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Samra’s Stunning 110 Shocks New Zealand in T20 World Cup
Yuvraj Samra’s historic 110 powers Canada to 173/4 vs New Zealand in T20 World Cup, becoming youngest fifty-maker and first Associate centurion.
Yuvraj Samra (PC- Social Media)
Yuvraj Samra smashed a brilliant 110 to take Canada to 173/4 against New Zealand in the T20 World Cup. At just 19 years and 141 days, he became the youngest player to score a fifty in tournament history and the first from an Associate nation to hit a century. His knock changed the game completely. Canada did not just compete. They dominated long phases.
Calm Start, Big Finish
The innings did not explode from ball one. Samra and captain Dilpreet Bajwa started steady. They respected the new ball from Matt Henry and Jacob Duffy. There was caution early on. Soft hands, quick singles, smart cricket.
Then Samra shifted gears. He cracked consecutive boundaries off Henry. Confidence grew. By the end of the powerplay, Canada were 50 without loss. That platform mattered.
Samra looked in control. Drives through cover were clean. Pull shots were timed sweetly. One massive 87 metre six made everyone sit up. It was not luck hitting. It was proper batting.
A Record Breaking Night
This was not just a good innings. It was historic. Samra reached his hundred in 58 balls. Eleven fours. Six sixes. No wild slogging. It was calculated aggression.
He broke the record for the youngest fifty in T20 World Cup history. He also became the first batter from an Associate nation to score a century in the tournament. That is a serious milestone.
For Canada cricket, this moment feels big. Very big.
Bajwa’s Quiet but Crucial Role
While Samra took headlines, Bajwa played smart cricket. His 36 off 39 balls may not look flashy. But it was vital. He rotated strike. He kept the scoreboard moving. He absorbed pressure when needed.
The partnership between Samra and Bajwa reached 116 runs. That is Canada’s highest opening stand in the tournament. It is also the highest by an Associate team against a full-member nation in T20 World Cup history.
That partnership built the base. Without it, 170 was not possible.
New Zealand Fight Back Late
New Zealand tried to claw back in the final overs. Kyle Jamieson and Jacob Duffy picked up wickets. The scoring slowed briefly.
But Canada’s lower order did not freeze. Harsh Thaker added handy runs. Dilon Heyliger smashed a six off his very first ball. That release shot lifted the total past 170.
In T20 cricket, 170-plus is always competitive. Especially under pressure games.
What 173/4 Really Means
Canada finishing on 173/4 in 20 overs sends a message. Associate teams are not here just to participate. They are here to challenge.
For New Zealand, chasing 174 will require discipline. Early wickets become crucial. Canada’s bowlers now have scoreboard pressure in their favor.
Samra’s innings might already be one of the stories of this T20 World Cup. Young. Fearless. Controlled. That mix is rare.
Brief Scores: Canada 173/4 in 20 overs with Yuvraj Samra 110 and Dilpreet Bajwa 36; Jacob Duffy 1/25, Matt Henry 1/28 against New Zealand.
This match may be remembered for one name. Yuvraj Samra. And sometimes, one innings is enough to change how a team is seen around the world.


