Oamaru Albion Cricket Club president Stephen Halliwell said the people who have played a part in keeping the North Otago club vital over the last 100 years were "too numerous" to mention individually.
Nevertheless, "honouring the past is really important because we wouldn't be playing without them", Mr Halliwell said.
"There were a huge number of people involved who weren't superstars," he said.
"The club has a history of the same families ... generation after generation playing for us."
In October 1919, the Oamaru Albion Cricket Club was established as a Saturday cricket club, and Mr Halliwell and club captain Ricky Whyte pored through 118 cricket books, and the Papers Past website, to fill in as much history as they could to create honours boards for the club's 100th birthday celebrations held at the weekend.
The club boasts 11 life members, including six living life members, after Lindsay Whyte and Peter Cartwright were inducted this year.
The centenary celebrations started on Friday night when the club welcomed returning players from across the country - and one who made the trip from Australia - social T20 cricket and a dinner for 70 followed on Saturday, and the weekend concluded with the Albion 100 BBQ and Beer on Sunday.