Melbourne Cricket Club - Club History
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ELENA Dementieva has taken the second set off Australia's Samantha Stosur to take their US Open fourth-round match to a deciding third set.

AUSTRALIAN Jason Day sank a tap-in birdie at the last hole to take the sole lead after three rounds of the Deutsche Bank Championship in Boston today.

PAKISTAN'S latest match in their controversial tour of Britain ended in a five-wicket Twenty20 defeat by world champions England overnight.

FIVE missed chances, all of them critical and all of them likely to haunt Carlton over a long, agonising summer.

TIM Cahill says the Socceroos are embracing coach Holger Osieck's more enterprising game plan.

OF ALL the names up there as the A-League's early-season top scorers, the most surprising may be Nick Kalmar.

AFTER an emotion-charged end to the season, Melbourne Storm coach Craig Bellamy has delivered his summary of a year from hell.
 

THE Boomers are out of the world basketball championships after a crushing 87-58 loss to Slovenia in the second stage in Turkey today.

TYPHOON Tracy is the Queen of Australian racing. She has been voted Australian Horse of the Year.

AUSTRALIAN Craig Mottram pipped European 10,000 metres silver medallist Chris Thompson in a sprint finish to the Great Yorkshire Run on Sunday.

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Club History

Robert Russell (source: MCC Museum collection M13394)The Melbourne Cricket Club was founded on November 15, 1838 when five men - Frederick Powlett, Robert Russell, George B. Smyth and brothers Andrew and Charles Mundy - agreed to form a cricket club to be known as the Melbourne Cricket Club.

Click here to read more about how this great club came into being, courtesy of a book titled Pavilions in the Park, by Alf Batchelder.

The MCC always has been the foremost promoter of sport in Australia.  In 1859 the MCC drew up the first set of rules for Victorian (later Australian) football. It hosted the first tour by an English cricket team in 1862, the first Test match in 1877 and the first one-day international match in 1971.

An exhibition baseball match was played at the ground between two American teams in 1888, the club laid the country's first asphalt tennis courts in 1879 and bowling greens were established at the MCG in 1894.

Along with the playing of cricket, today's MCC is an umbrella organisation for hundreds of participants in 11 sporting sections - baseball, bowls, croquet, football, golf, hockey, lacrosse, real tennis, shooting, squash and tennis.

The club's principal public role, however, remains the progressive management and development of one of the country's greatest assets - the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

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