1984
The first edition of the Asia Cup, called the Rothmans Asia Cup and conceived in
1983 with the creation of the Asian Cricket Council, was held in Sharjah, then
home to the council. The tournament was a round-robin tournament; India won the
title on the back of a ten-wicket win over minnows Sri Lanka and a 54-run win
over archrivals Pakistan. Wicketkeeper-batsman Surinder Khanna scored fifties in
both low-scoring games and emerged as the unexpected star by taking the
Man-of-the-Series award. Sri Lanka came in second while Pakistan lost both their
matches.
1986
Now termed the John Player Gold Leaf Trophy, the second edition was held in Sri
Lanka, the first such multi-nation tournament to be held there. The defending
champions were not present, however, owing to a controversial series against the
hosts the year before - one during which the umpires allegedly made incorrect
decisions in favour off Sri Lanka - and so Bangladesh entered as the third team.
Sri Lanka proceeded to lift the trophy with a five-wicket win over Pakistan
after losing their first match to the same opponents. Arjuna Ranatunga was named
Man of the Series.
1988
Bangladesh hosted the Wills Asia Cup but failed to win any of its three games.
Sri Lanka cruised into the final with three wins in a row but were brushed aside
by India, thanks to Man-of-the-Series Navjot Sidhu's rapid 76. Sidhu's
six-hitting exploits - he scored 50* and 50 going into the final - were a
continuation from his form in the World Cup the previous year.
1990-91
India hosted the fourth edition and won it for the third time, defeating Sri
Lanka in the final in Calcutta. Pakistan had pulled out of the tournament, which
helped India's cause. Bangladesh again failed to click and were downed by
another Sidhu hundred and a clinical Sri Lankan outfit. Four wickets from Kapil
Dev restricted Sri Lanka to 204 in the final, and a powerful middle order
knocked off the runs in 42.1 overs.
1995
With the 1993 tournament cancelled due to political tensions, the official fifth
edition returned to Sharjah after 11 years. India, Sri Lanka and Pakistan were
tied on points after the preliminary round but the former two teams went in by
virtue of a better run rate. For the third successive time India defeated Sri
Lanka in the final. Led by a magnificent third-wicket stand of 175 off 184 balls
by Sidhu and Mohammad Azharuddin, India cruised to an eight -wicket victory.
This win took India's overall win tally to four, the most for the Asia Cup.
1997
Sri Lanka lifted the 1997 Pepsi Asia Cup by defeating India by eight wickets at
home. Sri Lanka, having lifted the World Cup the year before, were a force to be
reckoned with. The world champions made use of a slow surface to defeat Pakistan
by 15 runs in the tournament opener, brushed aside India thanks to a brilliant
Ranatunga century, and demolished Bangladesh courtesy Sanath Jayasuriya's
83-ball 108. Ranatunga and Jayasuriya starred in the final in Colombo as well, a
triumph that followed their success in the Singer Akai Cup and Independence Cup
in India earlier in the year.
2000
Pakistan remained unbeaten all tournament and rightfully lifted the title for
the first time. Bangladesh lost all their matches and India only beat the hosts.
Pakistan were well-rounded; Bangladesh were thumped by 223 runs, Yousuf Youhana
and Abdul Razzaq combined to down India by 44 runs, and Sri Lanka were beaten by
seven wickets, with Youhana again the star. Come the final, at Dhaka's
Bangabandhu National Stadium, and another all-round effort under lights earned
Pakistan a 39-run win.
2004
Sri Lanka shrugged off an indifferent season with a 25-run win over India in
Colombo in the finals, after losing just one match all tournament. Hong Kong and
the UAE also participated but did little of note; Bangladesh beat Hong Kong by
116 runs to open up their account in the tournament history. Pakistan began well
only to crash out due to an error in net run rate calculation and India came
through despite a couple sluggish displays. But Sri Lanka once again proved
dominant at home, defending a total of 228 with some tigerish fielding and
top-class spin bowling from Jayasuriya and Upul Chandana.
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