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The 2006–07 Ranji One Day Trophy was the 14th edition of India's annual List A cricket tournament, which became the Vijay Hazare Trophy later in 2007. [1] It was contested between 27 domestic cricket teams of India, starting in February and finishing in March 2007. In the final, Mumbai beat Rajasthan by 72 runs to win their second title. [2]
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The 2003–04 Ranji One Day Trophy was the eleventh edition of India's annual List A cricket tournament, which became the Vijay Hazare Trophy in 2007. [1] It was contested between 27 domestic cricket teams in January and February 2004. Mumbai won the final group.
The 2013–14 Ranji Trophy was the 80th season of the Ranji Trophy. [1] ... (91.1 overs) Rohan Prem 80 (127 ... No play on days 1 and 5 and reduced play on day 4 due ...
The 2005–06 Ranji One Day Trophy was the 13th edition of India's annual List A cricket tournament, which became the Vijay Hazare Trophy in 2007. [1] It was contested between 27 domestic cricket teams of India, starting in February and finishing in April 2006. In the final, Railways beat Uttar Pradesh by 20 runs to win their maiden title. [2]
Ranjitsinhji, after whom the tournament is named. The idea of a national level, first class championship tournament was proposed by BCCI's founder A.S. De Mello. [7] The competition was launched following BCCI's meeting at Shimla in July 1934, [10] with the first fixtures taking place in 1934–35.Initially the tournament was named as 'The cricket championship of India', it later was renamed. [7]
1958/59 – 1984/85 [1] 531 Srinivasaraghavan Venkataraghavan: Madras/Tamil Nadu: 1963/64 – 1984/85 479 Sunil Joshi: Karnataka: 1992/93 – 2010/11 442 Vinay Kumar: Karnataka, Pondicherry: 2004/05 – 2019/20 441 Narendra Hirwani: Madhya Pradesh, Bengal: 1984/85 – 2005/06 437 Bhagwat Chandrasekhar: Mysore/Karnataka: 1963/64 – 1979/80 ...
The 2004–05 Ranji One Day Trophy was the twelfth edition of India's annual List A cricket tournament, which became the Vijay Hazare Trophy in 2007. [1] It was contested between 27 domestic cricket teams, starting in January and finishing in April 2005. The final was tied between Uttar Pradesh and Tamil Nadu, and they shared the trophy. [2]