New Delhi: The simmering diplomatic crisis between India and Pakistan has spilled over into the cricketing arena once again. In a move that’s sending shockwaves across the Asian cricketing fraternity, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has verbally informed the Asian Cricket Council (ACC) of its decision to withdraw from the upcoming 2025 Asia Cup, both in the men’s and women’s formats, reports claimed. This isn’t just a sporting decision—it’s a geopolitical message.
Operation Sindoor Casts a Shadow Over Sports
The military escalation following the Pahalgam terror attack and India’s retaliatory Operation Sindoor has affected Indo-Pak relations across the board. While a ceasefire has since been reached, the wounds of conflict remain fresh.
Pakistan resumed its domestic cricket with a self-proclaimed sense of victory, restarting the Pakistan Super League (PSL) in a show of defiance. India, however, took a divergent path—choosing not to conflate patriotism with cricket, but making it clear that business as usual was no longer an option.
The BCCI’s Quiet But Firm Stand
According to sources cited in The Indian Express, the BCCI communicated to the ACC that India would not participate in either the Women’s Emerging Teams Asia Cup or the Men’s T20 Asia Cup, both scheduled for later this year.
The main objection? The current ACC chairman is Mohsin Naqvi, a Pakistani minister and former PCB chief.
“The Indian team can’t play in a tournament that is organised by the ACC whose chief is a Pakistan minister. That’s the sentiment of the nation,” said a senior BCCI official, reinforcing that the cricket board is acting in lockstep with the Indian government’s geopolitical posture.
India had been slated to host the Asia Cup 2025, an irony not lost in this escalating saga. Now, not only is India pulling out—it’s potentially sinking the tournament entirely.
Ripple Effects: A Tournament in Crisis
Without India, there is no India-Pakistan clash. And without that high-stakes rivalry, the Asia Cup’s commercial appeal collapses. Broadcasters like Sony Pictures Networks India, which shelled out $170 million in 2024 for Asia Cup rights through 2032, may now renegotiate their deal, given the likely collapse of viewership and ad revenues.
This development is more than a strategic snub; it’s a financial blow. The Asia Cup’s revenue model depends heavily on the subcontinental rivalry. Full members of the ACC—India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, and Afghanistan—receive 75% of the broadcast revenue. The rest is shared among smaller associates and affiliates. Without India, the entire structure wobbles.
Pakistan Cricket: A Hat-Trick of Disappointments
This is the third major blow for Pakistan cricket in as many years:
- Asia Cup 2023 was moved to Sri Lanka after India refused to play in Pakistan.
- Champions Trophy 2025 matches involving India were relocated to Dubai.
- Now, Asia Cup 2025 faces cancellation after India’s withdrawal.
Ironically, in each case, Pakistan not only lost face but also faltered on the field—failing to reach the finals in 2023, and crashing out in the group stage of the Champions Trophy earlier this year.
The Road Ahead: India Draws a Line
India’s message is now unequivocal: it will not engage in bilateral cricket or non-ICC events with Pakistan while diplomatic and security concerns persist. Although ICC events leave India with little choice but to participate in global tournaments with neutral venues, the Asia Cup and similar formats offer it room to maneuver—and the BCCI is using that leverage unapologetically.
As the Indo-Pak standoff continues to unfold on both battlefields and boardrooms, cricket is no longer just a game—it’s a barometer of diplomacy