Cricket at the Asian Games

Cricket at the Asian Games
Current season, competition or edition:
Cricket at the 2022 Asian Games
SportCricket
FoundedM: 2010
W: 2010
First season2010
AdministratorOlympic Council of Asia
No. of teamsM: 14
W: 9
Most recent
champion(s)
M:  India (1st title)
W:  India (1st title)
Most titlesM:
 Bangladesh
 India
 Sri Lanka
(1 title each)
W:  Pakistan (2 titles)

Cricket became a medal sport at the 2010 Asian Games. India are defending champions in both men's and women's tournaments, having won during the 2022 edition.

History

The last time cricket featured in a major multi-sport event was at the 1998 Commonwealth Games held in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The gold medal was won on that occasion by South Africa, who defeated Australia by 4 wickets in the final with New Zealand winning the bronze medal. At a general meeting of the Olympic Council of Asia, held in Kuwait on 17 April 2007, it was announced that cricket would be included as a medal sport in the 2010 Asian Games to be held in Guangzhou. Matches would be played on a Twenty20, 20-overs per side format.

Following the announcement, Asian Cricket Council Chief Executive Syed Ashraful Huq said "Cricket will receive a major boost across Asia and in particular China, as a result of this enlightened decision. The Asian Cricket Council pledges its support to the Guangzhou games organizers in order to make the event a success."

Asian cricketing powerhouses India and Pakistan have been the drivers behind the inclusion of cricket in the Asian Games. The Test status nations in the Asian Cricket Council, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka would compete with the initial plan that the Associate teams such as Nepal would also be invited to play in the inaugural competition. China will compete as the host nation[1] which serves as a boost for the Chinese Cricket Association which has boldly stated its ambition of China becoming a force in one-day cricket by the 2019 World Cup.

The plans for including Associate nations in the Asian Games was later changed, along with the format that the competition would take place in, changing from 50 over matches to Twenty20 matches. It was decided that the 2009 ACC Twenty20 Cup would serve as the pre-tournament qualifying competition. Afghanistan qualified as winners of the tournament along with the national teams of Oman and the United Arab Emirates.

Cricket was not held in 2018 Asian Games but in 2019, during Olympic Council of Asia's General Assembly it was decided the return of the sport in the 2022 Asian Games, which will be held in Hangzhou, China.[2][3]

The inclusion of cricket in 2026 Asian Games in Aichi and Nagoya was announced in April 2025.[4] The Asian Cricket Council pushed for the bid and OCA President Randhir Singh was hopeful about it prior to decision.[5][6]

Editions

Men

Year Host Venue Final Third place match Teams
Winner Score Runner-up 3rd place Score 4th place
2010

Guangzhou
City Forex Stadium  Bangladesh 5 wickets  Afghanistan  Pakistan 6 wickets  Sri Lanka 9
2014

Incheon
Yeonhui Cricket Ground  Sri Lanka 68 runs  Afghanistan  Bangladesh 27 runs  Hong Kong 10
2022

Hangzhou
Zhejiang University of Technology Cricket Field  India Win by higher seeding  Afghanistan  Bangladesh 6 Wickets (DLS Method)  Pakistan 14
2026

Aichi

Women

Year Host Final Third place match Teams
Winner Score Runner-up 3rd place Score 4th place
2010

Guangzhou
 Pakistan 10 wickets  Bangladesh  Japan 7 wickets  China 8
2014

Incheon
 Pakistan 4 runs  Bangladesh  Sri Lanka 5 wickets  China 10
2022

Hangzhou
 India 19 runs  Sri Lanka  Bangladesh 5 wickets  Pakistan 9
2026

Aichi

Medal table

Total

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Pakistan (PAK)2013
2 India (IND)2002
3 Bangladesh (BAN)1236
4 Sri Lanka (SRI)1113
5 Afghanistan (AFG)0303
6 Japan (JPN)0011
Totals (6 entries)66618

Men

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Bangladesh (BAN)1023
2 India (IND)1001
 Sri Lanka (SRI)1001
4 Afghanistan (AFG)0303
5 Pakistan (PAK)0011
Totals (5 entries)3339

Women

RankNationGoldSilverBronzeTotal
1 Pakistan (PAK)2002
2 India (IND)1001
3 Bangladesh (BAN)0213
4 Sri Lanka (SRI)0112
5 Japan (JPN)0011
Totals (5 entries)3339

Performance by nations

Legend
  • QF: Quarterfinals
  • R1: First Round

Men

Team
2010

2014

2022

2026
 Afghanistan 2nd 2nd 2nd
 Bangladesh 1st 3rd 3rd
 Cambodia R1
 China QF R1
 Hong Kong QF 4th QF
 India 1st
 Japan R1
 Kuwait QF
 Malaysia QF QF QF
 Maldives R1 R1 R1
 Mongolia R1
   Nepal QF QF QF
 Pakistan 3rd 4th
 Singapore R1
 South Korea QF
 Sri Lanka 4th 1st QF
 Thailand R1
Total 9 10 14

Women

Team
2010

2014

2022

2026
 Bangladesh 2nd 2nd 3rd
 China 4th 4th
 Hong Kong R1 QF QF
 India 1st
 Indonesia QF
 Japan 3rd QF
 Malaysia R1 R1 QF
 Mongolia R1
   Nepal R1 QF
 Pakistan 1st 1st 4th
 South Korea R1
 Sri Lanka 3rd 2nd
 Thailand R1 QF QF
Total 8 10 9

List of medalists

See also

References

  1. ^ China catches cricket bug ahead of Asian Games debut BBC 13 November 2010. Retrieved 29 November 2010.
  2. ^ "Cricket likely to return to Asian Games in 2022". India Today. Retrieved 2019-03-22.
  3. ^ "Cricket to make Asian Games return at Hangzhou 2022". Times of India. Retrieved 2019-03-22.
  4. ^ Sportstar, Team (2025-04-29). "Everything you need to know about MMA and cricket at 2026 Asian Games". sportstar.thehindu.com. Retrieved 2025-04-29.
  5. ^ Lavalette, Tristan. "Amid Asian Games Uncertainty, Cricket Axed At 2026 Commonwealth Games Ahead Of Olympics". Forbes. Retrieved 2025-02-27.
  6. ^ Tagore, Vijay (2024-10-02). "Doubts arise over cricket's inclusion in 2026 Asian Games". Cricbuzz. Retrieved 2025-02-27.