2010 Under-19 Cricket World Cup

The 2010 ICC Under-19 Cricket World Cup was the eighth edition of the Under-19 Cricket World Cup and took place in New Zealand. Since 1998, the tournament has been held every 2 years. This edition had 16 teams competing in 44 matches between 15 and 30 January 2010. These included the 10 ICC Full Members and 6 Qualifiers. The tournament was originally scheduled to take place in Kenya, but the International Cricket Council (ICC) moved it to New Zealand after an inspection in June 2009 found that it would be unrealistic to expect Kenya to complete preparations in time.

Australia won the tournament, beating Pakistan in the final by 25 runs. South African Dominic Hendricks scored the most runs in the tournament, and Raymond Haoda of Papua New Guinea claimed the most wickets.

Venues
The following venues were used for the tournament:

Teams
16 teams participated in the competition. The 10 nations with ICC Full Membership automatically qualified for the tournament. 6 additional teams were determined by the 2009 Under-19 Cricket World Cup Qualifier.

Groups
The following groups were chosen for the World Cup 2010 by the International Cricket Council. The number alongside gives the rank of the team. The tournament will begin with a league stage consisting of four groups of four. Each team will play each of the other teams in its group once.

Squads
Each country selected a 15-man squad for the tournament.

Group stage

 * All matches to start at 10.30 (NZ Local)
 * New Zealand local Time is GMT+13
 * The top 2 teams from each group qualified for the knock-out rounds of the tournament.
 * The bottom 2 teams from each group take part in a Plate competition knock-out.

Future senior players
Future players that featured for their national team in the tournament were:

Media coverage

 * Supersport (live) – South Africa
 * STAR Cricket (live) – India
 * SKY Sport (live) – New Zealand
 * GEO Super (live) – Pakistan
 * PTV Home (live) – Pakistan
 * Fox Sports (live) – Australia
 * Sky Sports (live) – United Kingdom
 * ART Prime Sports (live) – Middle East