33 George Worker

George Worker Cricket Player
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Cricket player George Worker represents the New Zealand National Cricket Team. Since joining the club in 2015, he has enjoyed success with the team. On August 23, 1989, George Worker was born in Palmerston North. In the T20 format in 2015, George Worker made his debut for the New Zealand National Cricket Team.

George Worker Bio

Full NameGeorge Herrick Worker
NicknameGeorge Worker
BirthdayAugust 23, 1989
BirthplacePalmerston North
Age32 Years
NationalityNew Zealand
Star SignLeo
CountryNew Zealand
ProfessionCricketer
SchoolPalmerston North Boys High School

George Worker Height & Weight

Height183 cm
Weight75 Kg
BustUpdating Soon
WaistUpdating Soon
HipUpdating Soon
Hair ColorBrown
Eye ColorBlue
Shoe Size4 US
Dress Size8 US

Worker Cricket Info

Batting StyleLeft-hand Bat
Bowling StyleSlow Left arm Orthodox
RoleAllrounder
Teams New Zealand, Central Stags, New Zealand A, New Zealand XI, Central Districts, Montreal Tigers, Jamaica Tallawahs, Auckland
Test DebutN/A
T20 Debut9 August 2015 vs Zim
ODI Debut23 August 2015 vs SA

Net Worth

Net Worth$1 million – $6 million
Annual SalaryNot Known

Family

Father NameNot Known
Mother NameNot Known
WifeNot Known
ChildrenNot Known
SiblingsNot Known

Career

He was chosen on June 3rd, 2018, in the player draught for the inaugural Global T20 Canada tournament to represent the Montreal Tigers.

He was one of twenty players who received new contracts from New Zealand Cricket in May 2018 for the 2018–19 campaign.

He has been called up to play in place of Neil Broom for the final two Twenty20 Internationals against Bangladesh on January 5, 2017, but if he is not chosen to play that day, he will be released to play for Central District in the Domestic Twenty20 Final on January 7. He was also released when it was revealed Jimmy Neesham would take Broom’s place.

He was included in New Zealand’s Test team in November 2017 for their matchup with the West Indies. The worker scored 659 runs in 10 matches for the Ford Trophy in the 2016–17 season.

On August 9, 2015, he made his Twenty20 international debut for New Zealand. On August 23, 2015, he played in his first One Day International for New Zealand against South Africa.

George Worker was included in the 12-man New Zealand team for their August 2015 tour of Zimbabwe after Mitchell Santner was forced to withdraw due to injury. On August 9, 2015, he made his debut abroad at the solitary Twenty20 International.

He finished the game’s highest scorer with 62 runs off 38 balls, including 4 sixes and 3 fours. The worker was the match’s MVP as New Zealand handily prevailed.

On August 9, 2015, he made his Twenty20 international debut for New Zealand. On August 23, 2015, he played in his first One Day International for New Zealand against South Africa.

The worker was included in the 12-man New Zealand team for their August 2015 tour of Zimbabwe after Mitchell Santner was forced to withdraw due to injury. On August 9, 2015, he made his debut abroad at the solitary Twenty20 International. He finished the game’s highest scorer with 62 runs off 38 balls, including 4 sixes and 3 fours. George Worker was the match’s MVP as New Zealand handily prevailed.

In December 2007, he made his first-class debut for Central Districts, opening the batting and scoring 71 runs. For two years, he led the first eleven at Palmerston North Boys High School, where Jacob Oram had also studied. He previously competed for the Central Districts Under 19 team. He led the New Zealand Under-19s, competed in the 2008 ICC Under-19 World Cup in Malaysia, and then traveled to England.

Worker, a true all-rounder for Central Districts who bats in the top order and bowls left-arm spin, made his first-class debut in December 2007 and scored 71 on his debut.

Before joining the Canterbury Wizards for the 2011–12 season, he played over 80 games in all three formats with the Stags, including the 2010 Champions League tournament in South Africa. There, he just scored his first first-class hundred (120*) against Auckland Aces.

Cricketer George Herrick Worker represents New Zealand internationally. He was born on August 23, 1989. In August 2015, after Mitchell Santner was forced to withdraw due to injury, he was added to the New Zealand team for their tour of Zimbabwe.

Aqeel Ahmad
the authorAqeel Ahmad
Aqeel Ahmad is a passionate sports fan who enjoys reading and writing about the most recent sporting events taking place all around the world.