Tue, Mar 3, 2026
Sports
Pokhara Cup to kick off on January 29
The sixth Pokhara Cup Football Tournament is set for January 29 to February 9 at the Pokhara Stadium.bookmark
Deepak Pariyar
Published at : January 2, 2019
Updated at : January 2, 2019 08:14
Pokhara
The sixth Pokhara Cup Football Tournament is set for January 29 to February 9 at the Pokhara Stadium.
In all 12 teams will compete for the top prize of Rs 755,000, informed the organisers Kaski District Football Association on Tuesday. Eight top-tier Nepali football clubs, three foreign invitees and the hosts team will be in fray for the title.
The losing finalists will receive Rs 455,000. The champions and the runners-up in the previous edition had collected Rs 555,000 and Rs 355,000 respectively.
The best player of the tournament will ride home a motorcycle. The organisers will also present lifetime achieve award from this year. The winner of this award will also receive a motorcycle, informed the organisers. The organisers will also honour a sports journalist as well as one best club from the district.
Kaski District FA Milan Gurung informed that they are currently preparing the ground for the tournament. Without elaborating on details, Gurung said a Japanese University team has confirmed their participation for the tournament. Kaski District general secretary Ramesh Karki said the estimated the cost of the tournament is Rs 12.8 million.
Aaha Gold Cup from February 21POKHARA: The 17th Aaha-Rara Gold Cup is set for February 21-March 2 at the Pokhara Stadium. Organisers Sahara Club of Pokhara has informed the tournament features 12 teams including top flight clubs, foreign invitees, Eastern and Western Regional teams and the hosts Sahara Club.
Most Read from Sports
Samba’s injury plea sparks outrage over lack of institutional support
Citing required funds received, Samba requests to halt further support
Nepali officials cost nation medals at Asia Trail Master
Nepal seek positives in Scotland clash after Super 8 exit
Pakistan-Nepal Friendship T20 Tournament concludes in Kathmandu
Editor's Picks
Five and half decades of KP Oli in Nepali politics
How Facebook’s algorithm is amplifying one party over all others
Nepal’s IT exports near $1 billion. Can the momentum be sustained?
Parties’ lofty pledges on economy collide with hard realities
Upper house passes tourism bill with tougher Everest rules
E-PAPER | March 03, 2026
×




9.83°C Kathmandu.jpg)















