Greenvale Cricket Club

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Greenvale Cricket Club
One Day nameKangaroos
Team information
Home groundGreenvale Recreational Reserve
History
1st XI 2 Day wins0
1st XI One Day wins0
1st XI T20 Cup wins0
Official websitehttp://www.greenvalekangaroos.com.au/

Greenvale Cricket Club is an Australian cricket team competing in the Victorian Premier Cricket competition.

The club began as the Hotham Cricket Club, and changed to the North Melbourne Cricket Club in September 1887 to reflect the change to the name of the district.[1] It played in the Victorian Cricket Association pennant competition in the 19th century, and was one of the inaugural district cricket clubs in 1906/07. It played its home games at the North Melbourne Cricket ground (better known as the Arden Street Oval) in North Melbourne for many years.

In 1985/86, North Melbourne entered a trial amalgamation with the sub-district Geelong Cricket Club, which lasted for three seasons. Geelong has since established a premier cricket team in its own right.[2]

In 2013, North Melbourne merged with turf cricket's Greenvale Cricket Club, to become the Greenvale Kangaroos. The club moved to the Greenvale Recreation Reserve in Greenvale from the 2013/14 season.[3]

The club enjoyed most of its success in the 19th century, and won V.C.A. first XI pennants in the 1893/94[4] and 1895/96 seasons.[5] It has not achieved success since the establishment of district cricket in 1906/07, having failed to win a first XI premiership in any form of the game since that time; it and Frankston Peninsula, which joined the competition during the 1990s, are the only current clubs with this distinction.[6]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "The Victorian Cricketing Association". The Argus. 20 September 1887. p. 5.
  2. ^ "History of District/Premier Cricket". Retrieved 11 October 2014.
  3. ^ Liam McAleer (31 December 2013). "Hume Leader looks back on the biggest stories of 2013". Hume Leader. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
  4. ^ Felix (5 May 1894). "Cricket: the past season". The Australasian. p. 769.
  5. ^ Mid-on (25 April 1896). "Cricket Gossip". Leader. Melbourne, VIC. p. 17.
  6. ^ "Premierships". Cricket Victoria. Retrieved 12 April 2014.