Skip to main content

ICC U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup is not just a youth cricket tournament. But it’s where tomorrow’s stars step on the world’s cricket stage for the first time to prove the cricketing talent of their respective countries. Although these players are under nineteen years, the passion to represent their countries and showcase their potential burns bright inside each of the players. They step onto the U19 World Cup stage to set new records, and nations discover their budding heroes. Ranging from witnessing dominant champions to unforgettable individual feats, this tournament has seen it all while silently shaping cricket into what we know it today.

ICC U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup Schedule

Group Stage

Date Start Time (local) Team 1 Team 2 Venue
15/01/2026 09:30 United States India Queens Sports Club (Bulawayo)
15/01/2026 09:30 Zimbabwe Scotland Takashinga Sports Club (Harare)
15/01/2026 09:30 Tanzania West Indies High Performance Oval (Windhoek)
16/01/2026 09:30 Pakistan England Takashinga Sports Club (Harare)
16/01/2026 09:30 Australia Ireland Namibia Cricket Ground (Windhoek)
16/01/2026 09:30 Afghanistan South Africa High Performance Oval (Windhoek)
17/01/2026 09:30 India Bangladesh Queens Sports Club (Bulawayo)
17/01/2026 09:30 Japan Sri Lanka Namibia Cricket Ground (Windhoek)
18/01/2026 09:30 New Zealand United States Queens Sports Club (Bulawayo)
18/01/2026 09:30 England Zimbabwe Takashinga Sports Club (Harare)
18/01/2026 09:30 West Indies Afghanistan High Performance Oval (Windhoek)
19/01/2026 09:30 Pakistan Scotland Takashinga Sports Club (Harare)
19/01/2026 09:30 Sri Lanka Ireland Namibia Cricket Ground (Windhoek)
19/01/2026 09:30 South Africa Tanzania High Performance Oval (Windhoek)
20/01/2026 09:30 Bangladesh New Zealand Queens Sports Club (Bulawayo)
20/01/2026 09:30 Australia Japan Namibia Cricket Ground (Windhoek)
21/01/2026 09:30 England Scotland Takashinga Sports Club (Harare)
21/01/2026 09:30 Afghanistan Tanzania High Performance Oval (Windhoek)
22/01/2026 09:30 Zimbabwe Pakistan Takashinga Sports Club (Harare)
22/01/2026 09:30 Ireland Japan Namibia Cricket Ground (Windhoek)
22/01/2026 09:30 West Indies South Africa High Performance Oval (Windhoek)
23/01/2026 09:30 Bangladesh United States Takashinga Sports Club (Harare)
23/01/2026 09:30 Sri Lanka Australia Namibia Cricket Ground (Windhoek)
24/01/2026 09:30 India New Zealand Queens Sports Club (Bulawayo)

Super 6 and KO Stage

Date Start Time (local) Team 1 Team 2 Venue
24/01/2026 09:30 A4 D4 High Performance Oval (Windhoek)
25/01/2026 09:30 A1 D3 Namibia Cricket Ground (Windhoek)
25/01/2026 09:30 D2 A3 High Performance Oval (Windhoek)
26/01/2026 09:30 B4 C4 Harare Sports Club (Harare)
26/01/2026 09:30 C1 B2 Queens Sports Club (Bulawayo)
26/01/2026 09:30 D1 A2 Namibia Cricket Ground (Windhoek)
27/01/2026 09:30 C2 B3 Harare Sports Club (Harare)
27/01/2026 09:30 C3 B1 Queens Sports Club (Bulawayo)
28/01/2026 09:30 A1 D2 Harare Sports Club (Harare)
29/01/2026 09:30 D3 A2 Queens Sports Club (Bulawayo)
30/01/2026 09:30 D1 A3 Harare Sports Club (Harare)
30/01/2026 09:30 B3 C1 Queens Sports Club (Bulawayo)
31/01/2026 09:30 B2 C3 Harare Sports Club (Harare)
1/2/2026 09:30 B1 C2 Queens Sports Club (Bulawayo)
3/2/2026 09:30 TBC TBC Queens Sports Club (Bulawayo)
4/2/2026 09:30 TBC TBC Harare Sports Club (Harare)
6/2/2026 09:30 TBC TBC Harare Sports Club (Harare)

Let’s dive into every detail you should know about the U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup that makes this event inherently special.

Australia vs India: A Competitive Rivalry That Defines the Tournament

India and Australia are the two title contenders who stand tall in the U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup with their dominant victories.

India remains the most successful nation in the tournament’s history. With five titles, India has won more U19 World Cups than any other team. Their most recent triumph came in 2022, reinforcing their youth cricket potential.

Whereas Australia are the defending champions who defeated India in the 2024 final to lift their fourth U19 World Cup title, and their first since 2010. That win proved that Australia, too, has skilled big-match cricket players, even at the junior U19 level. Furthermore, Pakistan has claimed the title twice as of yet and is aiming to secure its third title with the upcoming U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup 2026.

Big Runs, Bigger Names: Batting Records That Still Shine

U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup has produced some of the biggest names in world cricket, who first made headlines, such as:

Former England captain Eoin Morgan holds the record for most career runs in the tournament’s history. Representing Ireland in 2004 and 2006, Morgan scored 606 runs, long before becoming a World Cup-winning captain for England.

Just two players have scored 500+ runs in an edition of the ICC U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup: Shikhar Dhawan, who managed 505 runs in 2004, before Dewald Brevis snuck past that record by hitting 506 runs in 2022. Both of these players’ performances announced the arrival of elite talent of their time to the cricketing world.

Bowling Magic and Record-Breaking Partnerships

While batters have grabbed all the attention. Bowlers have had their moments of magic on the pitch, too.

Australia’s Lloyd Pope has the best bowling record in Under-19 World Cup history. In 2018, he delivered an outstanding performance against England by taking 8 wickets for just 35 runs. In that same match, Lloyd Pope had also dismissed Harry Brook, Will Jacks, and Tom Banton, who later went on to become international cricketers for England.

Furthermore, on the batting partnership front, England’s Dan Lawrence and Jack Burnham had set an unmatched record in 2016 of a massive 303 runs for the second wicket against Fiji. It was the highest partnership ever in the tournament of U19.

Team Records – Overall Results

Team Appearances Titles Played Won Lost Tie NR Win %
India 15 5 96 75 20 0 1 79%
Australia 14 4 92 67 21 0 4 76%
Pakistan 15 2 91 66 24 0 1 73%
Bangladesh 14 1 87 58 26 1 2 69%
West Indies 15 1 94 57 35 0 2 62%
South Africa 14 1 85 56 27 0 1 67%
England 15 1 87 53 33 0 1 62%
Sri Lanka 15 0 91 49 41 0 1 54%
New Zealand 14 0 82 37 43 0 2 46%
Zimbabwe 14 0 85 37 48 0 0 44%
Ireland 11 0 66 24 41 1 0 37%
Nepal 8 0 48 22 25 0 1 47%
Afghanistan 8 0 44 21 23 0 0 48%
Scotland 10 0 57 14 43 0 0 25%
Namibia 10 0 57 10 46 1 0 18%
Canada 8 0 46 8 35 1 2 21%
UAE 3 0 18 7 11 0 0 39%
Kenya 4 0 23 6 17 0 0 26%
Uganda 3 0 18 4 14 0 0 22%
PNG 9 0 52 3 49 0 0 6%
United States 3 0 15 2 12 0 1 14%
Denmark 1 0 6 2 4 0 0 33%
Netherlands 1 0 6 1 4 0 1 20%
Hong Kong 1 0 6 1 5 0 0 17%
Bermuda 1 0 5 1 4 0 0 20%
Nigeria 1 0 6 1 5 0 0 17%
Malaysia 1 0 5 1 4 0 0 20%
Fiji 1 0 6 0 6 0 0 0%
Japan 1 0 6 0 5 0 1 0%

Team Records – Results by Tournament

Team 1988 1998 2000 2002 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 2020 2022 2024
Afghanistan 16th 10th 7th 9th 4th 7th 4th R1
Australia W 4th 4th W 10th 3rd 6th W 2nd 4th 2nd 6th 3rd W
Bangladesh 9th 10th 11th 9th 5th 8th 9th 7th 9th 3rd 6th W 8th R2
Bermuda 15th
Canada 15th 15th 11th 15th 15th 12th 13th 15th
Denmark 13th
England 4th W 6th 7th 4th 4th 5th 8th 5th 3rd 6th 7th 9th 2nd R2
Fiji 16th
Hong Kong 14th
India 6th 5th W 3rd 3rd 2nd W 6th W 5th 2nd W 2nd W 2nd
Ireland 14th 12th 11th 13th 13th 10th 12th 13th 13th 10th R2
Japan 16th
Kenya 11th 13th 14th 15th
Malaysia 16th
Namibia 15th 15th 12th 15th 11th 16th 14th 7th 14th R1
Netherlands 14th
Nepal 8th 10th 13th 9th 10th 13th 8th R2
New Zealand 7th 2nd 7th 6th 8th 10th 4th 7th 4th 10th 12th 8th 4th R2
Nigeria 15th
Pakistan 2nd 7th 3rd 5th W W 3rd 2nd 8th 2nd 5th 3rd 3rd 5th SF
PNG 16th 16th 16th 12th 12th 14th 16th 16th 15th
South Africa 3rd 9th 2nd 7th 11th 2nd 5th 3rd W 11th 5th 8th 7th SF
Scotland 12th 13th 12th 16th 11th 13th 14th 12th 14th R1
Sri Lanka 5th 6th 2nd 8th 5th 6th 7th 4th 9th 8th 4th 9th 10th 6th R2
Tanzania
Uganda 14th 14th 13th
UAE 12th 14th 9th
United States 12th 15th R1
West Indies 3rd 10th 5th 4th 2nd 8th 9th 3rd 6th 6th W 10th 5th 11th R2
Zimbabwe 8th 11th 9th 6th 7th 14th 13th 15th 11th 10th 11th 11th 12th R2

W: Winners, 2nd: Runners Up (RU), SF: Semi-Finals, R1 / R2: Round 1 / Round 2

The Expanding World of U19 Cricket | New Nations, New Dreams

In 2026, the U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup continues to expand beyond the traditional cricketing nations.

Zimbabwe, as co-hosts, have featured in a total of 14 of the last 15 editions of the U19 World Cup, missing only the inaugural 1988 tournament. Their consistent participation reflects the passion and commitment to cricket within the country’s youth.

Moreover, Tanzania will be playing in their first-ever ICC U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup, having won 10/10 matches in the continental qualifying process in Africa; they are the 30th different nation to appear in the competition and the seventh from Africa.

Meanwhile, Japan, which qualified for the 2026 edition via the East Asia-Pacific pathway, is one of only two teams yet to win a match at the U19 World Cup. In 2020, they lost five matches, with one game ending as a no result, but their qualification itself signals cricket’s growing global reach.

All-Time Records – ICC U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup

Most Runs

Player Team Innings Runs Average
Eoin Morgan Ireland 13 606 50.5
Babar Azam Pakistan 12 585 58.5
Sarfaraz Khan India 12 566 70.8
Kraigg Brathwaite West Indies 12 548 60.9
Finn Allen New Zealand 12 548 54.8
Kanishka Chaugai Nepal 20 537 28.3
Anamul Haque Bangladesh 12 519 43.3
Dewald Brevis South Africa 6 506 84.3
Shikhar Dhawan India 7 505 84.2
Brett Williams Australia 9 471 52.3
Shaun Marsh Australia 15 471 31.4

High Scores

Player Runs Team Opposition Ground Match Date
Hasitha Boyagoda 191 Sri Lanka Kenya Lincoln 23/01/2018
Jakob Bhula 180 New Zealand Kenya Christchurch 17/01/2018
Donovan Pagon 176 West Indies Scotland Dunedin 21/01/2002
Dan Lawrence 174 England Fiji Chattogram 27/01/2016
Keagan Simmons 166 West Indies Canada Lincoln 26/01/2018
James Marshall 164* New Zealand Namibia Pretoria 15/01/1998
Scott Kremerskothen 164 Australia PNG Orkney 15/01/1998
Raj Bawa 162* India Uganda Tarouba 22/01/2022
Jacques Rudolph 156* South Africa Nepal Katunayake 12/1/2000
Cameron White 156* Australia Scotland Dunedin 25/01/2002
Karim Janat 156 Afghanistan Fiji Cox’s Bazar 5/2/2016
Nathan McSweeney 156 Australia PNG Lincoln 19/01/2018

Most Runs in a Tournament

Player Team Innings Runs Year
Dewald Brevis South Africa 6 506 2022
Shikhar Dhawan India 7 505 2004
Brett Williams Australia 9 471 1988
Cameron White Australia 8 423 2002
Donovan Pagon West Indies 7 421 2002
Jack Burnham England 6 420 2016
Alick Athanaze West Indies 6 418 2018
Shadman Islam Bangladesh 6 406 2014
Yashasvi Jaiswal India 6 400 2020
Craig Simmons Australia 7 399 2002

The Unfinished Story: Sri Lanka’s U19 World Cup Wait

Sri Lanka has one of the most surprising facts in the U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup. Despite appearing in all 15 previous editions, Sri Lanka is the only major team which is yet to win the U19 World Cup trophy. However, their closest chance came in 2000, when they finished as runners-up against India. It’s a tournament that is remembered for India’s now senior cricketer, Yuvraj Singh, for winning the Player of the Series title.

Why the U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup Truly Matters

Every edition of this exciting tournament gives a sneak peek into what the future of that nation’s cricket looks like. The raw talents from around the world are brought into the limelight, and with it, the unknown names become global stars.

These record-breaking performances confirm that the future of cricket is not just bright, but the future stars are already set into motion and ready to shine with their skill sets.

ICC U19 World Cup 2026 Now Live on Digital and Television

The ICC U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup 2026 is now live across All-in-one digital platforms of myco, Tamasha, and ARY Zap that would offer advertisers a unique one-booking opportunity to run ads across multiple digital platforms during the ICC U19 World Cup. In Pakistan, this reach also extends to television through a strategic partnership between Geo Super and myco. Allowing Brands to run their ads on TV and digital platforms at the same time. With Pakistan’s U19 team coming off with a strong Asia Cup performance, the tournament is set to deliver exciting record-breaking performances for cricket fans. Moreover, for viewers who prefer an uninterrupted experience, an ad-free HD streaming is also available via subscription on myco.io

image of ICC U19 World Cup 2026 Now Live on Digital and Television

All-Time Records | ICC U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup

Most Wickets

Player Team Overs Wickets Average Economy
Kwena Maphaka South Africa 76.3 28 11.9 4.3
Wessly Madhevere Zimbabwe 131.1 28 18.5 3.9
Moises Henriques Australia 106.4 27 14.1 3.6
Greg Thompson Ireland 128.3 27 21.7 4.6
Abhishek Sharma India 120.2 26 17.8 3.8
Tim Bresnan England 119 25 19.6 4.1
Wayne Parnell South Africa 77.4 23 11.4 3.4
Rahul Vishwakarma Nepal 79.4 23 14.2 4.1
Paras Khadka Nepal 135.2 23 18.6 3.2
Raymond Haoda PNG 90.3 23 19.5 5

Best Bowling Innings

Player Overs Runs Wickets Team Opposition Match Date
Lloyd Pope 9.4 35 8 Australia England 23/01/2018
Jason Ralston 6.5 15 7 Australia PNG 19/01/2018
Jeevan Mendis 9.2 19 7 Sri Lanka Zimbabwe 24/01/2002
Trent Boult 8.1 20 7 New Zealand Malaysia 21/02/2008
Tazeem Chaudhry Ali 7.5 29 7 England Zimbabwe 3/2/2024
Rahul Vishwakarma 6.2 3 6 Nepal PNG 23/08/2012
Wayne Parnell 5 8 6 South Africa Bangladesh 24/02/2008
Shaheen Shah Afridi 8.5 15 6 Pakistan Ireland 16/01/2018
Shafiqullah Ghafari 9.1 15 6 Afghanistan South Africa 17/01/2020
Kwena Maphaka 8.2 21 6 South Africa Sri Lanka 2/2/2024

Most Wickets in a Tournament

Player Team Overs Wickets Year
Enamul Haque jnr Bangladesh 70.4 22 2004
Kwena Maphaka South Africa 53.3 21 2024
Reece Topley England 54.3 19 2012
Wayne Holdsworth Australia 72.2 19 1988
Riaz Afridi Pakistan 65.4 19 2004
Mushtaq Ahmed Pakistan 83 19 1988
Wayne Parnell South Africa 49.4 18 2008
Saumy Pandey India 68.5 18 2024
Tariq Mahmood Pakistan 67.5 18 2004
Ubaid Shah Pakistan 54 18 2024

Highest Team Totals

Team Score Innings Opposition Venue Date
Australia 480/6 1 Kenya Dunedin 20/01/2002
New Zealand 436/4 1 Kenya Christchurch 17/01/2018
India 425/3 1 Scotland Dhaka 16/02/2004
Sri Lanka 419/4 1 Kenya Lincoln 23/01/2018
India 405/5 1 Uganda Tarouba 22/01/2022
West Indies 402/3 1 Scotland Dunedin 21/01/2002
Australia 398/6 1 PNG Orkney 15/01/1998
Bangladesh 389/2 1 Scotland Savar 19/02/2004
England 383/7 1 Canada Queenstown 20/01/2018
New Zealand 372/7 1 Namibia Pretoria 15/01/1998

Highest Match Aggregates

Match Runs Wickets Venue Date
India v West Indies 634 16 Sharjah 27/02/2014
Australia v Ireland 631 14 Chattogram 29/02/2004
New Zealand v Kenya 629 8 Christchurch 17/01/2018
Ireland v New Zealand 609 16 Colombo (RPS) 14/02/2006
Australia v Zimbabwe 601 18 Potchefstroom (Uni) 12/1/1998
Bangladesh v South Africa 591 16 Coolidge 3/2/2022
PNG v West Indies 590 13 Khulna 18/02/2004
Sri Lanka v West Indies 585 12 Christchurch 29/01/2010
India v Scotland 580 11 Dhaka 16/02/2004
India v Sri Lanka 576 15 Dhaka 26/02/2004

Biggest Winning Margin (runs)

Winner Margin Opposition Venue Date
Australia 430 runs Kenya Dunedin 20/01/2002
India 326 runs Uganda Tarouba 22/01/2022
Australia 311 runs PNG Lincoln 19/01/2018
Sri Lanka 311 runs Kenya Lincoln 23/01/2018
West Indies 301 runs Scotland Dunedin 21/01/2002
England 299 runs Fiji Chattogram 27/01/2016
England 282 runs Canada Queenstown 20/01/2018
Pakistan 277 runs Denmark Boksburg 13/01/1998
India 270 runs Scotland Dhaka 16/02/2004
Australia 266 runs Namibia Colombo (PSS) 11/1/2000

SQUADS | ICC U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup 2026

GROUP A

Australia: Oliver Peake (c), Kasey Barton, Naden Cooray, Jayden Draper, Ben Gordon, Steven Hogan, Thomas Hogan, John James, Charles Lachmund, Will Malajczuk, Nitesh Samuel, Hayden Schiller, Aryan Sharma, William Taylor, Alex Lee Young.

Ireland: Olly Riley (c), Reuben Wilson, Alex Armstrong, Callum Armstrong, Marko Bates, Sebastian Dijkstra, Thomas Ford, Samuel Haslett, Adam Leckey, Febin Manoj, Luke Murray, Robert O’Brien, Freddie Ogilby, James West, Bruce Whaley.

Japan: Kazuma Kato-Stafford (c), Charles Hara-Hinze, Gabriel Hara-Hinze, Montgomery Hara-Hinze, Kaisei Kobayashi-Doggett, Timothy Moore, Skyler Nakayama-Cook, Ryuki Ozeki, Nihar Parmar, Nikhil Pol, Chihaya Sekine, Hugo Tani-Kelly, Sandev Aaryan Waduge, Kai Wall, Taylor Waugh.

Sri Lanka: Vimath Dinsara (c), Kavija Gamage, Dimantha Mahavithana, Viran Chamuditha, Dulnith Sigera, Chamika Heentigala, Adam Hilmy, Chamarindu Nethsara, Sethmika Seneviratne, Kugathas Mathulan, Rasith Nimsara, Vigneshwaran Akash, Jeewantha Sriram, Senuja Wekunagoda, Malintha Silva.

GROUP B

Bangladesh: Azizul Hakim Tamim (c), Zawad Abrar (vc), Samiun Basir Ratul, Sheikh Parvez Jibon, Rizan Hossan, Shaharia Al Amin, Shadin Islam, Md Abdullah, Farid Hasan Faysal, Kalam Siddiki Aleen, Rifat Beg, Saad Islam Razin, Al Fahad, Shahriar Ahmed, Iqbal Hossain.

India: Ayush Mhatre (c), R.S. Ambrish, Kanishk Chouhan, D. Deepesh, Mohamed Enaan, Aaron George, Abhigyan Kundu, Kishan Kumar Singh, Vihaan Malhotra, Udhav Mohan, Henil Patel, Khilan A. Patel, Harvansh Singh, Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, Vedant Trivedi.

New Zealand: Tom Jones (c), Marco Alpe, Hugo Bogue, Harry Burns, Mason Clarke, Jacob Cotter, Aryan Mann, Brandon Matzopoulos, Flynn Morey, Snehith Reddy, Callum Samson, Jaskaran Sandhu, Selwin Sanjay, Hunter Shore, Harry Waite.

USA: Utkarsh Srivastava (c), Adnit Jhamb, Shiv Shani, Nitish Sudini, Advaith Krishna, Sahir Bhatia, Arjun Mahesh, Amrinder Gill, Sabrish Prasad, Adit Kappa, Sahil Garg, Amogh Reddy Arepally, Ritvik Appidi, Rayaan Taj, Rishabh Shimpi.

GROUP C

England: Thomas Rew (c), Farhan Ahmed, Ralphie Albert, Will Bennison, Ben Dawkins, Caleb Falconer, Ali Farooq, Alex French, Alex Green, Luke Hands, Manny Lumsden, Ben Mayes, James Minto, Joe Moores, Sebastian Morgan.

Pakistan: Farhan Yousaf (c), Usman Khan (vc), Abdul Subhan, Ahmed Hussain, Ali Hasan Baloch, Ali Raza, Daniyal Ali Khan, Hamza Zahoor (wk), Huzaifa Ahsan, Momin Qamar, Mohammad Sayyam, Mohammad Shayan (wk), Niqab Shafiq, Sameer Minhas, Umar Zaib.

Scotland: Thomas Knight (c), Finlay Carter, Max Chaplin, George Cutler, Rory Grant, Finlay Jones, Ollie Jones, Olly Pillinger, Ethan Ramsay, Theo Robinson, Manu Saraswat, Ram Sharma, Shreyas Tekale, Shlok Thaker, Jake Woodhouse.

Zimbabwe: Simbarashe Mudzengerere (c), Kian Blignaut, Michael Blignaut, Leeroy Chiwaula, Tatenda Chimugoro, Brendon Senzere, Nathaniel Hlabangana, Takudzwa Makoni, Panashe Mazai, Webster Madhidhi, Shelton Mazvitorera, Kupakwashe Muradzi, Brandon Ndiweni, Dhruv Patel, Benny Zuze.

GROUP D

Afghanistan: Mahboob Khan (c), Khalid Ahmadzai, Osman Sadat, Faisal Khan, Uzairullah Niazai, Aziz Mia Khil, Nazif Amiri, Khatir Stanikzai, Nooristani, Abdul Aziz, Salam Khan, Wahid Zadran, Zaitullah Shaheen, Rohullah Arab, Hafieez Zadran.

South Africa: Muhammad Bulbulia (c), JJ Basson, Daniel Bosman, Corne Botha, Paul James, Enathi Khitshini Tembalethu, Michael Kruiskamp, Adnaan Lagadien, Bayanda Majola, Armaan Manack, Bandile Mbatha, Lethabo Phahlamohlaka, Jason Rowles, Ntandoyenkosi Soni, Jorichvan Schalkwyk.

Tanzania: Laksh Bakrania (c), Karim Kiseto, Hamza Ally, Khalidy Amiri, Abdulazak Mohamedi, Ayaan Shariff, Omary Ramadhani, Dylan Thakrar, Agustino Mwamele, Ally Hafidhi, Acrey Pascal (wk), Darpan Jobanputra, Mohammedi Simba, Raymond Francis, Alfred Daniel.

West Indies: Joshua Dorne (c), Jewel Andrew, Shamar Apple, Shaquan Belle, Zachary Carter, Tanez Francis, R’jai Gittens, Vitel Lawes, Micah McKenzie, Matthew Miller, Isra-el
Morton, Jakeem Pollard, Aadian Racha, Kunal Tilokani, and Jonathan Van Lange.

Zohra Taiyeb

I read to wander, I write to connect. At myco, I blend imagination and insight to give readers the same joy I find in a great story :)

Leave a Reply