Kenya hit again

Aman Gandhi during a recent U19 World Cup match /COURTESY
Aman Gandhi during a recent U19 World Cup match /COURTESY

Sri Lanka put up a superb performance to crush Kenya by 311 runs International Cricket Council Under-19 Cricket World Cup.
A dominant batting performance from Sri Lanka, built around a staggering 191 from Hasitha Boyagoda saw them record the highest U19 ODI score in their history, and the fourth-highest for all teams. This was also the joint-second biggest winning margin in U-19 ODI history
Six days since New Zealand’s opening batsman Jakob Bhula smashed 180 runs to emerge the highest scorer at the event in their win against Kenya, the record was broken yesterday after Kenya went down for the fourth time in the tournament against Sri Lanka in their plate quarter-final match.
It would be remiss to start anywhere else than with Boyagoda, whose innings broke Bhula’s record for the highest score in U-19 ODI. From a ‘proper cricket’ point of view, it was as close to a perfect innings.
The pacing was sublime with Boyagoda first taking advantage of the PowerPlay restrictions to race away to his half-century in just 39 balls. He then took stock in the middle overs before accelerating towards the end.
Support wasn’t in short supply either, with all of Sri Lanka’s top six making at least 29 and striking at above 100. Nishan Madushka’s 60 was the next top score, but the most attention-grabbing period came after Boyagoda was dismissed as captain Kamindu Mendis and Nawanidu Fernando added 80 runs in just under six overs. Mendis especially was exceptional, bringing up his fifty from just 21 balls on the last ball of the innings, his knock containing one absolutely enormous six which flew miles over mid-wicket.
For Kenya, this was a fourth chastening stint in the field in succession. They have been on the receiving end of five centuries, two of them world record innings, two 400-plus scores, a 40-ball 90, and a 21-ball 53. They could have been forgiven for throwing away their wickets in a bid for an early finish and in the face of an impossible target, and it is to their credit that, for the fourth time in a row, they didn’t choose to.
There was never any pretence of trying to chase the runs as Kenya chose the deadbat route, but Sri Lanka stuck at their task manfully, eventually dismissing their opposition for 108 after 36 overs of toil.