Women's Asia Cup
The ACC Women's Asia Cup is an international One Day International and Twenty20 International cricket tournament contested by women's cricket teams from Asia.[1] It has been played seven times to date.
Administrator | Asian Cricket Council |
---|---|
Format | One Day International and Twenty20 International |
First edition | 2004 ( |
Latest edition | 2018
( |
Next edition | 2020 ( |
Tournament format | Round-robin tournament |
Number of teams | ACC member nations |
Current champion | |
Most successful | |
Tournaments | |
---|---|
List of ACC Women's Asia Cup
One-Day Internationals
2004
The first Women's Asia Cup was played in Sri Lanka in April 2004. Only two teams took part, India and Sri Lanka and they played a five match One-Day International series against each other. India won all five matches and won the first Women's Asia Cup.[2]
2005-2006
Karachi, Pakistan hosted the second Women's Asia Cup in December 2005 and January 2006.[3] Pakistan made their first appearance in the tournament.[4] India again won the tournament, beating Sri Lanka by 97 runs in the final.[5]
2006
The third Women's Asia Cup tournament was played in Jaipur, India in December 2006.[6] The tournament went very much the way of the previous event. India beat Sri Lanka in the final, this time by eight wickets.[7]
2008
The fourth Women's Asia Cup tournament was played in Sri Lanka in May 2008. India again won the tournament, defeating Sri Lanka by 177 runs in the final.[8]
Twenty20 cricket
2012
The fifth Women's Asia Cup Tournament was played in Guanggong Cricket Stadium, Guangzhou, China from 24–31 October 2012. India beat Pakistan by 19 runs in the final [9][10]
2016
The sixth Women's Asia Cup tournament was played in Thailand, from 27 November to 4 December 2016. India beat Pakistan by 17 runs in the final, becoming champion for the 6th time consecutively.
2018
The seventh Women's Asia Cup tournament was played in Malaysia, from 3 June to 10 June 2018.[11] Bangladesh beat six-time winner India by 3 wickets in the final to clinch their first Asia Cup title.[12]
Results summary
Results
Year | Format | Host Nation | Final Venue | Final | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Winner | Result | Runner-up | ||||
2004 Details |
ODI | Sri Lanka | Sinhalese Sports Club Ground, Colombo | India won the tournament 5–0 | [13] | |
2005-06 Details |
ODI | Pakistan | National Stadium, Karachi | 269/4 (50 overs) | India won by 97 runs | 172/9 (50 overs) |
2006 Details |
ODI | India |
Sawai Mansingh Stadium, Jaipur | 95/2 (27.5 overs) | India won by 8 wickets | 93 (44.1 overs) |
2008 Details |
ODI | Sri Lanka |
Welagedara Stadium , Kurunegala | 260/7 (50 overs) | India won by 177 runs | 83 (35.2 overs) |
2012 Details |
T20I | China |
Guanggong International Cricket Stadium, Guangzhou | 81 (20 overs) | India won by 18 runs | 63 (19.1 overs) |
2016 Details |
T20I | Thailand |
Asian Institute of Technology Ground, Bangkok | 121/5 (20 overs) | India won by 17 runs | 104/6 (20 overs) |
2018 Details |
T20I | Malaysia |
Kinrara Academy Oval, Kuala Lumpur | 113/7 (20 overs) | Bangladesh won by 3 wickets |
|
See also
- Asia Cup - the equivalent men's event
- Asian Test Championship
- ACC Emerging Teams Asia Cup
- ACC Under-19 Cup
References
- "Why is the cricket Women's Asia Cup such an important tournament for India?".
- [ 2004 Women's Asia Cup] at CricketArchive
- [ 2005/06 Women's Asia Cup] at Cricket Archive
- [ Points table] for 2005/06 Women's Asia Cup at Cricket Archive
- [ Scorecard] of India Women v Sri Lanka Women, 4 January 2006 at Cricket Archive
- [ 2006 Women's Asia Cup] at Cricket Archive]
- [ Scorecard] of India Women v Sri Lanka Women match, 21 December 2006 at Cricket Archive
- [ Scorecard] of India Women v Sri Lanka Women match, 11 May 2008 at ESPN cricinfo
- Scorecard of Asian Cricket Council Women's Twenty20 Asia Cup, 2012/13 Final
- Final, Asian Cricket Council Women's Twenty20 Asia Cup at Guangzhou, Oct 13 2012, ESPN Cricinfo, retrieved 10 June 2018
- "Womens Asia Cup T20, 2018". CricBuzz. Retrieved 10 June 2018.
- "India vs Bangladesh T20 Highlights: Bangladesh beat India by 3 wickets to clinch Women's Asia Cup". The Indian Express. Retrieved 10 June 2018.
- "Cricket Records – Records – 1984 – Sri Lanka – One-Day Internationals – Match results – ESPN Cricinfo". Cricinfo.