ICC U19 Cricket World Cup Europe Qualifier

ICC U19 Cricket World Cup Europe Qualifier (formerly ICC Europe Under-19 Championships) are a series of regular cricket tournaments organised by the International Cricket Council (ICC) as the European qualifier for the Under-19 Cricket World Cup. The tournament was originally organised by the European Cricket Council (ECC). Traditionally there have always been two divisions though the nature of these divisions has varied strongly over the years.

ICC U19 Cricket World Cup Europe Qualifier
AdministratorInternational Cricket Council
FormatOne Day
First edition1999
Tournament formatRound-robin
Number of teams15 (from 2011)
Current champion Scotland
Most successful Scotland (9 titles)
2024 ICC Under-19 Cricket World Cup qualification

History edit

[1]

The first edition of the tournament was played in 1999 in Northern Ireland. The teams were split across two divisions, the more developed cricketing nations of Ireland, Scotland, Netherlands and Denmark joining England in the A Championship and three other associates, Gibraltar, Italy and Germany forming the B Championship. England won the tournament easily and would not participate again.

Following this inaugural competition, the higher, eventually referred to as Division One, was played every year between Ireland, Scotland, Netherlands and Denmark. Every other year, the Division Two tournament was also played alongside. In 2003, France debuted in the second division, later joined by Belgium and Israel in 2005 and by Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man in 2007.

In 2003, a different approach was taken with all the teams across both divisions participating in a preliminary qualification round. However, this did not affect the make-up of the divisions whatsoever as the four more developed nations easily overpowered the others and cemented their position in Division One. After this the system was abandoned and the old format was reintroduced the following year.

A fresh initiative for the 2006 edition was a new two-day format for Division One. The aim of this was to provide the players with some practice for the style of multi-day play encountered in the Intercontinental Cup. The one-day format returned the following year.[2]

2007 saw the two divisions being played separately for the first time when Division One was located in Ireland, but the nine-team Division Two was played in Jersey. This was Jersey's first ever European cricket competition.

Another change was made to the division format in 2009 when Jersey and Guernsey were relocated into Division One. This evened out the number of teams across the divisions and a win from Jersey over Denmark demonstrated their ability to play in the top flight. As a result, the two teams remained for the 2010 tournament where both teams performed even better than the previous year.

Plans have been unveiled that in 2011, for the first time, there will be a chance of promotion from Division Two. The total number of participants will also be increased from thirteen to fifteen.[3]

Tournament results edit

Division One edit

Year Host(s) Venue(s) Result
Winner Margin Runner-up
1999   Northern Ireland Belfast   England
185/5 (43.2 overs)
England won by 5 wickets
(needed 184 in 48 overs) scorecard
  Ireland
190/8 (50 overs)
2000   England Northampton   Ireland
6 points
Ireland won on points
table
  Netherlands
2 points
2001   Scotland Edinburgh   Scotland
6 points
Scotland won on points
table
  Ireland
4 points
2002   England Oundle   Scotland
6 points
Scotland won on points
table
  Denmark
4 points
2003   Netherlands Deventer   Ireland
6 points
Ireland won on points
table
  Scotland
2 points
2004   England Oundle   Ireland
4 points
Ireland and Scotland drew on points
table
  Scotland
4 points
2005   Scotland Dundee   Scotland
6 points
Scotland won on points
table
  Ireland
4 points
2006   Northern Ireland Belfast   Ireland
59 points
Ireland won on points
table
  Scotland
37 points
2007   Northern Ireland Belfast   Ireland
6 points
Ireland won on points
table
  Scotland
4 points
2008   Scotland Glasgow   Scotland
+3.49 NRR
Scotland won on net run rate
table
  Ireland
+1.22 NRR
2009   Jersey various   Ireland
+1.69 NRR
Ireland won on net run rate
table
  Netherlands
+1.45 NRR
2010   Northern Ireland Belfast   Scotland
10 points
Scotland won on points
table
  Ireland
8 points
2013   Netherlands various   Scotland
10 points
Scotland won on points
table
  Ireland
6 points
2015   Jersey various   Scotland
+1.036 NRR
Scotland won on net run rate
table
  Ireland
+0.793 NRR
2017   Jersey various   Ireland
12 points
Ireland won on points
table
  Scotland
8 points
2019   Netherlands various   Scotland
10 points
Scotland won on points
table
  Ireland
8 points
2021   Spain Almería   Ireland
144
Ireland won by 78 runs
scorecard
  Scotland
66
2023   Netherlands various   Scotland
9 points
Scotland won on points
table
  Guernsey
5 points

Division Two edit

Year Host Venue(s) Final
Winner Result Runner-up
1999   Northern Ireland Belfast   Gibraltar
7 points
Gibraltar won on points
table
  Italy
5 points
2001   Scotland Edinburgh   Germany
6 points
Germany won on points
table
  Italy
4 points
2003   Netherlands Deventer   Germany
6 points
Germany won on points
table
  Italy
4 points
2005   Scotland Dundee   Gibraltar
10 points
Gibraltar won on points
table
  Israel
8 points
2007   Jersey various   Jersey
4 points
Jersey won on points
table
  Guernsey
2 points
2009   Belgium Antwerp   Belgium
+1.71 (NRR)
Belgium won on net run rate
table
  Isle of Man
+1.67 (NRR)
2011   Isle of Man various   Denmark
140 (39 overs)
Denmark won by 60 runs
scorecard
  Isle of Man
80 (34.2 overs)
2014   England Essex   Jersey
+3.29 (NRR)
Jersey won on net run rate
table
  Netherlands
+2.69 (NRR)
2016   Netherlands various   Denmark
12 points
Denmark won on points
table
  Netherlands
6 points
2018   England various   Netherlands
281/6 (50 overs)
Netherlands won by 154 runs
scorecard
  France
127 (40.5 overs)
2022   Guernsey various   Italy
170/4 (38 overs)
Italy won by 6 wickets
scorecard
  Guernsey
169 (47 overs)

Participating teams (Division One) edit

Legend
  • 1st – Champions
  • 2nd – Runners-up
  • 3rd – Third place
  •     – Hosts
  • X – Qualified but withdrew
Team  
1999
 
2000
 
2001
 
2002
 
2003
 
2004
 
2005
 
2006
 
2007
 
2008
 
2009
 
2010
 
2013
 
2015
 
2017
 
2019
 
2021
 
2023
Total
  Denmark 6th 3rd 4th 2nd 3rd 4th 4th 4th 4th 4th 5th 6th 5th 4th 5th X 15
  England 1st Automatically qualified 1
  France 6th 1
  Guernsey 6th 5th 6th X 2nd 4
  Ireland 2nd 1st 2nd 3rd 1st 1st 2nd 1st 1st 2nd 1st 2nd 2nd 2nd 1st 2nd 1st AQ 17
  Italy 6th 1
  Jersey 4th 3rd 4th 3rd 3rd 3rd 4th 3rd 8
  Netherlands 3rd 2nd 3rd 4th 4th 3rd 3rd 3rd 2nd 3rd 2nd 4th 3rd 4th 4th 3rd 4th 17
  Norway 5th 1
  Scotland 4th 4th 1st 1st 2nd 2nd 1st 2nd 2nd 1st 3rd 1st 1st 1st 2nd 1st 2nd 1st 18

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ European Under 19 Cricket Championships icc-europe.org
  2. ^ Tournament Preview icc-europe.org
  3. ^ ICC Europe Tournaments Archived 7 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine icc-europe.org 18 February 2011