10 Players with Most Runs Conceded in an Innings in Asia Cup ODI

Written By: Sanjay Thomas
Published: July 13, 2026

Every Asia Cup highlights reel is built around batting carnage, centuries, six-hitting, chases pulled off in the last over. But behind every big total is a bowler who absorbed the damage, and someone always ends up top of the “wrong” list.

The record for most runs conceded in an innings for Asia Cup ODI belongs to Bangladesh’s Shafiul Islam, who leaked 95 runs off his 10 overs against Pakistan in Dambulla in 2010.

This article looks at that list from the bowler’s side of the story, and what it actually tells us about Asia Cup cricket.

Most Runs Conceded in an Innings for Asia Cup ODI: The Full List

Here’s the complete table of the ten most expensive bowling spells in Asia Cup ODI history, full quota overs, no rain-shortened games, just pure carnage absorbed ball after ball.

RankPlayerTeamOppositionOversRunsWktsEconGroundMatch Date
1Shafiul IslamBangladeshv Pakistan10.09539.50Dambulla21 Jun 2010
2Sohail TanvirPakistanv India10.08718.70Karachi2 Jul 2008
3T KumaranIndiav Pakistan10.08608.60Dhaka3 Jun 2000
4Sompal KamiNepalv Pakistan10.08528.50Multan30 Aug 2023
5Khaled MahmudBangladeshv Pakistan10.08108.10Dhaka2 Jun 2000
5Shahadat HossainBangladeshv India10.08108.10Mirpur16 Mar 2012
5Mohammed ShamiIndiav Sri Lanka10.08138.10Fatullah28 Feb 2014
8IK PathanIndiav Sri Lanka10.08018.00Karachi3 Jul 2008
9CAK RajithaSri Lankav Afghanistan10.07947.90Lahore5 Sep 2023
9Shaheen Shah AfridiPakistanv India10.07917.90Colombo (RPS)10 Sep 2023

Shafiul Islam’s 95: How the Record for Most Expensive Asia Cup ODI Spell Was Built

Shafiul Islam’s 3 for 95 came against Pakistan in Dambulla on 21 June 2010. What separates this record from a simple “bowler had a bad day” story is the context: he still picked up 3 wickets.

Shafiul Islam
Source: Cricket Country 

This is the pattern that shows up again and again on this list, expensive does not mean useless.

Nearly half the bowlers here (Shafiul, Shami, Rajitha) took three or more wickets while conceding heavily, proving that in T20-influenced ODI cricket, wicket-taking overs and expensive overs frequently arrive in the same spell.

Pakistan: The Common Thread in Asia Cup’s Most Expensive Spells

Look closely at the “Opposition” column and a pattern jumps out that most stat lists never point out:

  • 4 of the 10 most expensive spells were bowled against Pakistan (Shafiul, T Kumaran, Sompal Kami, Khaled Mahmud)
  • 2 more were bowled by Pakistan bowlers (Sohail Tanvir, Shaheen Shah Afridi)
  • That means Pakistan is directly involved in 6 of the 10 most expensive innings figures in Asia Cup ODI history — either dishing it out or soaking it up

No other team appears on both sides of the ledger this often, which says a lot about how consistently high-scoring and unpredictable Pakistan’s Asia Cup ODI encounters have been, regardless of the era.

Zero-Wicket Wicketless Hauls: When Economy Rate Tells Only Half the Story

Three bowlers on this list conceded 80+ runs without taking a single wicket:

  • T Kumaran — 0/86 vs Pakistan, Dhaka, 2000
  • Khaled Mahmud — 0/81 vs Pakistan, Dhaka, 2000
  • Shahadat Hossain — 0/81 vs India, Mirpur, 2012

Interestingly, two of these three came from the same 2000 Asia Cup edition, in the same city, within 24 hours of each other, Kumaran’s spell on 3 June and Mahmud’s on 2 June. That’s an underrated Asia Cup trivia nugget: back-to-back matches in Dhaka in June 2000 produced two of the most punishing wicketless spells in tournament history.

Old-Ball Era vs Modern Era: Why Recent Years Dominate the List

Split the table by decade and the timeline tells its own story:

EraMatches on the ListNotable Names
2000–20084T Kumaran, Khaled Mahmud, Sohail Tanvir, IK Pathan
2010–20143Shafiul Islam, Shahadat Hossain, Mohammed Shami
20233Sompal Kami, CAK Rajitha, Shaheen Shah Afridi

Three of the ten spells came from a single Asia Cup edition, 2023. Bigger bats, shorter boundaries, and flatter pitches at grounds like Lahore, Multan, and Colombo (RPS) mean the 2023 tournament alone nearly matches the entire 2000s decade for expensive bowling. If this trend holds, expect the top of this list to keep getting refreshed with every new edition.

Fast Bowlers vs Spinners: Who Actually Leaks the Most Runs?

A quick scan of bowling styles behind these figures shows this list is almost entirely a pace bowlers’ club, Shafiul, Tanvir, Kumaran, Kami, Mahmud, Hossain, Shami, Pathan, Rajitha, and Shaheen are all seamers. Not a single frontline spinner features in the top 10.

That’s a notable contrast to Twenty20 cricket, where spinners often go for plenty; in Asia Cup ODIs, it’s the new and old ball pace attacks that have historically absorbed the biggest hits, likely because captains lean on pace to both start and finish innings on flat batting tracks.

Quick-Fire Facts Fans Should Know

  • Record holder: Shafiul Islam, 3/95 vs Pakistan, Dambulla, 2010
  • Most economical among the “expensive” group: CAK Rajitha and Shaheen Shah Afridi, both at 7.90, yet still on the top-10 list — showing how high Asia Cup scoring has pushed the bar
  • Best wickets-to-runs trade-off: CAK Rajitha, 4 wickets for 79 runs
  • All ten spells came off a full quota of 10 overs — no rain-curtailed matches feature here
  • India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh account for 7 of the 10 bowlers, reflecting how often these three sides have faced each other in high-scoring Asia Cup contests

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Conclusion

Shafiul Islam’s 3 for 95 against Pakistan in Dambulla (2010) remains the most expensive innings figures in Asia Cup ODI history, but this list is more than a record book curiosity.

It reveals patterns fans rarely notice, Pakistan’s constant presence on both ends, pace bowlers absorbing almost all the punishment, and 2023 alone nearly rivaling an entire decade.

Next time a bowler gets hammered in an Asia Cup game, this list is the benchmark they’re chasing, hopefully from a safe distance.

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