George Worker

George Worker
Personal information
Full name George Herrick Worker
Born (1989-08-23) 23 August 1989
Palmerston North, New Zealand
Batting style Left-handed
Bowling style Slow left-arm orthodox
Role Middle-order Batsman, Opening Batsman (T20's), All-Rounder
International information
National side
ODI debut (cap 188) 23 August 2015 v South Africa
Last ODI 26 August 2015 v South Africa
T20I debut (cap 67) 9 August 2015 v Zimbabwe
Last T20I 14 August 2015 v South Africa
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
2007-2011; 2014-present Central Districts (squad no. 33)
2011- Canterbury
2012-2013 Scotland in England League
New Zealand A
Career statistics
Competition ODI T20I LA T20
Matches 2 2 71 60
Runs scored 41 90 2,353 1,329
Batting average 41.00 45.00 36.26 28.27
100s/50s 0/0 0/1 6/12 -/9
Top score 21 62 194 89*
Balls bowled 6 12 1,238 342
Wickets 0 1 25 14
Bowling average - 19.00 43.60 34.71
5 wickets in innings 0 0 0 0
10 wickets in match 0 n/a 0 n/a
Best bowling - 1/19 3/25 3/18
Catches/stumpings -/– 1/– 22/– 17/–
Source: Cricinfo, 9 August 2015

George Herrick Worker (born 23 August 1989 in Palmerston North) is a New Zealand international cricketer, who plays for limited over cricket.

He is a member of the New Zealand Under 19 side in the Under 19 Cricket World Cup. He was named in New Zealand's squad for their tour to Zimbabwe in August 2015, after Mitchell Santner was ruled out due to injury.[1]

He made his Twenty20 International debut for New Zealand on 9 August 2015.[2]

He made his One Day International debut for New Zealand against South Africa on 23 August 2015.[3]

Domestic career

He made his first class debut scoring 71 runs opening the batting for Central Districts in December 2007. He captained the Palmerston North Boys High School, the same school Jacob Oram had attended, first eleven for two years. He has represented the Central Districts Under 19 side. He skippered the New Zealand Under-19s, featured in the ICC Under-19 World Cup in Malaysia then toured England in 2008.

A genuine all-rounder who bats in the top order and bowls left-arm spin, Worker made his first-class debut for Central Districts in December 2007, hitting 71 on debut. He played over 80 matches across all three formats for the Stags, including the 2010 Champions League tournament in South Africa, before switching to the Canterbury Wizards for the 2011/12 season, where he has recently posted his maiden first-class hundred (120*) against Auckland Aces.

In 2010/11 Worker enjoyed his best season on the domestic circuit in all formats. He hit 335 runs at 30.45, with three fifties in the first-class arena, then an impressive 307 runs at 51.16 including his maiden hundred in domestic cricket. In the T20 format, 207 runs at 25.87 and 4 wickets at 10, with an economy rate of 5.71 pushed his name forward for international consideration.

Worker, has not only played Under-19 cricket for New Zealand, but featured for the national Emerging Players side against the touring England Lions in 2009. Later that year, he was part of the same side that played in the Cricket Australia Emerging Players Tournament in Brisbane.

He has also just returned from a success stint abroad, where he played league cricket in Scotland for SMRH which culminated in playing in the CB40 competition for Scotland. He was the sides leading run-scorer in two of his three fixtures.

In the 2016–17 Ford Trophy, Worker scored the most runs in the tournament, with 659 in ten matches.[4]

He has been called up to replace Neil Broom for the final 2 T20I matches against Bangladesh on 5 January, 2017, but will be released to play for Central District for the Domestic T20 Final on 7 January if he is not selected to play the day before, which he was released when it was announced he was replaced by Jimmy Neesham.[5][6]

International arena

Worker was named in 12-men New Zealand's squad for their tour to Zimbabwe in August 2015, after Mitchell Santner was ruled out due to injury. His first international appearance came during the single Twenty20 International on 9 August 2015. He top scored in the match with 62 runs off 38 balls with 4 sixes and 3 fours. New Zealand easily won the match and Worker was the man of the match.

References

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