By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Sports UpdatesSports UpdatesSports Updates
  • Home
  • Cricket
    • IPL
  • Football
  • Hockey
  • Badminton
  • Baseball
Reading: The under-19 World Cup when Little Virat Kohli changed the way India played cricket
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Sports UpdatesSports Updates
Font ResizerAa
  • News & Perspective
  • Home
  • Cricket
  • Football
  • Hockey
  • Badminton
  • About
  • Contact
Follow US
Sports Updates > News > Cricket > The under-19 World Cup when Little Virat Kohli changed the way India played cricket
Cricket

The under-19 World Cup when Little Virat Kohli changed the way India played cricket

Admin
Last updated: January 31, 2026 3:16 am
Published January 31, 2026
Share
9 Min Read
Like it is for the India Class of 2026 now, the March of 2008 had held a lot of promise for Virat Kohli and his very talented team. (BCCI)
SHARE

Even as a teenager, Virat Kohli came with a clear warning: ‘mess with me and face the consequences’. Little Virat, whenever challenged or undermined, would raise his game to leave his rivals regretting the provocation. The few on the sidelines of the 2008 under-19 World Cup final in Malaysia saw this trait early. They were also among the first to get a glimpse of the batting phenomenon and also the future of Indian cricket. It had started with a South African player mocking India’s very modest total during the mid-innings break. In the annals of Indian cricket history, this would be the opening of an inspiring folklore. Skipper Virat, after a rousing speech in the dressing room, would lead a frenzied unit to the ground. Like a raging storm, they would destroy the rivals and scoop the Cup. A legend was born, one that would continue to grow in the years to come. Another under-19 World Cup is reaching its business end in Zimbabwe. On Sunday, India is playing Pakistan in a crucial Super Six game. They have lost to the neighbours in the junior Asia Cup recently. They aren’t likely to shake hands. There would be taunts and sledges. Known to ape their heroes in the seniors teams, the impressionable boys might not be averse to blurt out war references too. It might get ugly. There would be incitement but, like Virat did back in the day, there will be the pressing need to focus on winning this crunch game. The game is expected to be a moment of truth for two stars – Vaibhav Suryavanshi and Ayush Mhatre. The IPL heroes have a chance to elevate their status and be India stars. Like Virat, they too can be the harbingers of change. Just 14, Sooryavanshi stands on the bank of a sea with unending possibilities. ALSO READ | Virat wanted to buy first car from IPL money, says 2008 U-19 India coach Dav Whatmore Like it is for this Class of 2026 now, the March of 2008 had held a lot of promise for Virat and his very talented team. They were a fun-loving bunch but obsessively driven to be the best in the world. They had laughs but were collectively scowly when confronted on field. The IPL was about to start, the kids knew that the franchise owners were watching. If they played their cards right, their lives were going to change forever. It was fascinating to watch the young, eyes alight with dreams, fame and fortune tantalisingly within reach. A young Jadeja Ravindra Jadeja, not yet the Rock Star that Warne called him or the legend that the world has acknowledged now, had brought to the World Cup small town India’s fashion trend – the straightened hair-style. His early query to the reporter at the ground was very basic. Not the pitch, nor the conditions, he wanted to know which channel was broadcasting the tournament back home. “Poore Jamnagar ko batana hai,” he would say. There was a much taller and broader player who too had the same hair-style. He was the hard-hitter Ranchi boy Sourabh Tiwary. Not surprisingly, his role model was his ‘bhaiya’ – Mahi bhaiya aka MS Dhoni. Sourabh had blonde streaks like Dhoni. He was the only player who had an agent traveling with him. His handler would hang around the few reporters at the ground, sweet talk them while giving details of his journey. Sourabh too had a flex. After one match-winning knock he would say, “Mahi bhaiya ka phone number bhi hai hamare paas, unhone hi diya hai (I have Mahi bhaiya’s phone number. He has given it to me).” In years to come the world would come to know about the importance of availing the phone number of India’s most enigmatic player.Story continues below this ad The impact of making Kohli captain was felt in the final when India was all out for 159 and South African wicket-keeper Bradley Barnes took a dig at India’s low score. (File) The squad also had the sly spinner with Mumbai maidan cleverness Iqbal Abdulla. There was also a Jat pacer Pradeep Sangwan, his bulging biceps giving him a fierce aura. Also in the team was the light on feet and very flexible pacer Siddharth Kaul, whose mother was a national level gymnast. In Shreevats Goswami, India had a gutsy wicket-keeper opener. He didn’t miss a beat and was constantly in the ears of the captain. The team had the incredibly talented Manish Pandey. A gifted batsman, a lively fielder, Manish had great hands. Once during a net session, he brought down a spinner’s delivery in air by hitting it with a spare ball in his hands. He had the aim of a marksman. There was the Baroda pacer Ajitesh Argal, who mostly kept to himself. Interestingly, the coach of the team was Dav Whatmore, the Aussie who had helped an Island, Sri Lanka, conquer the world. Endearingly, at press conferences, he would often refer to Virat as ‘son’. There was one boy who seldom spoke. He was Tanmay Srivastava, the team’s dependable opener from Lucknow. Virat called him Bhaisaab. Before the tournament, Tanmay was India’s u-19 captain. Inspired move In an inspired move, the selectors replaced the soft-spoken batsman with ingrained Lucknow gentility, with Virat, the West Delhi boy not known to give undue respect to rivals. What had seemed like an insignificant change to the junior India team, would prove to be the crucial nudge that gave Indian cricket a revolutionary makeover.Story continues below this ad The impact of this change was felt in the final when India was all out for 159 in a rain-curtailed game and South African wicket-keeper Bradley Barnes took a dig at India’s low score. His words reached the Indian dressing room. It worked as an ember that ignited Virat. This wasn’t your stereotypical nice-guys Indian team—the kind that didn’t react to snide remarks, whose blood never boiled and who kept wondering the consequences of confrontational approach. Virat ensured that 11 possessed teens took the field. Argal, the silent one, bowled an inspired spell. Jadeja struck at crucial intervals, In days to come Jadeja would be Virat’s trusted firearm in many such street fights. And when the last South African wicket fell, Virat would shout at the top of his voice, the veins of neck bulging worryingly. One shouldn’t have worried, for years to come, his wild victory roar would keep echoing around the world to be the traditional trumpet that announces many Indian victories. For Virat and his boys, the March of 2008, 18 years ago, was the kind that they never wanted to end. Of course, like all dreams it did. And now rolls the postscript of this Teen-Dream blockbuster. * The boy they called Cheeku went to be Virat Kohli, The GOAT. * Jadeja outlasted even Kohli to become an all-rounder that Indian cricket had never seen * Manish Pandey became IPL’s first Indian centurion. * Goswami was the “best young player of the IPL’ *  Sourabh Tiwary now heads Jharkhand Cricket Association. * Ajitesh Argal and Tanmay Srivastava are reputed umpires. * Abdulla and Sangwan are seen on the veterans circuit.

Source

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp Copy Link
Share
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

14 − 6 =

Cricket Live Score

Live Cricket Scores

Top Categories

  • Cricket
  • Football
  • Hockey
  • Badminton

Latest Updates

Talent Identification and Development programme thrives in Ashanti Region
Premiere League

Talent Identification and Development programme thrives in Ashanti Region

March 17, 2026
Basketball

Steve Kerr part of Oscar win for ‘All the Empty Rooms’ short

March 17, 2026
Ghana’s rise in FIFAe Esports: eFootball & Rocket League (Global Rankings)
Premiere League

Ghana’s rise in FIFAe Esports: eFootball & Rocket League (Global Rankings)

March 17, 2026
India's Sanju Samson smashed a 42-ball 89 in the T20 World Cup semi-final against England on Thursday at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai. (Express photo by Narendra Vaskar)
Cricket

Indian team prioritises collective success over personal milestones: Sanju Samson

March 16, 2026

You Might Also Like

India's Sanju Samson smashed a 42-ball 89 in the T20 World Cup semi-final against England on Thursday at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai. (Express photo by Narendra Vaskar)
Cricket

Indian team prioritises collective success over personal milestones: Sanju Samson

March 16, 2026
Liam Livingstone England
Cricket

‘If you’re not in, no-one cares about you’: Liam Livingstone praises RCB and savages England management after year in the cold

March 16, 2026
Sanju Samson in action during T20 World Cup 2026 final vs New Zealand in Ahmedabad. (PHOTO: AP)
Cricket

‘A major decision’: Ricky Ponting hails India’s call to back Sanju Samson in T20 World Cup return

March 16, 2026
Hardik Pandya of Mumbai Indians walks back to the mark during the IPL 2025 match against Gujarat Titans at the Wankhede Stadium. (Sportzpics for IPL)
Cricket

‘I think Hardik Pandya needs to unleash his real Hardik Pandya version’: Harbhajan Singh on how Mumbai Indians can win 6th IPL title

March 16, 2026
Facebook Twitter Linkedin Instagram
Quick Menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
Categories
  • Cricket
  • Football
  • Hockey
  • Badminton
Other Links
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms and Conditions

Copyright © 2025 Sports Updates. All Rights Reserved

adbanner
AdBlock Detected
Our site is an advertising supported site. Please whitelist to support our site.
Okay, I'll Whitelist
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

15 + ten =

Lost your password?