| The Ranji Trophy, which the winners get. | |
| Administrator(s) | BCCI |
|---|---|
| Cricket format | First-class cricket |
| Tournament format(s) | League and knockout |
| Champions | Bombay (31st title) |
| Participants | 27 |
| Most runs | M. V. Sridhar (Hyderabad) (757) [1] |
| Most wickets | Pradeep Jain (Haryana) (46) [2] |
The 1993–94 Ranji Trophy was the 60th season of the Ranji Trophy. Bombay defeated Bengal by 8 wickets in the final.
North Zone
Central Zone
East Zone
| South Zone
West Zone
|
| Pre-Quarter-finals | Quarter-finals | Semi-finals | Finals | |||||||||||
| 12 Feb 1994 — Nagpur | ||||||||||||||
| Vidarbha | 356& 131/5 | |||||||||||||
| 26 Feb 1994 — Pune | ||||||||||||||
| Maharashtra (F) | 535 & 350/2d | |||||||||||||
| Maharashtra (F) | 645/9d & 175/7d | |||||||||||||
| 12 Feb 1994 — Indore | ||||||||||||||
| Orissa | 398 & 33/3 | |||||||||||||
| Madhya Pradesh | 370 & 230/9 | |||||||||||||
| 12 Mar 1994 — Pune | ||||||||||||||
| Orissa (F) | 437 & 244 | |||||||||||||
| Maharashtra | 338 | |||||||||||||
| 12 Feb 1994 — Bangalore | ||||||||||||||
| Bombay (F) | 509 & 316/7 | |||||||||||||
| Karnataka | 468 | |||||||||||||
| 26 Feb 1994 — Bangalore | ||||||||||||||
| Assam | 107 & 175 | |||||||||||||
| Karnataka | 406 & 305/5d | |||||||||||||
| 12 Feb 1994 — Faridabad | ||||||||||||||
| Bombay (F) | 460 & 89/6 | |||||||||||||
| Haryana | 291 & 225 | |||||||||||||
| 27 Mar 1994 — Bombay | ||||||||||||||
| Bombay | 718 | |||||||||||||
| Bombay | 256 & 195/2 | |||||||||||||
| 12 Feb 1994 — Calcutta | ||||||||||||||
| Bengal | 193 & 257 | |||||||||||||
| Bengal (F) | 213 & 445/8 | |||||||||||||
| 26 Feb 1994 — Calcutta | ||||||||||||||
| Delhi | 178 | |||||||||||||
| Bengal | 392 & 79/1 | |||||||||||||
| 12 Feb 1994 — Jaipur | ||||||||||||||
| Hyderabad | 261 & 209 | |||||||||||||
| Rajasthan | 202 & 136 | |||||||||||||
| 12 Mar 1994 — Calcutta | ||||||||||||||
| Hyderabad | 272 & 233 | |||||||||||||
| Bengal | 278 & 98/2 | |||||||||||||
| 12 Feb 1994 — Baroda | ||||||||||||||
| Baroda | 249 & 123 | |||||||||||||
| Baroda (F) | 366 & 368 | |||||||||||||
| 25 Feb 1994 — Baroda | ||||||||||||||
| Tamil Nadu | 268 & 97/4 | |||||||||||||
| Baroda (F) | 592 | |||||||||||||
| Punjab | 349 & 287/8 | |||||||||||||
(F) - Advanced to next round on First Innings Lead
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The 1941–42 Ranji Trophy was the eighth season of the Ranji Trophy. Bombay regained the title after six years defeating Mysore.
The 1943–44 Ranji Trophy was the tenth season of the Ranji Trophy. Western India won their only title defeating Bengal in the final.
The 1952–53 Ranji Trophy was the 19th season of the Ranji Trophy. Holkar won the title defeating Bengal in the final.
The 1955–56 Ranji Trophy was the 22nd season of the Ranji Trophy. Bombay won the title defeating Bengal in the final.
The 1958–59 Ranji Trophy was the 25th season of the Ranji Trophy. Bombay won the title defeating Bengal in the final. This started a sequence of 15 consecutive Ranji titles for Bombay.
The 1961–62 Ranji Trophy was the 28th season of the Ranji Trophy. Bombay won the title defeating Rajasthan in the final.
The 1962–63 Ranji Trophy was the 29th season of the Ranji Trophy. Bombay won the title defeating Rajasthan in the final. The tournament was severely impacted by the Chinese Aggression of 1962. Services and Railways pulled out of the tournament after playing one game each. Being so close to the action Assam and Odisha had to pull out of the tournament. When the ceasefire was ordered, the invaders were only a few kilometres away from Tezpur, which was the headquarters of Assam cricket. Bihar played one match and then closed their season as most of their players were employed in firms and factories which were pressed into defence production.
The 1968–69 Ranji Trophy was the 35th season of the Ranji Trophy. Bombay retained the title defeating Bengal in the final.
The 1971–72 Ranji Trophy was the 38th season of the Ranji Trophy. Bombay won their 14th title in a row defeating Bengal in the final.
The 1988–89 Ranji Trophy was the 55th season of the Ranji Trophy, the premier first-class cricket tournament that took place in India between October 1988 and March 1989. Delhi defeated Bengal by an innings and 210 runs in the final.
The 1989–90 Ranji Trophy was the 56th season of the Ranji Trophy. Bengal won a rain interrupted final against Delhi on run quotient.
The 1998–99 Ranji Trophy was the 65th season of the Ranji Trophy. Karnataka won their third title in four years defeating Madhya Pradesh by 96 runs in the final.
The 2005–06 Ranji Trophy was the 72nd season of the Ranji Trophy. Uttar Pradesh won the final against Bengal on first innings lead and became the winner of Ranji Trophy, 2005–06, while the Saurashtra team clinched the Plate Group title.
The 2006–07 Ranji Trophy was the 73rd season of the Ranji Trophy. Mumbai defeated Bengal by 132 runs in the final.
The 2018–19 Ranji Trophy was the 85th season of the Ranji Trophy, the premier first-class cricket tournament that took place in India between November 2018 and February 2019. Vidarbha were the defending champions. The final took place between Vidarbha and Saurashtra, starting on 3 February 2019. Vidarbha defeated Saurashtra by 78 runs in the final, to become the sixth team in the tournament's history to retain their title.
The 2019–20 Ranji Trophy was the 86th season of the Ranji Trophy, the premier first-class cricket tournament in India. It took place between December 2019 and March 2020. Chandigarh competed in the Ranji Trophy for the first time. Vidarbha were the defending champions.
The 1993–94 Ranji One Day Trophy was the inaugural edition of India's annual List A cricket tournament.