DUBAI – Team India edged Pakistan by five wickets in a gripping Asia Cup 2025 final at the Dubai International Cricket Stadium, lifting a record ninth title. Tilak Varma guided the chase with an unbeaten 69 off 48 balls, steering India to 147 with two balls left.
The finish sparked a sea of blue in the stands and a roar that echoed across Dubai.
This was their third meeting in 15 days, and it carried heavy history. India had taken the group game on 14 September by seven wickets, then the Super Four clash on 21 September by six. That run stretched India’s winning streak against Pakistan across formats to seven.
Finals feel different, though. Pakistan, led by the fiery Shaheen Afridi, chased payback after a string of near misses.
Pakistan started brightly under lights. Sahibzada Farhan and Saim Ayub powered them to 55 for 1 in the powerplay, their best start against India in T20Is. Jasprit Bumrah had a rare lean burst, giving up 34 in his first three overs. Farhan’s 32 off 18 set the tone.
Then the game flipped. Kuldeep Yadav and Varun Chakaravarthy put a squeeze on the middle overs, cutting scoring shots and building pressure. Kuldeep, punished early for 23, came back with a stunning burst, taking 4 for 30 and ripping through the heart of the innings. Pakistan’s last nine wickets fell for 33.
Agha Salman held on for 28, and Fakhar Zaman made 22, but the tail gave way. Abrar Ahmed’s leg-spin struck twice in quick time, and Hardik Pandya closed the innings by removing Faheem Ashraf. Pakistan folded for 146 in 19.1 overs, which looked light on a surface with grip and fickle bounce. “We started well, but the spinners suffocated us,” Afridi said later, frustration clear in his voice.
India’s chase had its own swings. Abhishek Sharma and Shubman Gill matched their Super Four spark, racing to 69 without loss in the powerplay, then adding 105 in 59 balls. Abhishek blasted 74 off 39 with four sixes, and traded words with Haris Rauf in a heated moment that stirred the crowd.
Gill added a steady 47. At 115 for 3 in the 14th over, the wobble arrived. Suryakumar Yadav tried a flick off Rauf and top-edged to the infield. Sanju Samson made 13 from 17. Rinku Singh fell soon after to smart lines from Mohammad Nawaz and Abrar.
Tilak Varma, calm and sharp, teamed up with Shivam Dube for a vital 65-run stand. Tilak reached fifty from 38 balls, mixing neat drives with clean lofted hits. Dube chipped in with 22 off 15, finding gaps when needed.
The decisive moment came in the 19th over, when Tilak launched Afridi over square leg for six, a strike that broke the tension. With 10 required from the final two overs, Rinku Singh, 8 not out, clipped the winning runs over mid-on to set off wild celebrations. “This is for the fans who believed in us through the tough moments,” Tilak said, filming the joy around him.
The drama did not end with the last ball. India declined to collect the trophy on stage, citing discomfort with Asian Cricket Council president Mohsin Naqvi, the former PCB chief, presenting it. The hold-up lasted over an hour, heightened by Pakistan’s late arrival from the dressing room.
Chants of “Modi! Modi!” rolled around sections of the 35,000 crowd. BCCI officials said the squad would receive the silverware in private and called it a principled stand. The PCB hit back, calling it poor sportsmanship and reigniting the off-field feud between the boards.
This win, India’s second T20 Asia Cup title, strengthens a towering record in the competition. They have now dominated 16 of 20 editions overall, including six in a row. Suryakumar Yadav, Player of the Tournament with 245 runs at a strike rate of 165, praised his attack.
“Kuldeep’s spell turned the tide when Pakistan looked set,” he said. Pakistan felt the sting of another final, a second straight runner-up finish. Babar Azam, out injured, posted, “Proud of the fight, but we need to learn from these collapses.”
Fireworks lit the Dubai sky as India’s players took a lap in front of their fans. A rousing homecoming awaits. In a month full of India-Pakistan heat, India stayed composed when it mattered most and kept their hold on Asian cricket. The rivalry remains fierce, and the next chapter cannot come soon enough.