Asian Quadrangular Football Tournament Explained

Asian Quadrangular Football Tournament
Organiser:Ceylon Football Association
Teams:4
Most Successful Team: (4 titles)

The Asian Quadrangular Football Tournament was an annual football tournament first held in Colombo, Ceylon. It was also alternatively known as Colombo Cup. Established in 1952 by the Ceylon Football Association as a part of the Colombo Fair, the national sides of India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka (formerly known as Ceylon) and Burma played each other in a round robin tournament. The tournament was last played in 1955. In 1953 it was hosted in Rangoon, Burma, in 1954 at Calcutta, India, and finally at Dacca, East Pakistan.[1] [2]

Background

Established in 1952 by the Ceylon Football Association as a part of the Colombo Exhibition, it was Initially scheduled for March 1952 to coincide with princess Elizabeth II visit to Ceylon, the event was canceled due to the death of King George VI, which led to the cancellation of her visit.

The trophy awarded to the winner of the tournament was called the Colombo Cup. The competition featured four countries from the former British Raj: Burma, Ceylon, India, and Pakistan.[3] [4] [5] It was commonly referred to as the Asian Quadrangular Football Tournament or sometimes simply the Quadrangular Tournament.[6] [7] [8]

The success of the 1952 event led the four countries to agree to hold annual tournaments, with each country hosting in turn and additional trophies being awarded alongside the Colombo Cup. For example, the Burma Bowl was introduced in 1953, and the Pakistan Silver Cup in 1955.[9]

However, after the fourth tournament in 1955, plans for the next edition in March 1957 in Ceylon fell through. The Ceylon government withheld funding, and the All-India Football Federation withdrew, arguing that the Olympic Games and the Asian Games already provided enough international competition. In January 1958, there was a proposal for Ceylon and India to continue the Colombo Cup competition alone, but India rejected the idea.

Results

YearHostWinnerRunner-up3rd Place4th place
1952
Details

(Trophy shared)[10]
None
None
1953
Details
Rangoon, Burma[11]
1954
Details
Calcutta, India
1955
Details
Dacca, Pakistan

Stadiums

YearStadiumLocation
1952Colombo OvalColombo, Ceylon
1953Aung San StadiumRangoon, Burma
1954Calcutta FC GroundCalcutta, India
1955Dacca StadiumDacca, East Pakistan

Statistics

Performance by nation

TeamGoldSilverBronze
style=background:gold4 (1952, 1953, 1954*, 1955)
style=background:gold1 (1952)style=background:silver2 (1953, 1955)style=background:#cc99661 (1954)
style=background:silver1 (1954)style=background:#cc99661 (1952)
style=background:#cc99663 (1952, 1953, 1954)

* = host

Top goal scorers by edition

YearsPlayer(s)Goals
1952 Sheoo Mewalal4
1953 Samuel4
1954 Puran Bahadur Thapa4
1955 Pradip Kumar Banerjee5

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Asian Quadrangular Tournament (Colombo Cup) 1952-1955 .
  2. Web site: The Indian National Team at the Colombo Cup . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20030613163424/http://indianfootball.de/data/colombocup.html . 2003-06-13 . www.indianfootball.de.
  3. Web site: 2023-06-20 . Remembering Moideen Kutty, the ‘iron man’ from Kerala who captained Pakistan football team . live . https://web.archive.org/web/20230620124253/https://indianexpress.com/article/sports/football/remembering-moideen-kutty-the-iron-man-from-kerala-who-captained-pakistan-football-team-8675157/ . 20 June 2023 . 2023-08-14 . The Indian Express . en.
  4. News: 2015-08-31 . 1965: The year India, Pakistan began sparring in sports . 2024-11-26 . The Times of India . 0971-8257.
  5. Web site: Sri Lanka Sports News Online edition of Daily News - Lakehouse Newspapers . 2024-11-26 . archives.dailynews.lk.
  6. Web site: 2017-08-28 . Ahmed Khan, part of India's Asian Games gold-winning football team, passes away . 2024-11-26 . Firstpost . en-us.
  7. Web site: Sri Lanka beat Burma 2 - 1 to get first international win in football . 2024-11-26 . archives.sundayobserver.lk.
  8. Web site: 20 March 2020 . ‘Pradip da will remain alive in our hearts’: AIFF condoles legendary PK Banerjee’s death . Hindustan Times.
  9. Web site: 31 October 2022 . HT This Day: Nov 1, 1953 -- India win Asian soccer cup . Hindustan Times.
  10. Web site: History in Timeline of Indian Football. live. https://web.archive.org/web/20200308124507/http://www.the-aiff.com/history. 8 March 2020. 2021-02-15. All India Football Federation.
  11. News: Quadrangular Football: India's Win. 18 September 2022. The Indian Express. 25 October 1953. Rangoon, Burma. 9. https://web.archive.org/web/20220513054108/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=sMw-AAAAIBAJ&sjid=W0wMAAAAIBAJ&pg=4159%2C1770595. 13 May 2022. live.