- Source: ACC Trophy
The ACC Trophy was a limited-overs cricket tournament organised by the Asian Cricket Council (ACC). Open only to associate and affiliate members of the International Cricket Council (ICC), it was contested biennially between 1996 and 2012, but was replaced by the three-division ACC 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 as ACC Premier Cup in 2023. The finalists of the 2000 and 2006 tournaments qualified for the Asia Cup, where matches had One Day International (ODI) status.
The inaugural 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 the 2008 ACC Trophy Elite and the 2009 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, with promotion and relegation between divisions.
Only six teams – Hong Kong, Malaysia, the Maldives, Nepal, Singapore, and the United 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
ACC Trophy records
= Team records
=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
=Most runs in an innings: Arshad Ali United Arab Emirates 213* (146)
Most runs in a career: Arshad Ali United Arab Emirates 461
Best batting average: Arshad Ali United Arab Emirates 153.66
Best bowling in an innings: Mehboob Alam Nepal 7/3 v Myanmar, 2006
Most wickets in a career: Mehboob Alam Nepal 52
Best bowling ave: Kashif Butt United Arab Emirates 3.00
Most catches by an outfielder (career): Khuram Khan United Arab Emirates 5
Most wicket-keeping dismissals (career): Mohammad Nadeem United Arab Emirates 8
Most ACC Trophy appearances:
Best Partnerships
Note: Records are incomplete.
Sarfraz Ahmed & Fahad Suleiman for Saudi Arabia v Brunei 201*
Rahul Sharma & Khalid Butt for Hong Kong v Singapore 181
Muhammad Jahangir & Irfan Ahmed for Qatar v Thailand 174
Nowroz Khan & Karim Sadiq for Afghanistan v Malaysia 171
Chaminda Ruwan & Munish Arora for Singapore v Bahrain 170
Omer Taj & Muhammad Jahangir for Qatar v Iran 174
Muhammed Iqbal & Arshad Ali for United Arab Emirates v Brunei 166
Rahul Sharma & Khalid Butt for Hong Kong v Myanmar 161
Nadeem Babar & Hammad Saeed for * Saudi Arabia v Brunei 158
Arshad Ali & Saqib Ali for United Arab Emirates v Brunei 152
Participating teams
Legend
1st – Champions
2nd – Runners-up
3rd – Third place
SF – Semi-finalist
GS – Group stage
Q – Qualified
— Hosts
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 in italics no longer compete in ACC Trophy/ACC Trophy Elite matches, either through having gained Test status ( Bangladesh and Afghanistan), or through having moved to the ICC East Asia-Pacific region ( Fiji, Japan, and Papua New Guinea).
Champions and runners-up
Notes:
Bangladesh gained full Test status in 2000 and are no longer eligible to participate in the ACC Trophy.
See also
Asia Cup
ACC Premier Cup
ACC Twenty20 Cup
ACC Premier League
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- JJ Redick
- Aaron Donald
- Lamar Jackson
- Shane Battier
- Sourav Ganguly
- ACC Trophy
- United Arab Emirates national cricket team
- Hong Kong national cricket team
- Nepal national cricket team
- China national cricket team
- Bahrain national cricket team
- Saudi Arabia national cricket team
- ACC Under-19 Asia Cup
- Myanmar national cricket team
- Afghanistan national cricket team