team | Opponent | Venue | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 51 | Will Malajczuk | Australia | Japan | Windhoek | 2026 |
| 55 | Vaibhav Suryabanshi | India | England | Harare | 2026 |
| 63 | Qasim Akram | Pakistan | Sri Lanka | North Sound | 2022 |
| 65 | Ben Mayes | England | Scotland | Harare | 2026 |
| 69 | Raj Bawa | India | Uganda | Takba | 2022 |
Centuries in Under-19 World Cup Finals
| Runs | Player | Team | Opponent | Venue | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 175 | Vaibhav Suryabanshi | India | England | Harare | 2026 |
| 111* | Unmukt Chand | India | Australia | Townsville | 2012 |
| 108 | Brett Williams | Australia | Pakistan | Adelaide | 1988 |
| 107 | Stephen Peters | England | New Zealand | Johannesburg | 1998 |
| 100 | Jared Burke | Australia | South Africa | Lincoln | 2002 |
Most Sixes in an Under-19 World Cup Innings
| Sixes | Player | Team | Opponent | Venue | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 15 | Vaibhav Suryabanshi | India | England | Harare | 2026 |
| 12 | Michael Hill | Australia | Namibia | Penang | 2008 |
| 11 | Craig Simmons | Australia | Kenya | Dunedin | 2002 |
Most Sixes in a Single Under-19 World Cup Tournament
| Sixes | Player | Year |
|---|---|---|
| 30 | Vaibhav Suryabanshi | 2026 |
| 18 | Dewald Brevis | 2022 |
| 18 | Finn Allen | 2016 & 2018 |
| 15 | Jack Burnham | 2016 |
| 14 | Michael Hill | 2008 |
| 14 | Nicholas Pooran | 2014 |
