U-15_WC_IN_ENG_1996_14OCT94
A Junior World Cup involving under-15 teams from at least eight countries, will be staged in England in 1996 with a final at Lord's on Aug 24
14-Oct-1994
World cup for under-15s - Christopher Martin-Jenkins
A Junior World Cup involving under-15 teams from at  least  eight
countries,  will  be  staged  in  England in 1996 with a final at
Lord's on Aug 24. The Lombard World  Challenge  was  launched  at
Lord's  yesterday  by  the sponsoring finance company and the English Schools Cricket Association, who will organise  the  event.
Teams  from  England,  Australia,  West  Indies, India, Pakistan,
South Africa, Zimbabwe and Holland will play 55-over  matches  in
two  leagues  based  at Oundle School, near Peterborough, and the
Shell Lensbury Club in London. The top two from each  group  will
play  semi-finals  at  two  Test grounds, probably Headingley and
Trent Bridge. New Zealand and Sri Lanka have also  been  invited.
To  talented  young  cricketers a final at Lord's, especially one
given a "world" label, can only be a wonderful incentive and this
event  should  be seen as such rather than as a serious contribution, in itself,  to  the  development  of  cricket  in  schools.
Nonetheless,  the  ESCA,  who  already organise over 1,000 intercounty matches each summer for boys aged 11 to 19, will  be  keen
to  involve  Lombard in associated activities. ESCA already stage
an under-15 festival each season  and  selection  procedures  are
tried  and  tested.  Had the World Challenge been played in 1972,
David Gower and Mike Gatting would certainly  have  been  in  the
England  side;  a  decade later Graham Thorpe and Mark Ramprakash
would have been involved.  This year David Sales, who at the  age
of  16 made 70 not out for Northamptonshire in their final Sunday
League match three weeks ago, would no doubt have been  England's
leading  player.    Other  countries are not so well organised at
this age-group. Only South Africa and England have yet  organised
representative  cricket  so young. Whether it is the right age is
questionable. As in all school sport, anyone under 15 on  Sept  1
is  eligible, so many of those taking part will already be closer
to 16 when the tournament starts. But had the  Junior  World  Cup
been  pitched at 17 (post GCSE) or 19 (post A level) the physical
and technical development of those involved would have been  more
advanced.  Inevitably only a few of those lucky enough to play at
Lord's in August 1996 will go on to  play  for  their  countries.
That  point  made,  any investment which encourages school cricketers at a time when they may be tempted towards  greener-looking
pastures  must  be  a  good one. Hubert Doggart, ESCA's president
since 1965, said yesterday: "It's an exciting concept  that  will
encourage   excellence  and  be a  memorable experience for those
taking part."
Thanks  ::  The Daily Telegraph