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Melbourne Renegades

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Melbourne Renegades
Nickname(s)The 'Gades, The Men in Red (During The Melbourne Derby)
LeagueBig Bash League
AssociationCricket Australia
Personnel
CaptainWill Sutherland
CoachCameron White
OwnerCricket Victoria
Team information
CityMelbourne, Victoria
Colours  Red[1]
Founded2011; 15 years ago (2011)
Home groundDocklands Stadium
Capacity56,347
Secondary home groundKardinia Park
Secondary ground capacity40,000
History
Big Bash League wins1 (BBL |08)
Official websitemelbournerenegades.com.au

Regular kit

Indigenous kit

The Melbourne Renegades is an Australian men's professional Twenty20 (T20) franchise cricket team based in Melbourne, Victoria. They compete in the Australian domestic Big Bash League (BBL) competition. As of the 2024–25 season, the team is coached by Cameron White[2] and captained by Will Sutherland.[3] Since the establishment of the BBL in BBL |01, the Renegades have won one title in (BBL |08).

On 2 June 2026, it was reported that the brands of the Renegades and the Melbourne Stars would be merged into a new franchise, utilising the Stars' existing BBL license.[4] Nick Cummins, the CEO of Cricket Victoria (CV), has described the new team as "just a merger of brands and staff" and "not a merger of the teams".[5] Two weeks later, it was confirmed that both the Renegades and the Stars would compete in the upcoming 2026–27 season under their existing names.[6]

History

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Initial seasons (2011–2013)

[edit]

The Renegades' foundation captain was Victorian all-rounder Andrew McDonald and coached by then Victorian Bushrangers one-day coach, Simon Helmot. In their first season, the Renegades signed local state players such as Aaron Finch, Glenn Maxwell, Brad Hodge and Dirk Nannes, along with Pakistani imports Shahid Afridi and Abdul Razzaq. The Renegades struggled in their first season, only winning two games against the Sydney Thunder and the Sydney Sixers respectively. Aaron Finch scored 259 runs, whilst Shahid Afridi took 10 wickets.

The 2012–13 Big Bash League season saw the Renegades release several star players including the previous seasons captain, Andrew McDonald. However, the recruitment of consistent players such as Ben Rohrer and Peter Nevill and cricket legend Muttiah Muralitharan, saw the season being the Renegades most successful season to date, finishing on top of the ladder, only losing to the Perth Scorchers in the regular season. Aaron Finch also became the first Renegades player to score a century after scoring 111 from 65 balls against the Melbourne Stars. The Renegades were knocked out by the Brisbane Heat in the semi-finals, losing by 15 runs.[7]

Lean years (2013–2017)

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Despite maintaining the majority of their squad from the previous season and also recruiting Australian test bowlers Peter Siddle and James Pattinson, the Renegades struggled in the 2013–14 Big Bash League season, only winning 3 games, and in the process finishing 6th and missing the finals.

Similarly to the previous season, the Renegades headed into the 2014–15 Big Bash League season with confidence after signing Matthew Wade and Callum Ferguson in the pre-season, but failed to qualify for the finals yet again, finishing 6th. The poor run from the previous season resulted in the coach Simon Helmot being sacked.

The Renegades appointed David Saker as the new coach for the 2015–16 Big Bash League season. The Renegades also signed experienced players Cameron White, Xavier Doherty and Chris Gayle to strengthen their squad.

Renegades got a big boost by signing Brad Hogg, Sunil Narine and Thisara Perera for the 2016–17 Big Bash League season, however narrowly missed finals, finishing 5th on the table.

Successful seasons (2017–2019)

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The 2017–18 Big Bash League season saw the Renegades rejuvenate their squad, with Jack Wildermuth, Mohammad Nabi, Kieron Pollard, Tim Ludeman, Kane Richardson, along with the return of inaugural 2011–12 Renegades player Brad Hodge. They qualify for the finals for the first time after 5 years; finishing 3rd on the table and winning 6 of their 10 matches. However, they were knocked out in semi-final by Adelaide Strikers by one run at Adelaide Oval in front of 36,298 fans.[8]

With the retirements of Brad Hogg and Brad Hodge, the 2018–19 Big Bash League season was similar to the previous, with the Renegades making crucial signings such as Dan Christian, Cameron Boyce, Harry Gurney and Usman Shinwari. The Renegades finished the regular season in second place behind the Hobart Hurricanes, earning a home semi-final against the Sydney Sixers at Docklands. Chasing 181 runs for victory, the Renegades were 6/148, needing 33 runs from 14 balls. They chased the total down with one ball to spare thanks to Dan Christian and Kane Richardson hitting vital boundaries off the bowling of Sean Abbott and Ben Dwarshuis. Due to cross-town rivals, the Melbourne Stars upsetting the Hurricanes in their semi-final the night before, the final was a home Melbourne Derby at Docklands two days after their victory over the Sixers.[9]

The final saw the Stars win the toss and elect to field in front of 40,816 fans.[10] They had the Renegades 5/65 after 10.2 overs, but an unbeaten 80 run partnership between Dan Christian and Tom Cooper saw the Renegades post a modest total of 145 after their 20 overs. The Renegades initially struggled defending the total, with the Stars being 0/93, needing 53 runs off the final 43 deliveries. What transpired next has gone down as one of the biggest "chokes" in Australian sporting history, with the Stars losing 7 wickets in the next five overs and struggling at 7/112.[11] Despite some late hitting from Adam Zampa, the Stars fell 13 runs short, giving the Renegades their first BBL title. Dan Christian was named man of the match for his match saving 38 runs off 30 balls, and 2 wickets for 33 runs off his 4 overs of bowling.[12]

Recent dip in form (2019–2022)

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Following the success of the 2018–19 championship victory, coach Andrew McDonald left his role as head coach in October 2019, less than two months before the beginning of the 2019–20 Big Bash League season.[13] Michael Klinger, who had recently retired from first-class cricket, was appointed coach of the Renegades on 26 November 2019.[14] After signing Pakistani visa players Usman Shinwari and Faheem Ashraf, they pulled out on the eve of the start of the season. Their replacements were English duo Harry Gurney, who played in the BBL championship the previous season, and Richard Gleeson.[15] The Renegades struggled with injuries and form throughout the season, finishing the season in 8th position, but did finish the season on the winners list, defeating the Brisbane Heat by seven wickets.[16]

The following season in 2020–21 had a similar outcome to its predecessor. Visa recruit Imran Tahir pulled out of the season for personal reasons, and returning Australian test bowler James Pattinson was re-called to the national team and was unavailable for selection.[17] Frontline spinner Cameron Boyce also withdrew from the season due to illness.[18] Despite winning their first match of the season against the Perth Scorchers, the Renegades hit an all-time low, losing two matches by over 100 runs, and being consistently outperformed. The season did however see the unearthing of young players such as Jake Fraser-McGurk, Mackenzie Harvey, Will Sutherland, Zak Evans, Mitchell Perry and Peter Hatzoglou. The Renegades finished the season in 8th position again, but did register one more victory in comparison to the previous season. Just days after the Renegades' final victory of the 2020–21 season against the Hobart Hurricanes, Michael Klinger stood down as head coach.[19] Aaron Finch also stood down as captain of the team just weeks before the start of the 2021–22 Big Bash League season, replaced by new recruit Nic Maddinson.[20] This didn't result in a change of fortune as the Renegades finished in 8th position for the third reason in a row. The shining highlight was Cameron Boyce taking four wickets in a row in the final match of the season against the Sydney Thunder.[21]

Home ground

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The Renegades have played its home games at Docklands Stadium since the league's inception in 2011. A drop-in pitch is used to facilitate cricket at the venue. At the end of the 2016–17 Big Bash League season, the stadium was rated the most entertaining venue for Twenty20 cricket in Australia.[22]

Since the 2017–18 Big Bash League season, the Renegades have also played up to 2 home matches at Kardinia Park in Geelong, approximately 70 kilometres south-west of Melbourne.[23]

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2020–21 Big Bash League season saw the Renegades play home matches interstate at Bellerive Oval in Hobart, Carrara Stadium on the Gold Coast and Adelaide Oval in Adelaide due to quarantine issues. Only three home games in Victoria were played, with two at Docklands and one at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.[24]

Panoramic view of Kardinia Park in 2019.
Venue Games hosted by season
0102030405060708091011121314Total
GMHBA Stadium0000001220221111
Marvel Stadium3544444752564461

Players

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Current squad

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The squad of the Melbourne Renegades for the 2025–26 Big Bash League season as of 16 January 2026.[25][26][27]

  • Players with international caps are listed in bold.
No. Name Nat. Date of birth Batting style Bowling style Notes
Batters
6 Josh Brown  Australia 26 December 1993 (age 32) Right-handed Right-arm off spin
22 Harry Dixon  Australia 16 February 2005 (age 21) Left-handed Right-arm off spin
23 Jake Fraser-McGurk  Australia 11 April 2002 (age 24) Right-handed Right arm leg spin
32 Caleb Jewell  Australia 21 April 1997 (age 29) Left-handed Left-arm medium
19 Oliver Peake  Australia 11 September 2006 (age 19) Left-handed Right-arm medium
All-rounders
98 Hassan Khan  United States 16 October 1998 (age 27) Right-handed Left-arm orthodox Overseas draft pick (Gold)
Will Salzmann  Australia 19 November 2003 (age 22) Right-handed Right-arm medium
7 Matthew Spoors  Canada 6 May 1999 (age 27) Right-handed Right-arm Leg break Replacement player for Lyon.[28]
12 Will Sutherland  Australia 27 October 1999 (age 26) Right-handed Right-arm fast Captain
Wicketkeepers
16 Mohammad Rizwan  Pakistan 1 June 1992 (age 34) Right-handed N/a Overseas draft pick (Platinum)[29]
43 Tim Seifert  New Zealand 14 December 1994 (age 31) Right-handed N/a Overseas draft pick (Gold)[29]
Pace bowlers
5 Jason Behrendorff  Australia 20 April 1990 (age 36) Right-handed Left-arm fast
35 Brendan Doggett  Australia 3 May 1994 (age 32) Right-handed Right-arm fast
1 Sam Elliott  Australia 18 February 2000 (age 26) Right-handed Right-arm medium Replacement player for Salzmann.[30]
69 Fergus O'Neill  Australia 27 January 2001 (age 25) Right-handed Right-arm fast
8 Tom Rogers  Australia 3 March 1994 (age 32) Left-handed Right-arm fast
28 Gurinder Sandhu  Australia 14 June 1993 (age 33) Left-handed Right-arm fast
68 Andrew Tye  Australia 12 December 1986 (age 39) Right-handed Right-arm medium-fast Replacement player for Rogers.[31]
Spin bowlers
44 Michael Archer  Australia 28 February 1997 (age 29) Right-handed Right-arm leg spin Replacement player for Zampa.[32]
67 Nathan Lyon  Australia 20 November 1987 (age 38) Right-handed Right-arm off spin
24 Callum Stow  Australia 27 August 2002 (age 23) Right-handed Left-arm unorthodox
88 Adam Zampa  Australia 31 March 1992 (age 34) Right-handed Right-arm leg spin

Captains

[edit]
As of 19 January 2022
Name Seasons M W L T NR W%
Andrew McDonald 2011–2012 7 2 5 0 0 28.57
Aaron Finch 2012–2022 71 31 40 0 0 43.66
Ben Rohrer 2013–2015 5 3 2 0 0 60.00
Cameron White 2016–2018 5 1 4 0 0 20.00
Dwayne Bravo 2018 3 2 1 0 0 66.66
Tom Cooper 2018–2019 8 4 4 0 0 50.00
Dan Christian 2020 5 2 3 0 0 40.00
Shaun Marsh 2020 1 0 1 0 0 0.00
Kane Richardson 2021–2022 3 1 1 0 1 50.00
Nic Maddinson 2021–2022 9 2 7 0 0 22.22

Team of the Decade (2011–2021)

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On 28 January 2021, to celebrate the inaugural decade of the club and the league, the Renegades announced their team of the decade. All 93 players who had played for the Renegades were eligible for selection, but only two overseas players were permitted in the final XI, in line with the rules for nine of the ten seasons of the competition.[33]

  1. Aaron Finch (captain)
  2. Shaun Marsh
  3. Sam Harper (wicket-keeper)
  4. Ben Rohrer
  5. Tom Cooper
  6. Dan Christian
  7. Dwayne Bravo
  8. Cameron Boyce
  9. Kane Richardson
  10. Nathan Rimmington
  11. Muttiah Muralitharan
  12. Mohammad Nabi (12th man)

Administration and support staff

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Current staff

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The current administration and support staff of the Melbourne Renegades for the 2023–24 Big Bash League season as of 23 November 2023.[34][35]

Position Name
Head coach Cameron White
List manager[clarification needed] Andrew Lynch
Assistant coach Simon Helmot
Assistant coach Ian Bell
Assistant coach Andre Borovec
Bowling coach Michael Lewis
Strength and conditioning coach Richard Johnson
Physiotherapist Nick Adcock

Managerial history

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As of 19 January 2021
Name Seasons M W L NR W%
Simon Helmot 2011–2015 32 15 17 0 46.88
David Saker 2015–2016 8 3 5 0 37.50
Andrew McDonald 2016–2019 35 20 15 0 57.14
Michael Klinger 2019–2021 28 7 21 0 25.00
David Saker 2021–present 10 3 10 1 23.08

Identity

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Official Mascot

The official mascot of the team – 'Sledge' – was revealed on 2 November 2011 after online voting on the team's official Facebook page.[36][37]

The mascot has been described as the future of cricket. He comes from the year 2020 and wears industrial gear clad in corrugated shin pads and a futuristic helmet that hides his true identity.[38]

For the 2014–15 season a new female mascot, Willow was added, with the club also retaining the Sledge mascot.[39]

Support and fan following

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The Renegades averaged 13,323 fans to their home games for the inaugural BBL season, and 13,406 supporters in their second BBL season. The average attendance increased by a huge margin in the third season when they registered an average crowd of 21,929. The fourth season had an even better average crowd of 22,324 fans for their home matches.

Their highest home attendance was to the Melbourne Derby in their third BBL season, attracting 42,837 fans.[40] The biggest non-home attendance in BBL history occurred in the 2015–16 season against the Stars, with 80,883 present.[41] Their largest non-Derby attendance was 30,018, which came in their seventh BBL season against the Perth Scorchers.

Renegades' members have steadily increased with every passing season. They reached their biggest membership mark ever for a season two weeks before the start of the 2015–16 Big Bash League season.[42]

Season Average attendance Membership References
2011–12 13,323
2012–13 13,406
2013–14 21,929 3,383 [43]
2014–15 22,301 5,510 [43]
2015–16 29,010 7,637 [44]
2016–17 30,033 8,828
2017–18 28,315
2018–19 21,703
2019–20 15,528
2020–21 7,814*
2021–22 7,361*
2022–23 11,809
2023–24 18,251 11,903
2024–25 21,528 12,187
2025–26 21,403 12,528 [45]

Rivalry with Melbourne Stars

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When the league began in 2011, Cricket Australia decided they would place two teams in Melbourne. With the core group of players for both teams coming from the Victoria cricket team, this rivalry automatically became widely anticipated in Melbourne.[citation needed] The derby between the new two teams, the Melbourne Stars and the Renegades, quickly became hugely popular with big crowds flocking in to the derby matches at both the MCG and Docklands Stadium.[citation needed] In BBL05, during the first leg of the two derbies at the MCG, it drew a record crowd of 80,883 which was the highest crowd for any domestic cricket match ever in the history of the sport at that time which record was later broken in the 2022 Indian Premier League final.[46]

List of Melbourne Derby matches
Date Winner Margin Venue Attendance Player of the match
7 January 2012Stars11 runs (D/L)[47]MCG40,227David Hussey
7 December 2012Renegades8 wickets[48]Docklands Stadium23,589Aaron Finch
6 January 2013Renegades9 wickets[49]MCG46,581Aaron Finch
20 December 2013Stars76 runs[50]MCG25,266Luke Wright
4 January 2014Stars9 wickets[51]Docklands Stadium42,837Cameron White
3 January 2015Stars112 runs[52]Docklands Stadium33,734Michael Beer
10 January 2015Stars3 wickets[52]MCG37,323Glenn Maxwell
2 January 2016Stars7 wickets[53]MCG80,883Luke Wright
9 January 2016Stars8 wickets[54]Docklands Stadium43,176Marcus Stoinis
1 January 2017Renegades7 runs (D/L)[55]MCG71,162Brad Hogg
7 January 2017Stars46 runs[56]Docklands Stadium44,189Adam Zampa
6 January 2018Renegades6 wickets[57]MCG48,086Mohammad Nabi
12 January 2018Stars23 runs[58]Docklands Stadium44,316Kevin Pietersen
1 January 2019Stars7 wickets[59]MCG46,418Marcus Stoinis
19 January 2019Stars6 wickets[60]Docklands Stadium38,117Marcus Stoinis
17 February 2019Renegades13 runs[61]Docklands Stadium40,816Daniel Christian
4 January 2020Stars7 wickets[62]MCG54,478Adam Zampa
10 January 2020Stars7 wickets[63]Docklands Stadium30,388Glenn Maxwell
17 January 2021Stars6 wickets[64]MCG14,979Liam Hatcher
20 January 2021Renegades5 wickets[65]Docklands Stadium14,202Mackenzie Harvey
3 January 2022Renegades5 wickets[66]MCG21,562Kane Richardson
13 January 2022Stars6 wickets[67]Docklands Stadium10,014Glenn Maxwell
3 January 2023Renegades33 runs[68]MCG38,564Tom Rogers
14 January 2023Renegades6 runs[69]Docklands Stadium22,437Kane Richardson

Honours

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Records and statistics

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Season summaries

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Chart of yearly table positions for Melbourne Renegades in BBL
Season Coach Captain League position Finals result Player of the season Ref.
2011–12 Simon Helmot Andrew McDonald 7th Did not qualify Aaron Finch [70][71]
2012–13 Simon Helmot Aaron Finch 1st Semi-finalists Aaron Finch [72][71]
2013–14 Simon Helmot Aaron Finch 6th Did not qualify Aaron Finch [73][71]
2014–15 Simon Helmot Aaron Finch 6th Did not qualify James Pattinson [74][71]
2015–16 David Saker Aaron Finch 5th Did not qualify Dwayne Bravo [75][71]
2016–17 Andrew McDonald Aaron Finch 5th Did not qualify Aaron Finch [76][71]
2017–18 Andrew McDonald Aaron Finch 3rd Semi-finalists Tom Cooper [77][78]
2018–19 Andrew McDonald Aaron Finch 2nd Champions Dan Christian [79][78]
2019–20 Michael Klinger Aaron Finch 8th Did not qualify Beau Webster [80][81]
2020–21 Michael Klinger Aaron Finch 8th Did not qualify Sam Harper [80][82]
2021–22 David Saker Nic Maddinson 8th Did not qualify Kane Richardson [83]
2022–23 David Saker Nic Maddinson 3rd Knockout Aaron Finch
2023–24 David Saker Nic Maddinson 7th Did not qualify Jake Fraser-McGurk [84]
2024–25 Cameron White Will Sutherland 6th Did not qualify

Players

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Australian representatives

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The following is a list of cricketers who have played for the Renegades after making their debut in the national men's team (the period they spent as both a Renegades squad member and an Australian-capped player is in brackets):

Overseas Signings

[edit]

Source:[85]

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. "BBL Team Names and Colours". bigbash.com.au. Big Bash League. 6 April 2011. Archived from the original on 10 April 2011.
  2. "Melbourne Renegades - Big Bash League". www.melbournerenegades.com.au. Retrieved 6 August 2024.
  3. "Maddinson to lead Gades for third-straight season | Melbourne Renegades". www.melbournerenegades.com.au. 7 December 2023. Retrieved 6 August 2024.
  4. Morris, Tom (2 June 2026). "Breaking: Stars and Renegades to merge into solo Victorian BBL franchise". SEN. Archived from the original on 2 June 2026. Retrieved 2 June 2026.
  5. "Melbourne Renegades BBL licence to be sold as Cricket Victoria establishes new team". ABC News. 3 June 2026. Archived from the original on 3 June 2026. Retrieved 3 June 2026.
  6. McGlashan, Andrew; Malcolm, Alex (16 June 2026). "Melbourne Stars, Renegades likely to exist for another BBL season". ESPN. Archived from the original on 17 June 2026. Retrieved 16 June 2026.
  7. "Full Scorecard of Heat vs Renegades 1st semi-final 2012/13 - Score Report | ESPNcricinfo.com".
  8. "Strikers beat Renegades Strikers won by 1 run - Strikers vs Renegades, Big Bash League, 2nd Semi-Final Match Summary, Report | ESPNcricinfo.com". 2 February 2018.
  9. "Renegades beat Sixers Renegades won by 3 wickets (with 1 ball remaining) - Sixers vs Renegades, Big Bash League, 2nd Semi-Final Match Summary, Report | ESPNcricinfo.com". 15 February 2019.
  10. "BBL Final: Renegades vs Stars". Austadiums. Retrieved 17 February 2019.
  11. "Star's choke in 'unbelievable' BBL collapse". 17 February 2019.
  12. "Renegades beat Stars Renegades won by 13 runs - Renegades vs Stars, Big Bash League, Final Match Summary, Report | ESPNcricinfo.com". 17 February 2019.
  13. "McDonald stands down as Renegades coach". Melbourne Renegades.
  14. "Klinger announced as new BBL coach". Melbourne Renegades.
  15. "Renegades sign Gleeson after late signings drama".
  16. "Full Scorecard of Heat vs Renegades 56th Match 2019/20 - Score Report | ESPNcricinfo.com".
  17. "Tahir pulls out of Renegades stint for personal reasons".
  18. "Tough to swallow: Boyce bounces back after horror run".
  19. "Klinger steps down to take up NSW role". Melbourne Renegades.
  20. "Nic Maddinson to captain Melbourne Renegades after Aaron Finch stands down". 18 November 2021. Retrieved 18 November 2021.
  21. "Cameron Boyce hat-trick in vain as Sydney Thunder snatch win by one run". ESPN Cricinfo. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
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  28. "Spoors joins Renegades on eve of BBL|15 opener | Melbourne Renegades". www.melbournerenegades.com.au. Retrieved 6 July 2026.
  29. 1 2 "Rizwan lands at Gades, headlines epic draft haul | Melbourne Renegades". www.melbournerenegades.com.au. Retrieved 6 July 2026.
  30. "Gades bolster bowling group ahead of 'Canes clash | Melbourne Renegades". www.melbournerenegades.com.au. Retrieved 6 July 2026.
  31. "AJ tied to Renegades for BBL|15 | Melbourne Renegades". www.melbournerenegades.com.au. Retrieved 6 July 2026.
  32. "Gades hit the mark with Archer signing | Melbourne Renegades". www.melbournerenegades.com.au. Retrieved 6 July 2026.
  33. "Renegades announce Team of the Decade". Melbourne Renegades.
  34. "Bell joins Renegades as an assistant coach for the BBL". ESPNCricInfo. Retrieved 23 November 2023.
  35. "Our Coaches". Melbourne Renegades. Cricket Australia. Retrieved 29 November 2021.
  36. Renegades fans, we need your help choosing our mascot!. Facebook.com. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  37. Meet the future of Cricket. Facebook.com. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  38. The fans have spoken!. Facebook.com/MelbourneRenegades. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  39. Name our mascot. melbournerenegades.com.au. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
  40. Scorecard. Cricinfo. Retrieved 23 January 2015.
  41. "Record crowd at MCG for Melbourne derby". www.cricket.com.au.
  42. NEW MEMBERSHIP RECORD melbournerenegades.com.au. Retrieved 9 December 2015
  43. 1 2 We've broken the ALL TIME membership record twitter.com/RenegadesBBL. Retrieved 13 December 2015
  44. "Renegades set membership record". Melbourne Renegades.
  45. "Instagram". www.instagram.com. Retrieved 6 July 2026.
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  74. "Big Bash League 2014/15 Table, Matches, win, loss, points for Big Bash League".
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  78. 1 2 "Christian named BBL Player of the Season". Melbourne Renegades.
  79. "Big Bash League 2021/22 Table, Matches, win, loss, points for Big Bash League".
  80. 1 2 "Big Bash League 2021/22 Table, Matches, win, loss, points for Big Bash League".
  81. "Webster named BBL Player of the Season". Melbourne Renegades.
  82. "Harper voted Player of the Season for BBL|10". Melbourne Renegades.
  83. "Richardson named BBL Player of the Season". Melbourne Renegades.
  84. "Rooster reigns supreme | Melbourne Renegades". 27 March 2024.
  85. "n the red: Renegades' history of Big Bash imports". cricket.com.au. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
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