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India captain Virat Kohli (second right) and coach Anil Kumble (second left) during a practice session in Birmingham. Image Credit: AP

Birmingham: Title-holders India begin their quest to retain the Champions Trophy when they face arch-rivals Pakistan in their tournament opener at Edgbaston on Sunday.

Ahead of their latest one-day international encounter, we look back at five memorable limited overs matches between the Asian cricket giants.

April 18, 1986
Sharjah
Pakistan won by one wicket

A match no fan on either side of the border will forget. Pakistan, needing four runs off the last ball to lift the Australasia Cup, sailed through as Javed Miandad pulled a full toss from seamer Chetan Sharma for six. Instantly, Miandad became a national hero and Sharma was reduced to facing barbs and insults on his return home.

March 1, 2003
Centurion
India won by six wickets

The World Cup match featured a classic cricketing confrontation between two global stars — Indian batsman Sachin Tendulkar and Pakistan fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar. Tendulkar smashed a 75-ball 98 to help his team achieve a 274-run target. Akhtar bagged just one wicket, that of Tendulkar, while conceding 72 runs in his 10 overs. Pakistan opener Saeed Anwar (101) was the only batsman to score a century in the match.

September 19, 2004
Edgbaston
Pakistan won by three wickets

Pakistan would be delighted if history repeated itself on Sunday, having won the previous Champions Trophy encounter in Birmingham with four balls to spare. Rana Naved and Akhtar took four wickets apiece to restrict India, who were without Tendulkar because of a ‘tennis elbow’ injury, to 200. Pakistan slumped to 27 for three but Yousuf Youhana (who later came to be known as Mohammad Yousuf) saw them to victory with an unbeaten 81.

March 30, 2011
Mohali
India won by 29 runs

A World Cup semi-final match that Pakistan ‘lost’ as much as India, on home soil, won with the visitors dropping Tendulkar four times during a knock of 85 that also saw him survive two close lbw calls. Pakistan’s chase slowed to a halt in the face of a razor-sharp fielding effort, with Misbah-ul-Haq criticised for taking 76 balls to make 56.

March 2, 2014
Dhaka
Pakistan won by one wicket

Pakistan appeared to be cruising to victory in this Asia Cup clash in Bangladesh, needing 11 off the last 10 balls with four wickets in hand to overtake India’s 245 for eight. But three wickets fell quickly and it came down to nine runs off the last four deliveries from Ravichandran Ashwin. But Shahid Afridi, living up to his big-hitting reputation, smashed the next two balls for sixes to seal victory.