India left Dubai with the Asia Cup title secured, unbeaten through the tournament, yet the trophy itself never touched their hands.
What should have been a straightforward celebration turned into a night of contradictions — a breakthrough for Abhishek Sharma, a statement from captain Suryakumar Yadav, and another twist in the India–Pakistan rivalry.
For Abhishek, the campaign was the clearest sign yet that he belongs on the international stage. The 24-year-old opener finished as the tournament’s leading run-scorer, hammering 314 runs at a strike-rate of 200.
He batted without hesitation, often going after the first ball he faced. Twice he crossed fifty in the Powerplay. And yet, he said the freedom to play that way came less from numbers than from trust.
“I never felt this was a pressure match,” Abhishek said after being named Player of the Tournament. “Surya bhai and GG ji (Gautam Gambhir) gave me confidence. If you want to play with such high risk, you need support when it doesn’t work. They gave me that.”
Abhishek’s journey has been anything but linear. Part of India’s U-19 World Cup-winning squad in 2018, his domestic and IPL career faltered before taking off again. He admitted those struggles were necessary: “If I came directly, I would not have learned everything. I got more time to work, and that helped.”
His innings throughout the Asia Cup set the tone for India’s dominance, but the night of the final told a different story.
Chasing 147 against Pakistan, India stumbled to 20 for 3. Abhishek himself was back in the dugout early. It fell to Tilak Varma and Shivam Dube to steady the chase. India eventually won with two balls to spare, securing a ninth Asia Cup title.
Then came the controversy. On the presentation stage, Suryakumar and his teammates declined to take the trophy from Asian Cricket Council president Mohsin Naqvi, who is also Pakistan’s interior minister and cricket board chairman. Instead, they mimed lifting an invisible cup.
“I have never seen this before, a champion team not getting a trophy,” Suryakumar told reporters. “It was hard-earned. We were here since the fourth [of September]. But we were not disappointed. We had smiles on our faces, we celebrated our players, and that was enough.”
The India captain stressed the decision was the players’ own, not a directive from administrators.
Asked to explain, he said: “Rinku Singh hit a four, India won, we applauded every player’s achievement. We celebrated that. What more do you want?”
Even without a trophy in hand, Suryakumar said the campaign would be remembered for them in playing as a unit.
He called his teammates and staff “the real trophies” and later announced he would donate his match fees from the tournament to the Indian Armed Forces.