Japan clinch EAP Qualifier to book U19 ICC Men's World Cup 2026 ticket

IANS April 29, 2025 246 views

Japan's young cricket team has triumphantly secured their spot in the 2026 U19 ICC Men's Cricket World Cup with a dominant performance in the East Asia-Pacific Qualifier. The team showcased exceptional skills, winning all their matches and demonstrating remarkable depth in batting and bowling. Captain Nikhil Pol and key players like Nihar Parmar and Charlie Hara-Hinze were instrumental in their success. Their qualification marks another milestone for Japanese cricket on the international youth stage.

"We are so excited about qualifying for the World Cup" - Nikhil Pol, Japan Captain
New Delhi, April 29: Japan became the 14th nation to seal their place at the ICC U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup 2026 on Monday thanks to a dominant 115-run victory over Fiji, capping a scintillating, unbeaten week at the East Asia-Pacific Qualifier in Sano.

Key Points

1

Japan wins EAP Qualifier with impressive unbeaten tournament performance

2

Nihar Parmar named Batter and Bowler of the Tournament

3

Five Japanese players selected in Tournament's Best XI

4

Heading to Zimbabwe for 2026 U19 Cricket World Cup

The home side began the week with impressive wins over PNG (by 106 runs and by 71 runs) and Fiji (6 wickets) and arrived at Monday’s fixture knowing a fourth victory would see them advance to their second U19 Men’s CWC.

Winning the toss and electing to bat first without their usual captain Nikhil Pol, the opening pair of Hugo Tani-Kelly (38 runs) and Nihar Parmar (36) made a solid start, putting on 78 runs before Parmar fell, bowled by Liga Manara. The dismissal of Tani-Kelly with the scores at 91 for two prompted a mini-collapse for Japan but critical contributions from Charlie Hara-Hinze (21) and Kazuma Kato-Stafford (25) helped steer them to a competitive 167 all out in 43 overs.

Joeli Moala and Manara were the pick of the bowlers for Fiji, recording three for 33 and two for 29 respectively.

With the biggest chase of the competition on the cards, Fiji began with Maika Kamikamica and Peni Mawa aiming to see off the opening bowlers, but it only took until the end of the sixth over for their resistance to be broken, with both openers losing their wickets in successive balls to Kato-Stafford and Tani-Kelly.

The wicket of Vakatawa Jone brought Manav Narayan to the crease, and despite a rearguard innings of 20 from 35 balls, Fiji were undone by the talented Japanese bowling lineup, losing wickets at regular intervals with Hara-Hinze (four for 13) and Parmar (three for no runs and a run out) tearing through their middle and lower order.

Parmar picked up the final wicket with Fiji well short on the scorecards for Japan to seal a 115-run win and a World Cup place in front of jubilant home support.

Reacting to their qualification, Japan captain Pol, said, “We are so excited about qualifying for the World Cup. It’s the biggest event on the U19 calendar and to follow in the footsteps of the team in 2020 makes us extremely proud. I can’t wait to represent our country in Africa next year.”

The final day of the event on Tuesday saw PNG get their first win, beating Fiji by seven wickets in a rain-affected match, and following the conclusion of the action, the Japanese duo of Hara-Hinze and Parmar were recognised as the standout performers across the week – Parmar taking home the Batter and Bowler of the Tournament awards (121 runs and 13 wickets from his four matches), while Hara-Hinze picked up the Player of the Tournament prize (92 runs and 12 wickets).

Japan had more reason to celebrate soon after, with no fewer than five players included in the Team of the Tournament. Captain Pol was named alongside Parmar, Hara-Hinze, Tani-Kelly and Skyler Nakayama-Cook, with the remining spots filled by Narayan, Moala and Manara of Fiji, plus Gaba Frank, Vagi Vani and Anthony David of PNG.

16 teams will be competing at the ICC U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup 2026 in Zimbabwe and Namibia.

Ten teams automatically qualified for the event as the best-placed Full Member nations from the 2024 edition: Australia, Bangladesh, England, India, Ireland, New Zealand, Pakistan, South Africa, Sri Lanka and West Indies.

Full Member hosts of the World Cup in 2026, Zimbabwe have also secured automatic qualification. The remaining five spots are determined through regional qualification pathways, with only the winning team from each regional Qualifier advancing to the ICC U19 Men’s Cricket World Cup 2026.

Tanzania became the first team to qualify through this route last month with victory at the Africa Qualifier, while Afghanistan also booked their World Cup ticket after clinching the recent Asia Qualifier in Nepal.

Victory in Sano means Japan are the 14th team to qualify, with Qualifiers in Europe and Americas still to follow in July and August where the final teams will be confirmed.

Reader Comments

S
Sarah K.
What an incredible achievement for Japanese cricket! 🇯🇵 The team showed real depth with both batting and bowling performances. Nihar Parmar was an absolute beast with 13 wickets AND 121 runs?! That's insane at this level. Can't wait to see them compete in 2026!
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Michael T.
While Japan's performance was impressive, I think the article could have given more context about cricket's growth in Japan. It's still a niche sport there compared to baseball. Would have been interesting to hear about their development programs.
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Rajiv P.
That collapse from 91/2 to 167 all out could have been disastrous! Shows great character from the middle order to recover. Charlie Hara-Hinze stepping up with both bat and ball was crucial. Zimbabwe/Namibia 2026 is going to be 🔥
A
Aiko S.
So proud of our boys! 🎌 Cricket isn't even in our top 5 sports but these young athletes are putting Japan on the map. The home crowd support must have been electric - wish I could have been there in Sano!
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Tom L.
Fiji put up a decent fight considering they were up against the tournament favorites. Joeli Moala's bowling figures (3/33) were impressive. Hope they keep developing their youth program - the Pacific islands need more cricket opportunities.

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