From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cricket tournament
The 2013 ACC Twenty20 Cup was a cricket tournament held between March 26 and April 3 in Nepal . The tournament served as a qualifying tournament for the 2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier .[ 1] Afghanistan has already qualified as an ODI nation while UAE has already qualified as host for the 2013 ICC World Twenty20 Qualifier . Hence, the tournament will, in reality, serve as qualifier for other top two teams from Asian region.
Group stage
Group A
Teams that qualified for the semifinals.
Fixtures
Hong Kong won the toss and elected to field
Maldives won the toss and elected to field
Maldives won the toss and elected to field
Nepal won the toss and elected to bat
Malaysia won the toss and elected to field
Maldives won the toss and elected to field
Hong Kong won the toss and elected to bat
Malaysia won the toss and elected to field
Malaysia won the toss and elected to field
Nepal won the toss and elected to bat
Group B
Teams that qualified for the semifinals.
Fixtures
v
Oman 106/9 (19.1 overs)
Afghanistan won the toss and elected to bat
United Arab Emirates won the toss and elected to field
Bahrain won the toss and elected to bat
Oman 82 (18.1 overs)
v
United Arab Emirates won the toss and elected to field
Bahrain won the toss and elected to field
v
Oman 161 (18.5 overs)
Kuwait won the toss and elected to bat
Afghanistan won the toss and elected to bat
v
Oman 96/4(14.4 overs)
Bahrain won the toss and elected to bat
Afghanistan won the toss & elected to field
United Arab Emirates won the toss & elected to bat
Semi-finals
Afghanistan won the toss & elected to field
United Arab Emirates won the toss & elected to bat
3rd place play-off
Hong Kong won the toss and elected to field.
United Arab Emirates won the 3rd place play-off
Final
Afghanistan won the toss and elected to field.
Afghanistan won the 2012/13 ACC Twenty20 Cup
Statistics
Most runs
The top five highest run scorers (total runs) are included in this table.[ 2]
Most wickets
The following table contains the five leading wicket-takers.[ 3]
See also
References