CRICKET: THE ASIAN CHALLENGE
Even before the first ball is delivered in the main round of one of the most eagerly awaited cricket competitions, the 2018 Asia Cup has been robbed of, arguably, its biggest attraction as the redoubtable Virat Kohli is taking a break after an exhaustive tour of England and therefore will not be seen in action in the tournament.
The absence of the undisputed best cricketer of the modern generation has definitely taken some of the gloss off from the clash of the titans — when India face their traditional rivals Pakistan on the fifth day of the main round on Sept 19. It will be the first-ever encounter between them in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) since April 2006.
The forthcoming edition was originally slated to be played in India but, following a meeting of the Asian Cricket Council in Singapore, it was decided on Oct 29, 2015 that the tournament should be relocated to the UAE mainly because of Indo-Pak political tensions.
Although the Asia Cup has had a patchy history in terms of teams taking part in it on a regular basis, the ODI tournament has never been short of action or drama
The Asia Cup has basically been a low-key event since its inception in 1984 when the UAE hosted the inaugural tournament, which was played on a round-robin basis with no final, and which India won with Sri Lanka as the runners-up and Pakistan going home with two straight losses. Earlier, there had been a few instances when either Pakistan or India chose to boycott the continental jamboree because of strained bilateral relations. Many would also remember that India refused to travel to Sri Lanka for the 1986 edition of the tournament due to acrimonies arising out of a controversy-filled Test series on the island the previous year. Pakistan, on the other hand, missed the 1990 event hosted by India.
The format of the 2018 event is the same as was in 2004 and 2008 when a Super-Four round followed the group stage. But with the five Test-playing nations of the region — India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Afghanistan — earning automatic entry into the main round, the ACC this time around organised a qualifying tournament in Malaysia where, apart from the host country UAE, Nepal, Hong Kong, Oman and Singapore competed from Aug 29 to Sept 6.