WHO WE ARE

The Northcote Cricket Club “The Dragons” was founded in the mid 1870’s and was promoted to the Victorian District Cricket Competition in 1907. The Club has a long and proud history of providing opportunities for cricketers to play in the highest competition in Victoria. 

Northcote has won 5 1st XI Premierships in 1911/12, 1965/66, 1973/74, 1986/87 and 1996/97

The Dragons have produced 7 International Cricketers and 28 first class representatives and home grounds reside in Westgarth Street Northcote and Mayer Park in Thornbury.

We have 4 male teams an under 18 team that plays on various Sundays throughout the season and an under 16 Dowling Cup team that compete during January.


Our Purpose:

Providing an elite environment for our players, volunteers, coaches, and supporters to the best they can be, creating a successful future whilst respecting the history.

Our Vision:

To be the club of choice in Melbourne, with quality management, coaches and facilities

Our Values:

Inclusive, Professional, Mateship, Accountable


Bill Lawry Oval

Northcote Cricket Club has been playing cricket on the site since 1904 after moving from Croxton Park. At this time the Oval was named Northcote Park until 2000 when the oval was renamed in honour of Victorian and Australian cricket captain Bill Lawry, who played his district cricket for Northcote. We share the oval with Northcote Park Football club who play in the Northern Football League.


OUR HISTORY

A few name changes, and several venue changes aside; the Northcote Cricket Club can trace its history back to the mid 1870s. The club’s first recorded meeting was on July 17th 1875 and was organised by Northcote pioneer George Plant. The club played its matches at Plant’s Paddock in its early years, a field that sat at the base of Rucker’s Hill in what is now the Westgarth precinct, where the pitch conditions made batting extremely difficult. A score in double figures was quite an achievement for any batsman padding up at Plant’s Paddock!

In 1878 the club changed its name to Northcote Star Cricket Club but continued to play its home matches at Plant’s Paddock. At this same time, another team playing at Northcote Park, in Westgarth St, and called the Northcote Park Cricket Club had emerged and would no doubt have been the chief rival to the Northcote Star Cricket Club. In addition a club based near the old asylum at Yarra Bend, several other ‘social’ teams based around Northcote and a few clubs from rural but growing Preston provided ample local opposition in addition to matches that could be arranged against clubs further a field. 

During the 1870s and into the 1880s, Northcote Star established itself as the leading cricket club in the area. One of its notable early achievements was dismissing an entire team from Preston for just one run. 

Having been runner up to Collingwood based club ‘Capulet’ for the Armfield Brothers Cup after a narrow defeat in the final match, Northcote Star eventually did capture the fledgling township’s first sporting trophy in 1890, winning the Alliance Cup. The final was played at Sumner’s Paddock, in St Georges Rd, which is now Merri Park. The opposition was Fitzroy Imperial and the 104 run victory was achieved without the aid of star batsman H. Brice, who had earned a prize as the competition’s leading run scorer. Brice had scored 148 in an earlier match against Clifton Hill, quite possibly the first century by a cricketer in Darebin. The club’s prize was not a cup, but a marble clock, valued at 10 guineas. Perhaps not surprisingly, the club’s breakthrough had come in its first season playing on the privately owned ground at the Croxton Park Hotel. 

The move to the Hotel’s ground would provide a boost to Northcote Star in membership, but would also become a source of controversy in later years. The move had been instigated by the president of the club Walter Stott, a prominent local estate agent who would remain as club president with virtually no interruption, until his death in 1938. Stott’s influence on the club cannot be underestimated, he remains one of the key figures in the club’s history. In 1892 Northcote Star changed its name to Northcote. Throughout the decade of the 1890s, a trying one economically for all of Melbourne with the end of the land boom, Northcote Cricket Club remained strong. Northcote Park Cricket Club would be wound up during this time, as were many other sporting clubs in Darebin. 

One of the highlights of this era was the club’s victory in the prestigious Sports Depot Trophy in 1894, which was their debut season in the competition. A seven match season saw Northcote hosting the final against Richmond City at Croxton Park. Over four Saturdays in May and June Northcote terrorised Richmond City. Having dismissed the visitors for 152, Northcote batsmen piled on 468, a record for a junior competition in Melbourne. Two batsman, Lansdowne and Coomber, made centuries. In their second innings, Richmond City, were dismissed for just 47, leaving Northcote victors by a massive margin of an innings and 269 runs.

In 1903 the Northcote Council appointed a part-time gardener to Northcote Park in Westgarth Street. This was well overdue, as the park had been neglected for many years. It wasn’t long before the oval was significantly improved with the grass being well tended and a new fence built around the oval. As such the council offered Northcote Cricket Club use of the newly improved Northcote Park. This proved to be opportune timing as there was increasing opposition to the presence of sport at Croxton Park. 

In 1905 Northcote Park had its first turf wicket installed, after years of playing on hard earth and then matting, cementing Northcote Park as the hub of sports in Northcote. At the same time, Victorian cricket was going through a transitional phase. The Victorian Cricket Association (VCA) was in talks with the rival Victorian Cricket League (VCL) with a view of restructuring Melbourne’s club competition into a single competition with multiple grades for competing clubs. The VCL agreed to amalgamate with the VCA following their respective 1905/06 seasons with the clubs from both joining the new competition called District Cricket, under the management of the VCA. 

Northcote was invited to join and were placed in the second division for the inaugural season of 1906/07. As had been agreed, the club winning the second division premiership would be promoted to the first division at the expense of the first division’s last placed club. Northcote won the second division premiership in that first season and thus were playing in Melbourne’s elite cricket competition in the 1907/08 season. This system of promotion was abandoned by the beginning of the 1908/09 season. Northcote, who had benefited from the system, now benefited from its abandonment as they finished last that season! 

By the beginning of the 1911/12 season, Northcote had been showing steady improvement, culminating in a runners-up finish to Prahran in the 1910/11 season. The club had a balanced team, though N. Brown would have a standout season in 1911/12, topping the club’s batting averages while placing second in bowling average and wickets taken. The club completed the entire season, 11 matches, without defeat, winning each match. They were declared premiers without the need for a finals series. 

By 1914 the Northcote Cricket Club had raised £1,000 to put towards the construction of new stand at Northcote Park, largely through subscriptions. The club opened the stand at its first match of the 1914/15 season in October. With war having broken out, one of Northcote’s young stars, Frank Lugton enlisted. Lugton was only the second Northcote player to be selected for Victoria. Sadly, he would be the first Victorian State Cricketer to perish in the First World War. 

After the war, one of Northcote Cricket Club’s first Victorian State Representatives, Dr Albert Hartkopf, was promoted to the national team. Hartkopf was one of the great all round sportsman of his generation, having excelled at cricket, football and athletics, as well as achieving a medical degree. He was 35 when he received the call up to the Australian team in 1925 and despite hitting 80 in the side’s first innings, he was dropped after one match due to his poor return with the ball. Hartkopf was the first, but not the last Northcote player to be selected to play for Australia. Northcote qualified for the final of the 1925/26 season, losing to St Kilda.

It would be 40 years before the club would make it back to the final game of the season, and it would be the presence of Northcote’s greatest ever player, William (Bill) Lawry, that would ensure a remarkable victory. Northcote had by this time established the nickname of the Dragons and they went into the final against Essendon, nicknamed the Bombers, as massive underdogs. The Bombers had been premiers two years earlier and had already claimed the overall VCA championship for the 1965/66 season, awarded to the season’s most successful club across all grades. After declaring their innings closed at 9/514, the Bombers appeared to have the First XI Premiership in their grasp, but Lawry, an established member of the national team and enjoying the finest form of his career, had other ideas. Lawry reached a massive 282 not out and the Dragons would eclipse the Bombers total to record a famous victory in one of the more memorable District Cricket finals in history. Both Lawry’s individual score, and the team total of 5/516 remain Northcote Club records. 

In 1973/74, the Northcote Dragons would complete another fairytale, winning the First XI Premiership over Melbourne after finishing last the previous season. The Dragons of 1973/74 were a young side, with three players, still in their early 20s, who would go on to international careers. Rodney Hogg, Gary Cosier and Richie Robinson, would all play Test cricket and all featured in Northcote’s Premiership winning team, with Robinson hitting the final’s top score of 93 not out. Cosier and Hogg moved on to South Australia to play Sheffield Shield cricket, but both returned to the Dragons in playing / coaching roles. Cosier was the first Northcote player to win the Jack Ryder medal for outstanding player of the season in the 80/81 season. 

While success has never come easily to Northcote, the club can boast Premierships in each of the last four decades, with wins in 1986/87 and then in 1996/97. The club continues to call Northcote Park home, as it has for more than 100 years. It also continues to uncover new talent, with several Northcote alumni of recent years earning national selection, including Michael Lewis, Marcus Stoinis and Matt Short.


HONOUR BOARDS & AWARDS

Hall of Fame Inductees

Baggot, JH

Berrigan, JE

Dickson, NM

Dowling, GP

Fothergill, DH

Gannon, TM

Gardiner, GB

Gough, DJ

Jackson, WH

McArdle, BJ

Miller, ED

Monckton, AG

O’Sullivan, MJ

Rigg, WH

Robinson, WL

Stott, WS

Vernon, RE

Wass, CJ

Wettenhall, H

Team of the Century

WM Lawry

GP Dowling

DH Fothergill

GB Gardiner

A Wildsmith

TP Gloury

RD Robinson

Dr AEV Hartkopf

WJ Dudley

RM Hogg

FLO Thorn

AP Chivers

Northcote CC Legends

Bowtell, DRW

Dudley, WJ

Hartkopf, Dr AEV

Lawry, WM

Yeomans, EC

Ryder Medallists

Gary Cosier 1980/81

Andrew Wildsmith 1984/85

Robert Bartlett 2003/04

Theo Doropoulos 2010/11

Steven Taylor 2015/16