Asia Cup

The Asia Cup (Asian Men’s Cricket Championships), officially known as the ACC Men’s Asia Cup is a men's international cricket tournament contested between Asian countries in either One Day International format (50 overs) and Twenty20 International format (20 overs) every 2 years. It was established in 1983 when the Asian Cricket Council was founded as a measure to promote goodwill between Asian countries being the only continental championship in cricket where the winning team becomes the champion of Asia. India are the current champions after winning the 2023 edition.

ACC Men’s Asia Cup
Official tournament logo since 2018
AdministratorAsian Cricket Council
FormatODI and T20I
First edition1984 (United Arab Emirates UAE)
Latest edition2023 ( Pakistan
&  Sri Lanka)
Tournament formatGroup stage and knockouts
Number of teamsACC member nations
Current champion India (8th title)
Most successful India (8 titles)
Most runsSri Lanka Sanath Jayasuriya (1220)[1]
Most wicketsSri Lanka Lasith Malinga (33)[2]
Websiteasiancricket.org

The first edition held in 1984 in Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates where the council's offices were based (until 1995). India boycotted the 1986 tournament due to strained cricketing relations with Sri Lanka. Pakistan boycotted the 1990–91 tournament due to strained political relations with India and the 1993 tournament was cancelled for the same reason. The ACC announced that the tournament would be held biennially from 2009 onwards. The ICC has ruled that all games played in the Asia Cup have official ODI status.

After downsizing the Asian Cricket Council in 2015, it was announced by the ICC that Asia Cup events from 2016 would be played on a rotation basis between One Day International and Twenty20 International format, on the basis of the format of upcoming world events. As a result, the 2016 event was the first event played in the T20I format and functioned as a preparatory tournament ahead of the 2016 ICC World Twenty20.

India, with eight titles (seven ODI and one T20I), is the most successful team in the tournament. Sri Lanka is the second most successful team, with six, while Pakistan have won two titles. Sri Lanka has played the most Asia Cups (16) followed by India, Pakistan and Bangladesh (15 each).

History

Winners of ACC Asia Cup
SeasonFormatChampion
1984ODI  India
1986ODI  Sri Lanka
1988ODI  India (2)
1990ODI  India (3)
1995ODI  India (4)
1997ODI  Sri Lanka (2)
2000ODI  Pakistan
2004ODI  Sri Lanka (3)
2008ODI  Sri Lanka (4)
2010ODI  India (5)
2012ODI  Pakistan (2)
2014ODI  Sri Lanka (5)
2016T20I  India (6)
2018ODI  India (7)
2022T20I  Sri Lanka (6)
2023ODI  India (8)

1980s

The first edition of the Rothmans Asia Cup was held in 1984[3][4][5][6] in Sharjah, UAE, the location of the headquarters of the newly formed Asian Cricket Council. The tournament was a round-robin tournament among India, Sri Lanka and Pakistan. The first match was between Pakistan and the new ICC member Sri Lanka. India won this tournament with two victories, Sri Lanka were the runners up in the tournament with a single victory over Pakistan, while Pakistan went home without winning either of its two games.[5][6][7]

Sri Lanka was the host for the second edition in 1986. India pulled out of the tournament due to soured cricketing relations with Sri Lanka after a controversial series in Sri Lanka the previous year.[8] Bangladesh was included for the first time. Sri Lanka won the tournament beating Pakistan in the final.

The third edition, in 1988, was held in Bangladesh, the first time a multi-national cricket tournament was held there. In the final, India beat Sri Lanka by 6 wickets to win their second Asia Cup.

1990s

The fourth edition of the tournament was held in India in 1990–91. Pakistan had pulled out of the tournament due to strained political relations with India. India retained the Asia Cup defeating Sri Lanka in the final.In 1993, the tournament was cancelled due to strained political relations between India and Pakistan.

The fifth edition, in 1995, took the series back to Sharjah, UAE after 11 years. India and Sri Lanka made it to the final by virtue of better run rate than Pakistan as all three teams had equal points after the preliminary round. For the third successive time, India defeated Sri Lanka in the final.

The sixth edition was held in Sri Lanka in 1997. Sri Lanka beat India in the final by 8 wickets to win its second Asia Cup.

2000s

The 7th edition took place in Bangladesh for the second time in 2000. Pakistan and Sri Lanka made it to the final while India only won one match against Bangladesh and surprisingly did not qualify for the final for the very first time. In the final, Pakistan beat Sri Lanka to win the Asia Cup for the very first time. Yousuf Youhana was the player of the Tournament.

The 8th edition took place in Sri Lanka in 2004. There was a change in the tournament format as UAE and Hong Kong were also included for the first time and the tournament was now divided into three stages – the Group Stage, Super Fours and the final. The group stage was divided into two groups of 3 teams, each playing each other once. The top two teams from each group qualified for the Super Four stage where they played each other again once. The top two teams in the Super Four stage then qualified for the final. Hosts Sri Lanka, India and UAE were placed in Group A while the then defending champions Pakistan, Bangladesh and Hong Kong were placed in Group B. UAE and Hong Kong were knocked out in the group stage. Bangladesh had the distinction of reaching the second stage in a major tournament for the first time, but played poorly in the Super Fours and got eliminated. India and Sri Lanka topped the Super Four stage and reached the final. In the final, Sri Lanka defeated India by 25 runs to win the Asia Cup. Sanath Jayasuriya was the player of the Tournament.

The ninth edition of the Asia Cup was held in Pakistan. Once again, the 2004 format was retained. The tournament started on 24 June 2008 and the Final was held on 6 July 2008.[9] Sri Lanka topped Group A and qualified for the second phase along with Bangladesh. In Group B, India came out on top and entered the Super Fours along with Pakistan in second place. Sri Lanka and India topped the Super Four stage and entered the final. Sri Lanka beat India in the final comfortably winning their fourth Asia Cup. Sanath Jayasuriya scored a quick 125 off 114 balls to rescue Sri Lanka from 66/4 earlier on when the top order collapsed. Sri Lanka's new mystery spinner, Ajantha Mendis, took 6/13 bowling Sri Lanka to a 100 run victory. He also was adjudged as the Player of the Tournament.

2010s

The tenth edition was held in Sri Lanka, between 15 and 24 June 2010 hosting the Asia Cup for the fourth time. It only featured the four Test playing Asian nations, and seven matches were played in all (including the final). Sri Lanka and India topped the group stages and entered the final. In the final, India beat Sri Lanka comfortably to become champions for the fifth time, winning the tournament for first time in 15 years.[10] Shahid Afridi was the Player of the Tournament.

The eleventh edition of the Asia Cup was held in Dhaka, Bangladesh from 11 to 22 March 2012. Pakistan and Bangladesh qualified to play in the final of the eleventh edition, Bangladesh had beaten India and Sri Lanka to book their place in the final for the first time in the history of the tournament.Pakistan beat Bangladesh after a thrilling final over, winning their second Asia Cup.[11] Shakib Al Hasan was adjudged the Player of the Tournament. Sachin Tendulkar scored his 100th international century in this tournament.

The twelfth edition was held in Dhaka and Fatullah, Bangladesh from 25 February to 8 March 2014. The tournament consisted of five teams with Afghanistan in it for the first time since its inception in 1984. Sri Lanka defeated Pakistan by 5 wickets in the final to win the Asia Cup for the fifth time. Lahiru Thirimanne was adjudged the Player of the Tournament scoring 279 runs.

After the Asian Cricket Council was downsized by the ICC in 2015, it was announced that Asia Cup tournaments would be played on rotation basis in ODI and T20I format.[12][13][14] As a result, 2016 events was the first tournament in T20I format and was played between five teams just ahead of 2016 ICC World Twenty20. The 2016 edition of the Asia Cup tournament was held in Bangladesh for the third consecutive time from 24 February to 6 March. The final was held on 6 March 2016. India won the final by beating Bangladesh by 8 wickets in the final held at the Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium situated in Mirpur locality, Dhaka, Bangladesh. It is for the sixth time that India won the Asia cup title in 2016. Shikhar Dhawan of India was the man of the match for his 60 runs. Sabbir Rahman of Bangladesh was the player of the series.India won all of its matches played in Asia Cup 2016 beating Bangladesh 2 times, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and UAE.

On 29 October 2015, following the Asian Cricket Council meeting in Singapore, BCCI secretary Anurag Thakur stated that the 2018 edition of the tournament would be held in India. It will follow the ODI format.[15] However, in April 2018, the tournament was moved to the United Arab Emirates, due to political tensions between India and Pakistan.[16]

India were the defending champions,[17] and retained their title, after beating Bangladesh by three wickets in the final.[18] India did not suffer a single defeat in the tournament, with 2 wins each against Pakistan & Bangladesh, a solitary win against Hong Kong, and a tie with Afghanistan.Shikhar Dhawan was the top run getter with 342 runs in 5 matches, was awarded Man of the Series.Afghanistan was the only team in the tournament who remained unbeaten against eventual winners India.

2020s

United Arab Emirates hosted the tournament and Sri Lanka won the Asia Cup beating Pakistan by 23 runs in the final. Sri Lanka reached the final as the only unbeaten team in the Super-Four stage winning against Afghanistan, India, and Pakistan.Bhanuka Rajapaksa was awarded Man of the Match for his unbeaten 71 off 45 balls, and Wanindu Hasaranga was second highest wicket-taker with 9 wickets in 6 matches, scored 66 runs in 5 innings and was named Player of the Series.Pakistan had an average start in the Asia Cup with a defeat against India in the group stage, beating India & Afghanistan in a close encounter in Super 4, ending with 2 back-to-back defeats against Sri Lanka.India started the tournament as hot favourites defeating Pakistan; however, they could not win against them and Sri Lanka in the super 4 and got knocked out of the tournament.Afghanistan was the only team in the tournament to defeat the eventual winners Sri Lanka.

Pakistan was awarded to host the tournament. However, Indian cricket team was reluctant to visit Pakistan to participate in the tournament. So, after a lot of deliberation, India agreed to play in a hybrid model where India will play all their matches in another country and few other matches will be hosted in Pakistan. Thus, it was the first Asia Cup to be co-hosted by multiple countries; four matches were played in Pakistan, and the remaining nine matches were played in Sri Lanka.[19] The five full members of the Asian Cricket Council were joined by Nepal, who made their ACC Asia Cup debut having qualified for the first time in qualifying the 2023 ACC Men's Premier Cup. India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Afghanistan qualified to play in the tournament. India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Sri Lanka qualified to play the Super fours stage.

India and Sri Lanka, both got qualified for finals after two victories by each. The finals occurred in Sri Lanka. In a quick match, defending champions Sri Lanka lost to India by 10 wickets and got only 50 runs, giving target of 51 runs to the winning Indian team. It was 8th time win for India. Kuldeep Yadav was the Player of the Tournament due to his skilled bowling in the series.

Results

YearFormatHost NationNumber of teamsFinal VenueFinalWinning Captain
WinnerResultRunner-up
1984
Details
ODI
United Arab Emirates
3Sharjah CA Stadium,
Sharjah
 IndiaNo finals; India won the tournament via Round-robin format  Sri Lanka
[5]
Sunil Gavaskar
1986
Details
ODI
Sri Lanka
3Sinhalese Sports Club Ground,
Colombo
 Sri Lanka
195/5 (42.2 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 5 wickets
(scorecard)
 Pakistan
191/9 (45 overs)
Duleep Mendis
1988
Details
ODI
Bangladesh
4Bangabandhu National Stadium,
Dhaka
 India
180/4 (37.1 overs)
India won by 6 wickets
(scorecard)
 Sri Lanka
176 (43.5 overs)
Dilip Vengsarkar
1990/91
Details
ODI
India
3Eden Gardens,
Calcutta
 India
205/3 (42.1 overs)
India won by 7 wickets
(scorecard)
 Sri Lanka
204/9 (45 overs)
Mohammad Azharuddin
1995
Details
ODI
United Arab Emirates
4Sharjah CA Stadium,
Sharjah
 India
233/2 (41.5 overs)
India won by 8 wickets
(scorecard)
 Sri Lanka
230/7 (50 overs)
Mohammad Azharuddin
1997
Details
ODI
Sri Lanka
4R. Premadasa Stadium,
Colombo
 Sri Lanka
240/2 (36.5 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 8 wickets
(scorecard)
 India
239/7 (50 overs)
Arjuna Ranatunga
2000
Details
ODI
Bangladesh
4Bangabandhu National Stadium,
Dhaka
 Pakistan
277/4 (50 overs)
Pakistan won by 39 runs
(scorecard)
 Sri Lanka
238 (45.2 overs)
Moin Khan
2004
Details
ODI
Sri Lanka
6R. Premadasa Stadium,
Colombo
 Sri Lanka
228/9 (50 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 25 runs
(scorecard)
 India
203/9 (50 overs)
Marvan Atapattu
2008
Details
ODI
Pakistan
6National Stadium,
Karachi
 Sri Lanka
273 (49.5 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 100 runs
(scorecard)
 India
173 (39.3 overs)
Mahela Jayawardene
2010
Details
ODI
Sri Lanka
4Rangiri Dambulla International Stadium,
Dambulla
 India
268/6 (50 overs)
India won by 81 runs
(scorecard)
 Sri Lanka
187 (44.4 overs)
MS Dhoni
2012
Details
ODI
Bangladesh
4Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium,
Mirpur
 Pakistan
236/9 (50 overs)
Pakistan won by 2 runs
(scorecard)
 Bangladesh
234/8 (50 overs)
Misbah-ul-Haq
2014
Details
ODI5Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium,
Mirpur
 Sri Lanka
261/5 (46.2 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 5 wickets
(scorecard)
 Pakistan
260/5 (50 overs)
Angelo Mathews
2016
Details
T20I5Sher-e-Bangla National Stadium,
Mirpur
 India
122/2 (13.5 overs)
India won by 8 wickets
(scorecard)
 Bangladesh
120/5 (15 overs)
MS Dhoni
2018
Details
ODI
United Arab Emirates
6Dubai International Cricket Stadium,
Dubai
 India
223/7 (50 overs)
India won by 3 wickets
(scorecard)
 Bangladesh
222 (48.3 overs)
Rohit Sharma
2022
Details[20]
T20I6Dubai International Cricket Stadium,
Dubai
 Sri Lanka
170/6 (20 overs)
Sri Lanka won by 23 runs
(scorecard)
 Pakistan
147 (20 overs)
Dasun Shanaka
2023
Details[21]
ODI
Pakistan


Sri Lanka

6R. Premadasa Stadium, Colombo  India
51/0 (6.1 overs)
India won by 10 wickets
Scorecard
 Sri Lanka
50 (15.2 overs)
Rohit Sharma
2025
Details
T20I6

Tournament summary

Combined

The table below provides an overview of the performances of teams over past Asia Cup ODI and T20I tournaments.

TeamAppearancesBest result
TotalFirstLatest
 India1519842023Champions (1984, 1988, 1990–91, 1995, 2010, 2016, 2018, 2023)
 Sri Lanka1619842023Champions (1986, 1997, 2004, 2008, 2014, 2022)
 Pakistan1519842023Champions (2000, 2012)
 Bangladesh1519862023Runners-up (2012, 2016, 2018)
 Afghanistan420142023Super Four (2018, 2022)
 Hong Kong420042022Group stage (2004, 2008, 2018, 2022)
 United Arab Emirates320042016Group stage (2004, 2008, 2016)
   Nepal120232023Group stage (2023)

ODIs

The table below provides an overview of the performances of teams over past Asia Cup ODI tournaments.[22]

TeamAppearancesBest resultStatistics
TotalFirstLatestPlayedWonLostTieNRWin%
 India1319842023Champions (1984, 1988, 1990–91, 1995, 2010, 2018, 2023)5535171266.98
 Sri Lanka1419842023Champions (1986, 1997, 2004, 2008, 2014)5638170067.85
 Pakistan1319842023Champions (2000, 2012)5028200258.33
 Bangladesh1319862023Runners-up (2012, 2018)489390018.75
 Afghanistan320142023Super Four (2018)11371031.81
 Hong Kong320042018Group stage (2004, 2008, 2018)606000.00
   Nepal120232023Group stage (2023)202000.00
 United Arab Emirates220042008Group stage (2004, 2008)404000.00

T20Is

The table below provides an overview of the performances of teams in the Asia Cup T20I tournament.[23]

TeamAppearancesBest resultStatistics
TotalFirstLatestPlayedWonLostTieNRWin%
 India220162022Champions (2016)10820080.00
 Sri Lanka220162022Champions (2022)10640060.00
 Pakistan220162022Runners-up (2022)10550050.00
 Bangladesh220162022Runners-up (2016)7340042.85
 Afghanistan120222022Super Four (2022)5230040.00
 United Arab Emirates120162016Group stage (2016)4040000.00
 Hong Kong120222022Group stage (2022) 2020000.00

Note:

  • The win percentage excludes no-result matches and counts ties as half a win.
  • Teams are sorted by best result, then winning percentage, then (if equal) by alphabetical order.

Performance by teams

1st
Champion
2nd
Runners-up
DNQ
Did not qualify
Q
Qualified
WD
Withdrawn
GP
Group stage
ICC Full Member Nation

An overview of the teams' performances in every Asia Cup:

India has most titles i.e. 8, while Sri Lanka has second highest 6.

Host
Team
1984
ODI
(3)
1986
ODI
(3)
1988
ODI
(4)
1990-91
ODI
(3)
1995
ODI
(4)
1997
ODI
(4)
2000
ODI
(4)
2004
ODI
(6)
2008
ODI
(6)
2010
ODI
(4)
2012
ODI
(4)
2014
ODI
(5)
2016
T20I
(5)
2018
ODI
(6)
2022
T20I
(6)
2023
ODI
(6)
 Afghanistan
DNQ
4th
DNQ
4th4thGP
 Bahrain
DNQ
DNQ
 Bangladesh3rd4th3rd4th4th4th4th4th4th2nd5th2nd2ndGP3rd
 Hong Kong
DNQ
GPGP
DNQ
GPGP
DNQ
 India1st
WD
1st1st1st2nd3rd2nd2nd1st3rd3rd1st1st3rd1st
 Kuwait
DNQ
DNQ
 Malaysia
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
   Nepal
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
GP
 Oman
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
 Pakistan3rd2nd3rd
WD
3rd3rd1st3rd3rd3rd1st2nd3rd3rd
2nd
4th
 Qatar
DNQ
DNQ
 Saudi Arabia
DNQ
DNQ
 Singapore
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ
 Sri Lanka2nd1st2nd2nd2nd1st2nd1st1st2nd4th1st4thGP
1st
2nd
 United Arab EmiratesGPGP5th
DNQ
DNQ
DNQ

Debutant teams in main tournament

YearTeams
1984  India,  Pakistan,  Sri Lanka
1986  Bangladesh
2004  Hong Kong,  United Arab Emirates
2014  Afghanistan
2023    Nepal

Debutant teams in Asia Cup Qualifier

YearTeams
2000  Hong Kong,  Japan,  Kuwait,  Malaysia,    Nepal,  United Arab Emirates
2006  Afghanistan,  Bahrain,  Bhutan,  Brunei,  Iran,  Myanmar,  Oman,  Qatar,  Saudi Arabia,  Thailand
2016All participating cricket teams had T20I status
2018    Nepal and  United Arab Emirates had ODI status
2022All participating cricket teams had T20I status
2023    Nepal,  Oman and  United Arab Emirates had ODI status
2024All participating cricket teams had T20I status

Championship summary

RankTeamsAppearanceTitlesRunners-up
1  India1583
2  Sri Lanka1667
2  Pakistan1523
4  Bangladesh1503

Ranking

Results

#YearHost1st2nd3rd4th5th6thTeams
11984  UAE  IND  SRI  PAK3
21986  SRI  SRI  PAK  BAN3
31988  BAN  IND  SRI  PAK  BAN4
41990  IND  IND  SRI  BAN3
51995  UAE  IND  SRI  PAK  BAN4
61997  SRI  SRI  IND  PAK  BAN4
72000  BAN  PAK  SRI  IND  BAN4
82004  SRI  SRI  IND  PAK  BAN  UAE  HKG6
92008  PAK  SRI  IND  PAK  BAN  UAE  HKG6
102010  SRI  IND  SRI  PAK  BAN4
112012  BAN  PAK  BAN  IND  SRI4
122014  BAN  SRI  PAK  IND  AFG  BAN5
132016  BAN  IND  BAN  PAK  SRI  UAE5
142018  UAE  IND  BAN  PAK  AFG  HKG  SRI6
152022  UAE  SRI  PAK  IND  AFG  BAN  HKG6
162023  SRI  IND  SRI  BAN  PAK  AFG    NEP6

Medals

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1  India (IND)83415
2  Sri Lanka (SRI)67013
3  Pakistan (PAK)23914
4  Bangladesh (BAN)0336
Totals (4 entries)16161648

Summary

RankTeamPartMWLDNR
1  India1565431912
2  Sri Lanka1666432300
3  Pakistan1560332502
4  Bangladesh1555124300
5  Afghanistan41651010
6    Nepal120200
7  United Arab Emirates380800
8  Hong Kong480800

Qualification

#YearGamesTeams in QualificationQualified Teams
11984No Qualification
219861984 South-East Asia Cup--
3 - 71988 - 2000No Qualification
82004 Asia Cup2000 ACC Trophy82 + 4
92008 Asia Cup2006 ACC Trophy82 + 4
10 - 122010 - 2014No Qualification
132016 Asia Cup2016 Asia Cup Qualifier41 + 4
142018 Asia Cup2018 Asia Cup Qualifier61 + 4
152022 Asia Cup2022 Asia Cup Qualifier131 + 5
162023 Asia Cup2023 ACC Men's Premier Cup141 + 5
172025 Asia Cup2024 ACC Men's Premier Cup181 + 5
Total8Asia Cup QualificationMax:18Max:6

Broadcasters

CountryBroadcastersYear
BangladeshGTV, T Sports &

Rabbithole, Toffee (Online)

2022-23
CaribbeanRUSH Sports2023
India and NepalStar Sports2022-23
Sri LankaITN Sri Lanka2022-23
PakistanPTV , Ten Sports2022-23
AustraliaKayo Sports2022
Hong Kong, MalaysiaAstro Cricket2022-23
SingaporeHUB Sports2022-23
UKTNT Sports2022-23
Continental Europe, Australia, New Zealand, Japan, Malaysia and Southeast AsiaYupptv2016-23

See also

References