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Cricket has a long and proud history in Bendigo, and the junior game is in good health. The Bendigo District Cricket Association coordinates local competition, and a network of clubs across the city and surrounding towns runs junior programs each summer. For families looking to introduce their children to cricket, the pathways are clear and the clubs are welcoming, whether your child is picking up a bat for the first time or has already caught the bug and wants more structured competition.
The entry point for most young players is the Woolworths Cricket Blast program, run through Cricket Australia and managed locally by Cricket Victoria. Cricket Blast is designed for children aged five to ten and runs as a fun, skills-based session format rather than a match competition. Sessions typically take place at local grounds on weekend mornings during the summer school terms, and registration is done through the Play Cricket website. The program introduces batting, bowling and fielding in a relaxed environment with trained volunteers.
Older children, generally from around ten years of age, can move into junior club cricket where they play in age-group competitions under the BDCA structure. Matches are played across suburban and regional grounds throughout Bendigo on weekend mornings, with the season running from October through to March, giving it a pleasing overlap with the warm Bendigo summer. Most clubs offer both training sessions and match commitments, and the emphasis at junior level is strongly on skill development and participation.
The Queen Elizabeth Oval is the prestige ground for Bendigo cricket, and watching a senior or representative match there alongside your child's participation at a suburban club gives young players a sense of what the game can look like at a higher level. The QEO has hosted state-level competition matches over the years, and seeing that standard of play in person can be a real spark for a junior cricketer with ambitions.
Parents new to cricket are often pleasantly surprised by how supportive the club environment is. Clubs do not expect any prior knowledge from parents, and most are happy to explain the rules and routines as the season progresses. If you are looking to get a child involved, reaching out to your nearest BDCA-affiliated club in September or October, before the summer season begins, is the best way to ensure your child is registered and ready when the first ball is bowled.
Covering sport in Bendigo. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources, under human oversight and our editorial standards. Sensitive material is held for human review before publication. See our editorial standards.