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ACC Trophy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cricket tournament
ACC Trophy
AdministratorAsian Cricket Council
Format50-over
First edition1996
Latest edition2012
Most successful United Arab Emirates (5 titles)
Part of a series on the
International cricket competitions
ICC Competitions
Men's
Women's
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Note:Defunct competitions are listed in italics.

TheACC Trophy was alimited-overs cricket tournament organised by theAsian Cricket Council (ACC). Open only toassociate and affiliate members of theInternational Cricket Council (ICC), it was contested biennially between 1996 and 2012, but was replaced by the three-divisionACC Premier League in 2014 as the primary limited-overs competition for non-Test-playing ACC members. The tournament was discontinued for 9 years, and reinvented asACC Premier Cup in 2023. The finalists of the2000 and2006 tournaments qualified for theAsia Cup, where matches hadOne Day International (ODI) status.

Theinaugural edition of the tournament was played in Malaysia in 1996, and featured 12 teams in a single division. The single-division format continued until the 2006 tournament, which featured a record 17 teams. The ACC Trophy was then split into "Elite" (first-grade) and "Challenge" (second-grade) divisions, with the first editions held under this format being the2008 ACC Trophy Elite and the2009 ACC Trophy Challenge (the latter tournament was the only one to be held in an odd year). The two-division format continued until the final tournament in 2012, withpromotion and relegation between divisions.

Only six teams –Hong Kong,Malaysia, theMaldives,Nepal,Singapore, and theUnited Arab Emirates – competed in all nine editions of the ACC Trophy, although the Maldives and Singapore were relegated to the "Challenge" tournament at various stages after the introduction of two divisions. The UAE was by far the most successful ACC Trophy team, with five wins (and four consecutive victories from 2000 to 2006).Bangladesh won the first two tournaments, but were rendered ineligible after gaining Test status.

Previous finals

[edit]
ACC Trophy
TournamentFinal venueScoresResult
Malaysia
1996
Kuala Lumpur Bangladesh 212 in 49.3 overs (Shahriar Hossain 58;Saleem Raza 3-31)
 United Arab Emirates 104 in 36.5 overs (Arshad Laeeq 31*;Sheikh Salahuddin 3–13)
Bangladesh won by 108 runs
Nepal
1998
Kathmandu Malaysia 83 in 37.2 overs (Rohan Selvaratnam 25;Aminul Islam 3-22)
 Bangladesh 85/2 in 21.1 overs (Shahriar Hossain 51;Matthew William 1–5)
Bangladesh won by 8 wickets
United Arab Emirates
2000
Sharjah Hong Kong 186 49.4 overs (Rahul Sharma 78;Asim Saeed 4-32)
 United Arab Emirates 191/7 in 44 overs (Mehmood Pir Baksh 56; Mohammad Zubair 4-30)
UAE won by 3 wickets
Singapore
2002
Singapore   Nepal 184 in 50 overs (Paresh Lohani 52;Arshad Ali 4-24)
 United Arab Emirates 185/4 in 38.3 overs (Khuram Khan 60*;Binod Das 2-27)
UAE won by 6 wickets
Malaysia
2004
Kuala Lumpur United Arab Emirates 253/7 in 50 overs (Syed Maqsood 67;Hemal Mehta 3-38)
 Oman 159 in 44 overs (Hemal Mehta 39;Ali Asad 4-38)
UAE won by 94 runs
Malaysia
2006
Kuala Lumpur Hong Kong 174/8 in 50 overs (Tim Smart 56;Arshad Ali 3-35)
 United Arab Emirates 175/5 in 35.3 overs (Khurram Khan 59*;Nadeem Ahmed 3-48)
UAE won by 5 wickets
ACC Trophy Elite
TournamentFinal venueScoresResult
Malaysia
2008
Kuala Lumpur United Arab Emirates 243/7 in 50 overs (Saqib Ali 102;Najeeb Amar 4-61)
 Hong Kong 205/7 in 34.1 overs (Najeeb Amar 100;Shadeep Silva 3-39)
Hong Kong won by 3 wickets (D/L)
Kuwait
2010
Kuwait City Afghanistan 224 in 50 overs (Karim Sadiq 58;Binod Das 3-35)
   Nepal 129 in 40 overs (Sharad Vesawkar 35;Nowroz Mangal 2–9)
Afghanistan won by 95 runs
United Arab Emirates
2012
Sharjah United Arab Emirates 241/6 in 50 overs (Saqib Ali 101*;Shakti Gauchan 3-36)
   Nepal 241/9 in 50 overs (Subash Khakurel 55;Ahmed Raza 2-44)
Match tied. Nepal and UAE shared trophy.
ACC Trophy Challenge
TournamentFinal venueScoresResult
Thailand
2009
Chiang Mai Oman 322/9 in 50 overs (Adnan Ilyas 138; Lobzang Yonten 2-56)
 Bhutan 104 in 40 overs (Kumar Subba 40;Hemal Mehta 3-22)
Oman won by 213 runs
Thailand
2010
Bangkok[1] Saudi Arabia 139 in 43.3 overs (Shoaib Ali 39; Ahmed Faiz 3–19)
 Maldives 140/9 in 41.4 overs (Abdulla Shahid 30; Shoaib Ali 5-25)
Maldives won by 1 wicket
Thailand
2012
Chiang Mai[2] Singapore 214/8 in 50 overs (Chetan Suryawanshi 40; Qamar Saeed 3-27)
 Bahrain 190 in 45.4 overs (Sameer Yousuf 31;Amjad Mahboob 5-22)
Singapore won by 24 runs

ACC Trophy records

[edit]

Team records

[edit]
  • Highest total: United Arab Emirates 510/6 (50 overs) v Bhutan, 2010
  • Lowest total: Myanmar 10 all out (12.1 overs) v   Nepal, 2006
  • Most wins: UAE 5, Nepal 2, Bangladesh 2, Hong Kong 1, Afghanistan 1

Individual records

[edit]

Best Partnerships

[edit]

Note: Records are incomplete.

  1. Sarfraz Ahmed & Fahad Suleiman for Saudi Arabia v Brunei 201*
  2. Rahul Sharma & Khalid Butt for Hong Kong v Singapore 181
  3. Muhammad Jahangir & Irfan Ahmed for Qatar v Thailand 174
  4. Nowroz Khan & Karim Sadiq for Afghanistan v Malaysia 171
  5. Chaminda Ruwan & Munish Arora for Singapore v Bahrain 170
  6. Omer Taj & Muhammad Jahangir for Qatar v Iran 174
  7. Muhammed Iqbal & Arshad Ali for United Arab Emirates v Brunei 166
  8. Rahul Sharma & Khalid Butt for Hong Kong v Myanmar 161
  9. Nadeem Babar & Hammad Saeed for * Saudi Arabia v Brunei 158
  10. Arshad Ali & Saqib Ali for United Arab Emirates v Brunei 152

Participating teams

[edit]
Legend
  • 1st – Champions
  • 2nd – Runners-up
  • 3rd – Third place
  • SF – Semi-finalist
  • GS – Group stage
  • Q – Qualified
  •     — Hosts
TeamMalaysia
1996
Nepal
1998
United Arab Emirates
2000
Singapore
2002
Malaysia
2004
Malaysia
2006
Malaysia
2008
Kuwait
2010
United Arab Emirates
2012
Total
 Afghanistan6th3rd3rd1st3rd5
 BahrainGS6th7th10th4
 Bangladesh1st1st2
 BhutanQF13th8th10th4
 BruneiGS15th2
 FijiSF1
 Hong KongGSSF2ndSFGS2nd1st3rd5th9
 IranGS16th2
 JapanGSGSGS3
 KuwaitGSGS3rd9th8th7th7th7
 MalaysiaGS2ndSFSFQF7th6th4th4th9
 MaldivesGSGSGSGSGS14th8th7
 Myanmar17th1
   NepalGSGSSF2nd5th4th4th2nd1st9
 OmanGS2nd11th6th6th5
 Papua New GuineaSFGS2
 QatarGS4th8th9th4
 Saudi ArabiaGS10th10th9th4
 SingaporeGSGSGSGSGS5th5th9th8
 ThailandGSGSGSGS12th5
 United Arab Emirates2ndSF1st1st1st1st2nd5th1st9
  • Note: the above table includes results in all top-flight ACC tournaments – the ACC Trophy from 1996 to 2006, and the ACC Trophy Elite from 2008 to 2012,
  • Teams initalics no longer compete in ACC Trophy/ACC Trophy Elite matches, either through having gained Test status ( Bangladesh and Afghanistan), or through having moved to theICC East Asia-Pacific region ( Fiji, Japan, and Papua New Guinea).

Champions and runners-up

[edit]
TeamChampionsRunner up
 United Arab Emirates52
 Bangladesh20
   Nepal12
 Hong Kong12
 Afghanistan10
 Oman01
 Malaysia01

Notes:Bangladesh gained full Test status in 2000 and are no longer eligible to participate in the ACC Trophy.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Asian Cricket Council – ACC Trophy Challenge 2010
  2. ^Asian Cricket Council – ACC Trophy Challenge 2012
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