Asian Cricket Council chief Mohsin Naqvi, who also heads Pakistan's cricket board, said on Wednesday that India are "welcome" to collect their Asia Cup trophy from his office in Dubai.
Winning moment for Team India! 🇮🇳✨
— ICC Asia Cricket (@ICCAsiaCricket) September 28, 2025
Beating Pakistan 3 times in a tournament & becoming 9-time Asia Cup champions is not everyone cup of tea🔥#AsiaCup2025 #INDvPAK pic.twitter.com/g8Z45AX0MA
India defended their Asia Cup title by defeating Pakistan on Sunday, but refused to take the winning prize from Naqvi, who is also Pakistan's interior minister.
The Indian players instead celebrated retaining their regional crown by mimicking holding a trophy, and later skipper Suryakumar Yadav said they were denied the trophy.
"As ACC President, I was ready to hand over the trophy that very day and I am still ready now," Naqvi said on X.
"If they truly want it, they are welcome to come to the ACC office and collect it from me."
The regional tournament was dominated by political posturing between the players as the two rivals met three times and the final ended in high drama when the presentation was delayed by one hour.
The T20 tournament in the United Arab Emirates was the first time the Asian cricket giants had met since a deadly military conflict between the nuclear-armed neighbours in May.
Suryakumar refused to shake hands with Pakistan captain Salman Agha in their first meeting and the deadlock continued in the next two matches – all won by India.
𝗥𝗮𝘄 𝗘𝗺𝗼𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻𝘀
— BCCI (@BCCI) September 29, 2025
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Special Triumph 🙌
🎥 From Dressing Room to the Field of Play - Scenes right through the final moments before #TeamIndia completed a stunning win in #AsiaCup2025 #Final! 👍 👍 pic.twitter.com/P2hfjarLQl
Players from both teams also resorted to signals and gestures aimed to mimic each other's military highs during the four-day conflict.
Both countries claimed victory in the conflict that killed more than 70 people in missile, drone and military fire on each side.
India and Pakistan only meet in cricket on neutral territory in international tournaments because of long-simmering tensions between the arch-rivals.




















