Celebrating the people, places, moments and pride that have carried Plenty Cricket Club across generations.
Plenty Cricket Club proudly celebrates 1946 as the start of our story — a local club built around community, cricket and connection. Across generations, Plenty people have kept showing up, rolling up their sleeves and carrying The Power forward.
The club proudly celebrates 1946 as its beginning — the foundation year carried through club identity, records and community memory.
Early records note a Plenty Hall meeting where locals formally organised cricket in the district — another marker in the club’s growing community story.
After two years of social games, Plenty entered official competition in 1950, turning local cricket into a structured club pathway.
The earliest Plenty cricketers played on land owned by Mr Burns, near what became the Council Depot in Yan Yean Road.
The first pavilion was built in the early 1950s on the eastern side of the oval, behind the old tennis shed.
The club’s first recorded premiership came in the 1957/58 season — a milestone for the players, families and volunteers who built the early club.
The current clubrooms were officially opened in 1990 after years of fundraising, drive and hard work from Vernon Brown and club supporters.
The next chapter belongs to today’s players, families, volunteers and supporters carrying The Power forward.
We have deliberately kept this page clean and factual. If you have old photos, premiership records, life member lists, team sheets, newspaper clippings or stories from Plenty Cricket Club, we’d love to add them properly.