Men's Asian Champions Trophy
The Men's Asian Champions Trophy is an event held annually by the Asian Hockey Federation (since 2011). It features Asia's top six field hockey teams during that hockey season competing in a round robin format. India is the most successful team in this tournament's history.
Current season, competition or edition: 2023 Men's Asian Champions Trophy | |
Sport | Field hockey |
---|---|
Founded | 2011 |
Inaugural season | 2011 |
No. of teams | 6 |
Confederation | AHF (Asia) |
Most recent champion(s) | India (4th title) (2023) |
Most titles | India (4 titles) |
India are the defending champions as they won the 2023 edition by defeating Malaysia 4–3 in the final.[1] At the 2018 edition the final between India and Pakistan was abandoned due to heavy rainfall and they were declared joint winners.[2]
Results
Year | Host | Final | Third place match | Number of teams | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Winner | Score | Runner-up | Third place | Score | Fourth place | ||||||
2011 Details |
Ordos, China | India |
0–0 (4–2 s.o.) |
Pakistan |
Malaysia |
1–0 | Japan |
6 | |||
2012 Details |
Doha, Qatar | Pakistan |
5–4 | India |
Malaysia |
3–1 | China |
6 | |||
2013 Details |
Kakamigahara, Japan | Pakistan |
3–1 | Japan |
Malaysia |
3–0 | China |
6 | |||
2016 Details |
Kuantan, Malaysia | India |
3–2 | Pakistan |
Malaysia |
1–1 (3–1 s.o.) |
South Korea |
6 | |||
2018 Details |
Muscat, Oman | India and Pakistan (Joint Winners) |
Malaysia |
2–2 (3–2 s.o.) |
Japan |
6 | |||||
2021 Details |
Dhaka, Bangladesh | South Korea |
3–3 (4–2 s.o.) |
Japan |
India |
4–3 | Pakistan |
5 | |||
2023 Details |
Chennai, India | India |
4–3 | Malaysia |
Japan |
5–3 | South Korea |
6 |
Summary
Team | Winners | Runners-up | Third place | Fourth place |
---|---|---|---|---|
India | 4 (2011, 2016, 2018^, 2023*) | 1 (2012) | 1 (2021) | |
Pakistan | 3 (2012, 2013, 2018^) | 2 (2011, 2016) | 1 (2021) | |
South Korea | 1 (2021) | 2 (2016, 2023) | ||
Japan | 2 (2013*, 2021) | 1 (2023) | 2 (2011, 2018) | |
Malaysia | 1 (2023) | 5 (2011, 2012, 2013, 2016*, 2018) | ||
China | 2 (2012, 2013) |
- * = host nation
- ^ = title shared
References
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.