1992–93 SAARC Quadrangular
The 1992–93 SAARC Quadrangular was the inaugural SAARC Quadrangular cricket tournament. It started in Dhaka, Bangladesh in December 1992 amidst great enthusiasm and excitement.
Background
4 teams, the 'A' teams from neighbouring India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka, and the full national team of the host country participated in the event. Due to the volatile political situation arising in the sub-continent, the tournament had to be abandoned at the League stage. Thus, there was no winners of the tournament.Scores in brief
| Date | Match | Scorecard | Result |
| Dec. 3 | Bangladesh v Sri Lanka | Sri Lanka 85 Bangladesh 87/3 | Bangladesh wins by 7 wickets |
| 4 Dec. | India V Pakistan | Pakistan 195 India 199/1 India wins by 9 wickets | |
| 5 Dec. | Bangladesh V Pakistan | Bangladesh 159 Pakistan 160/5 | Pakistan wins by 5 wickets |
| 6 Dec. | India V Sri Lanka | India216/3 Sri Lanka 149 | India wins by 68 runs |
| 9 Dec. | Pakistan V Sri Lanka | Sri Lanka 126 Pakistan 126/1 | Pakistan wins by 9 wickets |
| 10 Dec | India vs Bangladesh | India 30/0 Bangladesh | The match & the Tournament abandoned |
India came to the tournament with the strongest team, and they were the favourites to lift the trophy. The didn't get the chance to do that, but some of the players were rewarded for their brilliant performances. Both Vinod Kambli and off-spinner Rajesh Chauhan made their test debut against England at Eden Garden, Calcutta, in Jan 1993. Navjot Singh Sidhu was recalled to open the batting, and he remained a regular member of the Indian national team till the end of the decade. Maninder Singh, the captain of the 'A' team, was recalled briefly, for the one-off test Match against Zimbabwe in March 1993. Ajay Sharma, the highest wicket taker of the tournament, earned himself a recall to the Indian ODI team. In contrast, the future Indian captain Sourav Ganguly played in all the games, but never got the chance to bat. His only over in the tournament, against the Pakistanis, went for 13 runs.
Pakistan didn't send their strongest available team. Instead, they gave opportunity to some youngsters. The openers, Basit Ali and Shaheed Anwar, impressed with their aggressive batting. Their seamers did well, but they didn't have the quality spinner required for slow turning pitches. The Lankan team was very weak, and they were badly beaten in all the games. Still, The pacer Graeme Labrooy, bowled with plenty of heart.
For the hosts, their best moment came on the opening day, with a crushing defeat of the Lankans. The medium pacers Saiful Islam, Jahangir Alam Talukdar Dulu & Gholam Nousher Prince bowled the opposition out for a mere 85. The Abedin brothers, Nobel & Nannu, then did the rest. The seamers bowled well again against Pakistan, putting them under pressure initially, but at the end the hosts didn't have enough runs on the board.