The 1983–84 Ranji Trophy was the 50th season of the Ranji Trophy. Mumbai won the final against Delhi on first innings lead, thanks mainly to a double century by Sunil Gavaskar.
Administrator(s) | BCCI |
---|---|
Cricket format | First-class cricket |
Tournament format(s) | League and knockout |
Champions | Bombay (29th title) |
Participants | 24 |
Most runs | Surinder Khanna (Delhi) (685)[1] |
Most wickets | Rajinder Goel (Haryana) (48)[2] |
Highlights
edit- Dilip Vengsarkar of Bombay scored hundreds in the quarter-final, semifinal and the final.
- Kiran More of Baroda scored a career-best 181* in the quarter-final against Uttar Pradesh and added a Ranji trophy record 145 for the last wicket with Vasudev Patel.
- Rajinder Goel took 5/7 and 5/18 for Haryana v Jammu and Kashmir.
Group stage
edit
Central Zoneedit
South Zoneedit
West Zoneedit
|
North Zoneedit
East Zoneedit
|
Knockout stage
editPre-Quarter-finals | Quarter-finals | Semi-finals | Finals | |||||||||||
22 Jan 1984 — Rourkela | ||||||||||||||
Orissa | 438 & 37/4 | |||||||||||||
3 Mar 1984 — Jaipur | ||||||||||||||
Rajasthan | 502 & 213/2d | |||||||||||||
Rajasthan | 370 & 276/7d | |||||||||||||
Bombay | 401 & 193/4 | |||||||||||||
17 Mar 1984 — Bombay | ||||||||||||||
Bombay | 552 & 264/6d | |||||||||||||
Haryana | 377 & 113/1 | |||||||||||||
3 Mar 1984 — Chandigarh | ||||||||||||||
Haryana | 363 & 251 | |||||||||||||
Hyderabad | 240 & 216 | |||||||||||||
30 Mar 1984 — Bombay | ||||||||||||||
Bombay | 625 & 245/9d | |||||||||||||
Delhi | 333 & 266/4 | |||||||||||||
3 Mar 1984 — Madras | ||||||||||||||
Tamil Nadu | 353 & 255/5 | |||||||||||||
22 Jan 1984 — Delhi | ||||||||||||||
Delhi | 477 | |||||||||||||
Delhi | 400 & 141/2 | |||||||||||||
18 Mar 1984 — Delhi | ||||||||||||||
Bengal | 298 & 242 | |||||||||||||
Delhi | 349 & 385/7d | |||||||||||||
Baroda | 199 & 94 | |||||||||||||
3 Mar 1984 — Baroda | ||||||||||||||
Baroda | 483 | |||||||||||||
Uttar Pradesh | 238 & 201 | |||||||||||||
Final
editScorecards and averages
editReferences
edit- ^ "Ranji Trophy, 1983/84 / Records / Most runs". Retrieved 13 December 2014.
- ^ "Ranji Trophy, 1983/84 / Records / Most wickets". Retrieved 13 December 2014.