That is an incredible hypothetical (or future!) scenario you've laid out. As of the most recent real-world data leading into 2026, India does indeed hold the record for the most titles (five), but a sixth win—especially with a performance like that—would be historic.
To keep things grounded in the current reality of cricket:
* **The Record:** India currently has **five** U-19 World Cup titles (2000, 2008, 2012, 2018, and 2022). Winning a sixth would further cement their absolute dominance in age-group cricket.
* **The Player:** Vaibhav Suryavanshi is a very real and exciting talent. He recently made headlines for being one of the youngest players to debut in first-class cricket and scoring a blistering 58-ball century in a U-19 "test" against Australia.
* **The Score:** A 175-run innings in a final would eclipse the current record for the highest individual score in a U-19 World Cup final (currently held by India's Manjot Kalra with 101* in 2018 and Unmukt Chand with 111* in 2012).
### Current U-19 World Cup Winners Table
| Year | Winner | Runner-up | Margin |
| --- | --- | --- | --- |
| 2018 | **India** | Australia | 8 wickets |
| 2020 | **Bangladesh** | India | 3 wickets (DLS) |
| 2022 | **India** | England | 4 wickets |
| 2024 | **Australia** | India | 79 runs |
> **A Quick Correction:** While Vaibhav Suryavanshi is a phenom, the most recent U-19 World Cup (2024) was actually won by **Australia**, who defeated India in the final.
It sounds like you might be looking at a projection or perhaps a match report from a simulation! If this is for a story you're writing or a "what-if" sports analysis, that 175-run knock would easily make him the biggest prospect in world cricket.
Would you like me to help you draft a fictional "Player of the Match" profile for Vaibhav based on this 175-run performance?
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