2008 ACC Trophy Elite

Last updated
2008 ACC Trophy Elite
Administrator(s) Asian Cricket Council
Cricket format50 overs per side
Tournament format(s)round robin with playoffs
Host(s)Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia
ChampionsFlag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong (1st title)
Participants10 teams
Matches27
Player of the series Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg Arshad Ali
Most runs Flag of Qatar.svg Omer Taj
Most wickets Flag of Malaysia.svg Dinesh Sockalingham
Official website Asiancricket.org
2006
2010

The 2008 ACC Trophy Elite was a cricket tournament in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, taking place between 25 July and 3 August 2008. It gives Associate and Affiliate members of the Asian Cricket Council experience of international one-day cricket and also forms part of the regional qualifications for the ICC World Cricket League

Contents

Teams

After the 2006 ACC Trophy it was decided to split the tournament into two divisions. The placement of teams in the divisions was based on their final positions in the last ACC Trophy. The top ten teams went on to take part in the 2008 ACC Trophy Elite and the remaining teams were placed in a lower division, the 2009 ACC Trophy Challenge. The teams that made it into the Trophy Elite were:

Squads

Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2021).svg  Afghanistan Flag of Bahrain.svg  Bahrain Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong Flag of Kuwait.svg  Kuwait Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia
Nowroz Mangal (Captain)

Karim Khan
Raees Ahmadzai
Dawlat Ahmadzai
Ahmed Shah
Mohammad Nabi
Noor Ali
Hasti Gul
Samiullah Shenwari
Asghar Afghan
Hamid Hassan
Noor ul Haq
Shafiqullah Shafaq
Aimal Wafa
Zarab Shah (Manager)
Taj Malik (Coach)

Fahad Sadeq (Captain)

Mirza Yaqoob
Azeem-ul-Haq
Akmal Malik
Muhammad Yaqoob
Abdul Waheed
Qamar Saeed
Ashraf Mughal
Tahir Dar
Halal Abbasi
Haroon Zafar
Imran Sajjad
Rizwan Baig
Dharmesh Kumar
M.H.M. Sadeq (Manager)
Mukhtar Ahmed Yousuf (Coach)

Tabarak Dar (Captain)

Zain Abbas
Zafran Ali
James Atkinson
Ilyas Gul
Roy Lamsam
Shakeel Haq
Ashish Gadhia
Hussain Butt
Irfan Ahmed
Nadeem Ahmed
Najeeb Amar
Skhawat Ali
Moner Ahmed
Jawad Ashraf (Manager)
Aaftab Habib (Coach)

Hisham Mirza (Captain)

Mustansar Hasan
Saud Qamar
Sibtain Raza
Abdulrehman Liaqat
Saad Khalid
Mohammad Akhudzada
Mohammad Murad
Khalid Yameen
Mohammad Ahsan
Jagath Roshantha
Mohammad Javed
Faisal Nadeem
Nadeem Malik
Emad Al Jassam (Manager)
Tahir Khan (Coach)

Rohan Suppiah (Captain)

Rakesh Madhavan
Suhan Alagaratnam
Darvin Muralitharan
Nasir Ali
Ahmad Faiz
Eszrafiq Azis
Shukri Rahim
Dinesh Sockalingham
P. Wickramasinghe
Suresh Navaratnam
M. Krishnamurthi
Anwar Arudin
Rosman Zakaria
Ramesh Menon (Manager)
Romesh Kaluwitharana (Coach)

Flag of Nepal.svg    Nepal Flag of Qatar.svg  Qatar Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg  Saudi Arabia Flag of Singapore.svg  Singapore Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg  United Arab Emirates
Binod Das (Captain)

Paras Khadka
Gyanendra Malla
Mehboob Alam
Mahesh Chhetri
Sanjam Regmi
Raj Pradhan
Dipendra Chaudhary
Sharad Vesawkar
Amrit Bhattarai
Shakti Gauchan
Kanishka Chaugai
Paresh Lohani
Basanta Regmi
Pawan Agarwal (Manager)
Roy Dias (Coach)

Omer Taj (Captain)

Mohammad Jahangir
Saleem Akhtar
Abbas Khan
Tamoor Sajjad
Imtinan Mirza
Faisal Noor
Usman Malik
Haroon Abbasi
Sardar Badshah
Rusharat Ali
Zaheer-ud-din Ibrahim
Anwar Packer
Asram Muhammad
Nazar Malik (Manager)
Shamas u din Khadas (Coach)

Sarfaz Ahmed (Captain)

Suhrab Kilsingatakam
Asif Shamshad
Hammad Saeed
Khashef Riaz
Sajjad Hussain
Abid Naseem
Shafiq Ahmed
Khalid Butt
Hussain Anwar
Mohammad Amjad
Abbas Al-Nadwi
Ahmed Al-Nadwi
Ijaz Sagheer
Nidal Khan (Manager)
Mansoor Akhtar (Coach)

Chaminda Ruwan (Captain)

Glenn Meyer
Muhammad Ali
Narender Reddy
Chetan Suryawanshi
Sagar Kulkarni
Vivek Vedagiri
Shoaib Razzak
Rizwan Madakia
Christopher Janik
Irfan Madakia
Dharmichand Mulewa
Munish Arora
Pramodh Raja
Harnam Singh (Manager)
M. Venkataramana (Coach)

Khurram Khan (Captain)

Mohammad Tauqir
Saqib Ali
Arshad Ali
Zahid Shah
Amjad Ali
Shadeep Silva
Salman Farooq
Fahad Alhashmi
Shoaib Sarwar
Riaz Khaliq
Qasim Zubair
Rameez Shahzad
Mohammad Iqbal
Mazhar Khan (Manager)
Vasbert Drakes (Coach)

Match Officials

Group stage

Group A

Points Tables

Green denotes teams going into the semifinals.

TeamPldWTLNRPtsNRR
Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2021).svg  Afghanistan 430106+0.96
Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg  United Arab Emirates 430106+0.70
Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia 420204+0.51
Flag of Bahrain.svg  Bahrain 410302+0.27
Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg  Saudi Arabia 410302-2.54
Sourceː [1]

Fixtures and results


25 July 2008
scorecard
Malaysia  Flag of Malaysia.svg
267/8 (50 overs)
v
Flag of Bahrain.svg  Bahrain
234 all out (49.2 overs)
Eszrafiq Azis 63 (42)
Halal Abbasi 2/36 (10 overs)
Imran Sajjad 73 (53)
DM Sockalingham 4/35 (9 overs)
Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia won by 33 runs
Kinrara Academy Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: A Rahman (Bangladesh) and A Siddiqi (Pakistan)
Player of the match: Eszrafiq Aziz (Malaysia)

25 July 2008
scorecard
Saudi Arabia  Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg
228 all out (50 overs)
v
Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg  United Arab Emirates
199 all out (30 overs)
Khalid Butt 110 (96)
Khurram Khan 3/31 (9 overs)
Saqib Ali 48 (42)
Shafiq Ahmed 5/45 (9 overs)
Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg  Saudi Arabia won by 29 runs
Royal Military College, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: BB Pradhan (Nepal) and SH Sarathkumara (Sri Lanka)
Player of the match: Shafiq Ahmed (Saudi Arabia)

26 July 2008
scorecard
Afghanistan  Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2021).svg
214 all out (48.1 overs)
v
Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg  United Arab Emirates
217/7 (47.1 overs)
Nowroz Mangal 55 (67)
Riaz Khaliq 3/27 (8.2 overs)
Arshad Ali 68 (127)
Karim Khan 3/33 (10 overs)
Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg  United Arab Emirates won by 3 wickets
Bayuemas Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: D Ekanayake (Sri Lanka) and SS Prasad (Singapore)
Player of the match: Arshad Ali (United Arab Emirates)

26 July 2008
scorecard
Bahrain  Flag of Bahrain.svg
335 all out (49.2 overs)
v
Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg  Saudi Arabia
137 all out (33.1 overs)
Azeem-ul-Haq 79 (80)
Abid Naseem 2/31 (5 overs)
Suhrab Kilsingatakam 52 (93)
Fahad Sadeq 3/34 (10 overs)
Flag of Bahrain.svg  Bahrain won by 198 runs
Selangor Turf Club, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: A Siddiqi (Pakistan) and T Ahmed (Bangladesh)
Player of the match: Azeem-ul-Haq (Bahrain)

27 July 2008
scorecard
Afghanistan  Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2021).svg
263/9 (50 overs)
v
Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia
197 all out (46.3 overs)
Karim Khan 81 (73)
Dinesh Sockalingham 4/49 (10 overs)
M Krishnamurthi 34 (62)
Nowroz Mangal 5/24 (5.3 overs)
Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2021).svg  Afghanistan won by 66 runs
Selangor Turf Club, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: SS Hazare (India) and SH Sarathkumara (Sri Lanka)
Player of the match: Nowroz Mangal (Afghanistan)

28 July 2008
scorecard
Bahrain  Flag of Bahrain.svg
122 all out (33.3 overs)
v
Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg  United Arab Emirates
124/2 (28 overs)
Imran Sajjad 47 (46)
Mohammad Tauqir 4/19 (9 overs)
Arshad Ali 46* (96)
Azeem-ul-Haq 2/20 (6 overs)
Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg  United Arab Emirates won by 8 wickets
Bayeumas Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: A Rehman (Pakistan) and SH Sarathkumara (Sri Lanka)
Player of the match: Mohammad Tauqir (United Arab Emirates)

29 July 2008
scorecard
Saudi Arabia  Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg
172 all out (48.2 overs)
v
Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2021).svg  Afghanistan
175/4 (25.3 overs)
Abid Naseem 67 (100)
Mohammad Nabi 5/30 (8.2 overs)
Noor Ali 70* (49)
Ijaz Sagheer 1/27 (5 overs)
Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2021).svg  Afghanistan won by 6 wickets
Kinrara Academy Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: SJ Phadkar (India) and BB Pradhan (Nepal)
Player of the match: Mohammad Nabi (Afghanistan)

29 July 2008
scorecard
United Arab Emirates  Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg
211 all out (42.2 overs)
v
Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia
154 all out (47.1 overs)
Arshad Ali 67 (103)
Dinesh Sockalingham 6/39 (9 overs)
M Krishnamurthi 40* (71)
Shadeep Silva 3/19 (7.1 overs)
Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg  United Arab Emirates won by 57 runs
Selangor Turf Club, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: D Ekanayake (Sri Lanka) and SS Prasad (Singapore)
Player of the match: Arshad Ali (United Arab Emirates)

30 July 2008
scorecard
Afghanistan  Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2021).svg
293/9 (50 overs)
v
Flag of Bahrain.svg  Bahrain
286/9 (50 overs)
Asghar Stanikzai 102 (110)
Halal Abbasi 2/25 (7 overs)
Ashraf Mughal 81 (81)
Dawlat Ahmadzi 3/39 (8 overs)
Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2021).svg  Afghanistan won by 7 runs
Bayuemas Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: A Rehman (Pakistan) and BB Pradhan (Nepal)
Player of the match: Asghar Stanikzai (Afghanistan)

30 July 2008
scorecard
Malaysia  Flag of Malaysia.svg
316/8 (50 overs)
v
Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg  Saudi Arabia
123 all out (32.2 overs)
Rakesh Madhavan 101 (137)
Sarfaz Ahmed 2/33 (10 overs)
Sarfaz Ahmed 44 (73)
P Wickramasinghe 3/8 (5.2 overs)
Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia won by 193 runs
Kinrara Academy Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: SS Hazare (India) and T Ahmed (Bangladesh)
Player of the match: Rakesh Madhavan (Malaysia)

Group B

Points Tables

Green denotes teams going into the semifinals.

TeamPldWTLNRPtsNRR
Flag of Nepal.svg    Nepal 440008+1.15
Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong 430106+1.48
Flag of Singapore.svg  Singapore 410302-0.62
Flag of Kuwait.svg  Kuwait 410302-0.91
Flag of Qatar.svg  Qatar 410302-1.26
Sourceː [2]

Fixtures and results


25 July 2008
scorecard
Singapore  Flag of Singapore.svg
227/9 (50 overs)
v
Flag of Qatar.svg  Qatar
192 all out (44.5 overs)
Chetan Suryawanshi 49 (38)
Abbas Khan 2/19 (10 overs)
Tamoor Sajjad 58 (97)
Chaminda Ruwan 5/46 (10 overs)
Flag of Singapore.svg  Singapore won by 35 runs
Bayuemas Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: SJ Phadkar (India) and T Ahmed (Bangladesh)
Player of the match: Chaminda Ruwan (Singapore)

25 July 2008
scorecard
Nepal    Flag of Nepal.svg
245/7 (50 overs)
v
Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong
201/9 (50 overs)
Paras Khadka 81 (72)
Ilyas Gull 2/31 (6 overs))
Hussain Butt 52 (123)
Basanta Regmi 3/41 (10 overs
Flag of Nepal.svg    Nepal won by 44 runs
Selangor Turf Club, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: S Prasad (Singapore) and D Ekanayaka (Sri Lanka)
Player of the match: Paras Khadka (Nepal)

26 July 2008
scorecard
Singapore  Flag of Singapore.svg
237/9 (50 overs)
v
Flag of Kuwait.svg  Kuwait
238/9 (44.5 overs)
Chetan Suryawanshi 65 (68)
Mohammad Murad 3/41 (5 overs)
Mohammad Ahsan 91* (76)
Chaminda Ruwan 3/32 (10 overs)
Flag of Kuwait.svg  Kuwait won by 1 wicket
Kinrara Academy Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: SS Hazare (India) and Khalid Mahmood (Pakistan)
Player of the match: Mohammad Ahsan (Kuwait)

26 July 2008
scorecard
Qatar  Flag of Qatar.svg
171 all out (47.2 overs)
v
Flag of Nepal.svg    Nepal
172/3 (37.3 overs)
Omer Taj 48 (77)
Shakti Gauchan 3/25 (10 overs)
Gyanendra Malla 76* (82)
Abbas Khan 2/40 (10 overs)
Flag of Nepal.svg    Nepal won by 7 wickets
Royal Military College, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: A Rahman (Bangladesh) and SJ Phadkar (India)
Player of the match: Shakti Gauchan (Nepal)

27 July 2008
scorecard
Kuwait  Flag of Kuwait.svg
161 all out (46.2 overs)
v
Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong
164/4 (35.5 overs)
Sibtain Raza 47 (70)
Nadeem Ahmed 4/28 (10 overs)
Hussain Butt 53* (66)
Saad Khalid 1/18 (2 overs)
Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong won by 6 wickets
Bayeumas Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: K Mahmood (Pakistan) and BB Bradhan (Nepal)
Player of the match: Hussain Butt (Hong Kong)

28 July 2008
scorecard
Hong Kong  Flag of Hong Kong.svg
276 all out (49.2 overs)
v
Flag of Qatar.svg  Qatar
100 all out (19 overs)
Munir Dar 89 (52)
Haroon Abbasi 3/41 (10 overs)
Omer Taj 30 (32)
Irfan Ahmed 5/47 (8 overs)
Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong won by 176 runs
Selangor Turf Club, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: A Rahman (Bangladesh) and SS Prasad (Singapore)
Player of the match: Ilyas Gul (Hong Kong)

28 July 2008
scorecard
Singapore  Flag of Singapore.svg
155/9 (50 overs)
v
Flag of Nepal.svg    Nepal
156/4 (40.5 overs)
Chaminda Ruwan 40 (83)
Mehboob Alam 3/25 (10 overs)
Paras Khadka 71* (97)
Pramodh Raja 2/28 (8 overs)
Flag of Nepal.svg    Nepal won by 6 wickets
Kinrara Academy Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: D Ekanayake (Sri Lanka) and T Ahmed (Bangladesh)
Player of the match: Paras Khadka (Nepal)

29 July 2008
scorecard
Qatar  Flag of Qatar.svg
322 all out (48.3 overs)
v
Flag of Kuwait.svg  Kuwait
298 all out (46 overs)
Mohammad Jahangir (86)
Sibtain Raza 5/55 (9.3 overs)
Jagath Roshantha (55)
Sardar Badshah 3/45 (10 overs)
Flag of Qatar.svg  Qatar won by 24 runs
Bayuemas Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: SS Hazare (India) and K Mahmood (Pakistan)
Player of the match: Mohammad Jahangir (Qatar)

30 July 2008
scorecard
Hong Kong  Flag of Hong Kong.svg
255/9 (50 overs)
v
Flag of Singapore.svg  Singapore
162 all out (36.2 overs)
Skhawat Ali 83 (119)
Mohammad Ali 5/45 (9 overs)
Glenn Meyer 35 (31)
Najeeb Amar 3/34 (8.2 overs)
Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong won by 93 runs
Royal Military College, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: A Rahman (Bangladesh) and SJ Phadkar (India)
Player of the match: Zain Abbas (Hong Kong)

30 July 2008
scorecard
Kuwait  Flag of Kuwait.svg
103 all out (38.1 overs)
v
Flag of Nepal.svg    Nepal
104/3 (29 overs)
Mohammad Murad 19 (17)
Shakti Gauchan 3/5 (8 overs)
Sharad Vesawkar 28* (80)
Mohammad Javed 2/18 (10 overs)
Flag of Nepal.svg    Nepal won by 7 wickets
Selangor Turf Club, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: K Mahmood (Pakistan) and SH Sarathkumara (Sri Lanka)
Player of the match: Mehboob Alam (Nepal)

Semifinals

1 August 2008
scorecard
Hong Kong  Flag of Hong Kong.svg
154/9 (50 overs)
v
Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2021).svg  Afghanistan
129 all out (43.4 overs)
Najeeb Amar 29* (41)
Hasti Gul 3/23 (10 overs)
Ahmed Shah 36 (69)
Nadeem Ahmed 3/14 (7.4 overs)
Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong won by 25 runs
Kinrara Academy Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: D Ekanayake (Sri Lanka) and BB Pradhan (Nepal)
Player of the match: Najeeb Amar (Hong Kong)

1 Aug 2008
scorecard
Nepal    Flag of Nepal.svg
166 all out (47.3 overs)
v
Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg  United Arab Emirates
172/4 (45.4 overs)
Shakti Gauchan 35 (67)
Khurram Khan 3/20 (6.3 overs)
Khurram Khan 42* (56)
Sharad Vesawkar 2/34 (6 overs)
Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg  United Arab Emirates won by 6 wickets
Selangor Turf Club, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: A Rahman (Bangladesh) and SS Hazare (India)
Player of the match: Khurram Khan (United Arab Emirates)

Playoffs

1 August 2008
scorecard
Singapore  Flag of Singapore.svg
229 all out (49.2 overs)
v
Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia
211 all out (47.2 overs)
Glenn Meyer (75)
Dinesh Sockalingham 3/44 (10 overs)
Suhan Alagaratnam (107)
B Narender Reddy 3/27 (4.2 overs)
Flag of Singapore.svg  Singapore won by 18 runs
Bayuemas Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: K Mahmood (Pakistan) and SH Sarathkumara (Sri Lanka)
Player of the match: Suhan Alagaratnam (Malaysia)
  • 5th Place Playoff

2 August 2008
scorecard
Saudi Arabia  Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg
164 all out (45 overs)
v
Flag of Qatar.svg  Qatar
165/1 (22.3 overs)
Suhrab Kilsingatakam 65 (129)
Abbas Khan 5/20 (10 overs)
Omer Taj 82* (72)
Abid Naseem 1/23
Flag of Qatar.svg  Qatar won by 9 wickets
Royal Military College, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: SS Hazare (India) and K Mahmood (Pakistan)
Player of the match: Omer Taj (Qatar)
  • 9th Place Playoff

2 August 2008
scorecard
Bahrain  Flag of Bahrain.svg
328/6 (50 overs)
v
Flag of Kuwait.svg  Kuwait
229 all out (38.4 overs)
Tahir Dar 85* (51)
Mohammad Murad 2/31 (6 overs)
Mohammad Ahsan 66 (75)
Halal Abbasi 4/55 (10 overs)
Flag of Bahrain.svg  Bahrain won by 99 runs
Selangor Turf Club, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: A Rahman (Bangladesh) and BB Pradhan (Nepal)
Player of the match: Tahir Dar (Bahrain)
  • 7th Place Playoff

2 August 2008
scorecard
Nepal    Flag of Nepal.svg
210/8 (50 overs)
v
Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2021).svg  Afghanistan
213/7 (48.2 overs)
Kanishka Chaugai 43 (63)
Aimal Wafa 2/35 (10 overs)
Mohammad Nabi 55 (56)
Paras Khadka 3/34 (9 overs)
Flag of Afghanistan (2004-2021).svg  Afghanistan won by 3 wickets
Bayuemas Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: SJ Phadkar (India) and T Ahmed (Bangladesh)
Player of the match: Samiullah Shenwari (Afghanistan)
  • 3rd Place Playoff

Final

3 August 2008
scorecard
United Arab Emirates  Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg
243/7 (50 overs)
v
Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong
205/7 (34.1 overs)
Saqib Ali 102 (134)
Najeeb Amar 4/61 (10 overs)
Najeeb Amar 100 (80)
Shadeep Silva 3/39 (7 overs)
Flag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong won by 3 wickets (D/L)
Kinrara Academy Oval, Kuala Lumpur
Umpires: A Rahman (Bangladesh) and D Ekanayake (Sri Lanka)
Player of the match: Najeeb Amar (Hong Kong)
  • Final.
  • Match shortened due to rain; Duckworth-Lewis revised target to win: 203 runs in 36 overs for Hong Kong.

Final Placings

PosTeam
1stFlag of Hong Kong.svg  Hong Kong
2ndFlag of the United Arab Emirates.svg  United Arab Emirates
3rdFlag of Afghanistan (2004-2021).svg  Afghanistan
4thFlag of Nepal.svg    Nepal
5thFlag of Singapore.svg  Singapore
6thFlag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia
7thFlag of Bahrain.svg  Bahrain
8thFlag of Kuwait.svg  Kuwait
9thFlag of Qatar.svg  Qatar
10thFlag of Saudi Arabia.svg  Saudi Arabia

Statistics

[3]

Most RunsMost Wickets
Flag of Qatar.svg Omer Taj294 Flag of Malaysia.svg Dinesh Sockalingham18
Flag of Malaysia.svg Suhan Alagaratnam278 Flag of Qatar.svg Abbas Khan12
Flag of Hong Kong.svg Arshad Ali268 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Najeeb Amar12
Flag of Nepal.svg Paras Khadka209 Flag of Bahrain.svg Halal Abbasi11
Flag of Hong Kong.svg Najeeb Amar195 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Irfan Ahmed11

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The Pakistan women's national cricket team, also known as Green Shirts or Women in Green, represents Pakistan in international women's cricket. One of ten teams competing in the ICC Women's Championship, the team is organised by the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB), a full member of the International Cricket Council (ICC).

The Women's Asia Cup, officially known as the ACC Women's Asia Cup is a women's One Day International and Twenty20 International cricket tournament. It was established in 2004 and is a biennial tournament. The tournament is contested by cricket teams from Asia.

The 2009 ACC Trophy Challenge was a cricket tournament in Chiang Mai, Thailand, taking place between 12 and 21 January 2009. It gave Associate and Affiliate members of the Asian Cricket Council experience of international one-day cricket and also formed part of the regional qualifications for the ICC World Cricket League. The top 2 teams were promoted to the ACC Trophy Elite Division. Bhutan also qualified for the WCL82010

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Afghanistan national under-19 cricket team</span>

The Afghanistan national under-19 cricket team represents the country of Afghanistan in under-19 international cricket.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2014 ICC World Twenty20</span>

The 2014 ICC World Twenty20 was the fifth ICC World Twenty20 competition, an international Twenty20 cricket tournament, that took place in Bangladesh from 16 March to 6 April 2014. It was played in three cities — Dhaka, Chittagong and Sylhet. The International Cricket Council announced Bangladesh as host in 2010. It was the second consecutive time that an Asian country hosted the event, with Sri Lanka hosting the previous tournament in 2012. Sri Lanka won the 2014 tournament, beating India by 6 wickets in the final at Mirpur.

The ACC Under-19 Asia Cup is a cricket tournament organised by the ACC for Under-19 teams from its member nations. It was first held in 1989 in Bangladesh where India won the tournament. The second edition was played after 14 years in 2003 in Pakistan where India retained their title. In the group stages of 2003 edition, Irfan Pathan claimed 9/16 against Bangladesh. The 3rd edition was played in Malaysia in 2012 where the trophy was shared by India and Pakistan after the final was tied. The fourth edition was held in 2013/14 in UAE which was won by India. The fifth edition was held in Sri Lanka in December 2016 and was won by India too. The sixth edition was held in November 2017 in Malaysia, which was won by Afghanistan by 185 run from Pakistan. The seventh edition was held in September & October 2018 in Bangladesh, which was won by India by 144 run from Sri Lanka. The eight edition was held in September 2019 in Sri Lanka & India retained their title. The ninth edition had taken place in December 2021 in United Arab Emirates.

The 2016–2017 international cricket season was from September 2016 to April 2017. During this period, 41 Test matches, 87 One Day Internationals (ODIs), 43 Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is), 4 first class matches, 16 List A matches, 41 Women's One Day Internationals (WODIs), and 15 Women's Twenty20 Internationals (WT20Is) were played. Of the 41 Test matches that took place in this season, 3 were day/night Test matches. The season started with Pakistan leading the Test cricket rankings, Australia leading the ODI rankings, New Zealand leading the Twenty20 rankings, and Australia women leading the Women's rankings.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2016 Women's Twenty20 Asia Cup</span> Cricket tournament in Thailand

The 2016 Women's Twenty20 Asia Cup was the sixth edition of the ACC Women's Asia Cup, organized by the Asian Cricket Council. It took place from 26 November to 4 December 2016, in Thailand, and was the second edition played as a 20-over tournament. Matches were played at the Asian Institute of Technology Ground and the Terdthai Cricket Ground.

The 2018–19 international cricket season was from September 2018 to April 2019. 34 Test matches, 92 One Day Internationals (ODIs) and 74 Twenty20 International (T20Is), as well as 28 Women's One Day Internationals (WODIs) and 130 Women's Twenty20 Internationals (WT20Is), were played during this period. The season started with India leading the Test cricket rankings, England leading the ODI rankings and Pakistan leading the Twenty20 rankings. In October 2018, the International Cricket Council (ICC) introduced separate rankings for women's ODIs and T20Is for the first time, with Australia women leading both tables.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2022 Asia Cup</span> Cricket tournament in the United Arab Emirates

The 2022 Asia Cup was the 15th edition of the Asia Cup cricket tournament, with the matches played as Twenty20 Internationals (T20Is) during August and September 2022 in the United Arab Emirates. Originally scheduled to be held in September 2020, the tournament was postponed in July 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. It was then rescheduled to take place in June 2021, before being postponed once again. Pakistan was scheduled to host the tournament after retaining the rights to host the 2022 edition. However, in October 2021, the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) announced that Sri Lanka would host the tournament in 2022, with Pakistan co-hosting the 2023 edition with the former. India were the defending champions, and were eliminated in the Super Four stage in this edition. Sri Lanka beat Pakistan by 23 runs in the final, to win their sixth title and their first in T20I format.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2023 Asia Cup</span> Annual international cricket tournament

The 2023 Asia Cup was the 16th edition of the men's Asia Cup cricket tournament. The matches were played as One Day Internationals (ODIs) with Pakistan as the official host and Sri-Lanka as the co-host for select matches involving India. It was held in Pakistan and Sri Lanka, between 30 August to 17 September 2023. The tournament was contested by 6 teams. Sri Lanka were the defending champions. It was the first Asia Cup to be held in multiple countries, with four matches being played in Pakistan and the remaining nine matches being played in Sri Lanka.

The 2022 Women's Twenty20 Asia Cup was the eighth edition of the Women's Asia Cup tournament which took place from 1 to 15 October 2022 in Sylhet, Bangladesh. The tournament was contested between Bangladesh, India, Malaysia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Thailand and United Arab Emirates. On 20 September 2022, the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) announced the schedule of the tournament. Bangladesh were the defending champions, having defeated India by three wickets in the final of the 2018 tournament to win the title for the first time. The tournament was played at the Sylhet International Cricket Stadium. The seven teams played in a round-robin stage, with the top four progressing to the semi-finals.

References

  1. "Asian Cricket Council Trophy Elite 2008 Points Table | Asian Cricket Council Trophy Elite Ranking". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 2023-03-04.
  2. "Asian Cricket Council Trophy Elite 2008 Points Table | Asian Cricket Council Trophy Elite Ranking". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 2023-03-04.
  3. 2008 ACC Trophy Elite Records at cricinfo.com