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Nic Maddinson

Australian cricketer


Summary

Australian cricketer

FieldValue
nameNic Maddinson
imageNic_Maddinson_playing_for_the_Sixers.jpg
captionMaddinson playing for Sydney Sixers
fullnameNicolas James Maddinson
birth_date
birth_placeNowra, New South Wales, Australia
battingLeft-handed
bowlingSlow left-arm
roleOpening batsman
internationaltrue
countryAustralia
internationalspan2013–2018
testdebutdate24 November
testdebutyear2016
testdebutagainstSouth Africa
testcap448
lasttestdate26 December
lasttestyear2016
lasttestagainstPakistan
T20Idebutdate10 October
T20Idebutyear2013
T20IdebutagainstIndia
T20Icap65
lastT20Idate6 July
lastT20Iyear2018
lastT20IagainstZimbabwe
T20Ishirt53
club1New South Wales
year12010/11–2017/18, 2024/25-present
clubnumber153
club2Sydney Sixers
year22011/12–2017/18
club3Royal Challengers Bangalore
year32014–2015
club4Guyana Amazon Warriors
year42016
club5Surrey
year52018
club6Melbourne Stars
year62018/19–2020/21
club7Victoria
year72018/19–2023/24
clubnumber753
club8Melbourne Renegades
year82021/22–2023/24
club9Durham
year92022
clubnumber953
club10Sydney Thunder
year102024/25-present
clubnumber1053
columns4
column1Test
matches13
runs127
bat avg16.75
100s/50s10/0
top score122
deliveries136
wickets10
bowl avg10
fivefor10
tenfor10
best bowling10
catches/stumpings12/–
column2T20I
matches26
runs245
bat avg211.25
100s/50s20/0
top score234
deliveries20
wickets20
bowl avg20
fivefor20
tenfor20
best bowling20
catches/stumpings21/–
column3FC
matches3121
runs37,565
bat avg338.59
100s/50s318/35
top score3224
deliveries3658
wickets38
bowl avg356.50
fivefor30
tenfor30
best bowling32/10
catches/stumpings388/–
column4LA
matches4101
runs43,010
bat avg432.36
100s/50s46/16
top score4137
deliveries4564
wickets48
bowl avg464.25
fivefor40
tenfor40
best bowling44/29
catches/stumpings445/–
date15 March 2024
sourcehttp://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/player/333780.html ESPNcricinfo

| 100s/50s1= 0/0 | catches/stumpings1= 2/– | 100s/50s2= 0/0 | catches/stumpings2= 1/– | 100s/50s3= 18/35 | catches/stumpings3= 88/– | 100s/50s4= 6/16 | catches/stumpings4= 45/–

Nicolas James Maddinson (born 21 December 1991) is an Australian cricketer. He is a left-handed opening batsman who has represented Australia in both Test matches and Twenty20 Internationals. Domestically, he plays for New South Wales and the Sydney Thunder in the Big Bash League, previously having played for Victoria, Melbourne Stars, Melbourne Renegades (as captain) and Sydney Sixers.

Early life and cricket

Born on 21 December 1991 in Nowra, New South Wales, Maddinson was part of the New South Wales under-19 side that won the Australian under-19 Championship in December 2009. Two months earlier, he had topped the batting averages for Australia's under-19 side in a home series against Sri Lanka under-19s, averaging 72 runs and innings during the series, including scoring a century in one match. He was later selected for the Australian for the 2010 ICC Under-19 Cricket World Cup, opening the batting as Australia won the tournament.

Maddinson also enjoyed an excellent season for Sutherland District Cricket Club in 2009/10, scoring 604 runs at an average of 46.46 runs per innings. He scored two centuries, including making 137 runs in the semi-final against Eastern Suburbs Cricket Club, helping Sutherland reach the Grand Final, where they eventually lost to St George Cricket Club. he took 12 First Grade wickets during the season with his left-arm orthodox spin deliveries, including five wickets for 95 runs in the semi-final.

Domestic cricket career

Maddinson made his first-class cricket debut in October 2011, scoring a century to become the youngest New South Wales player to score a century on first-class debut. His score of 113 runs against South Australia at the Adelaide Oval came aged 18 years and 294 days, beaten the record set by Arthur Morris in 1940 aged 18 years and 342 days.

Maddinson made his Big Bash League debut for Sydney Sixers in January 2011 and played for the side until the 2017/18 season. During the 2014/15 season he captained the side in five matches when Moisés Henriques was injured, He made his Indian Premier League debut in 2014 for Royal Challengers Bangalore, playing in just two matches before being ruled out of the competition due to injury. He rejoined the side in 2015 but played only once before playing for Guyana Amazon Warriors in the 2016 Caribbean Premier League, finishing on the losing side in the competition's final. In 2018 he played for Surrey County Cricket Club in the 2018 Vitality Blast.

Maddinson moved to play for Victoria ahead of the 2018/19 Australian season. He found a place in the side in the 2018–19 JLT One-Day Cup, playing in all eight matches and scoring two half-centuries. He was left out of the first five matches of the Sheffield Shield season but selected following Marcus Harris' selection in the Australian Test squad for the tour of India. He scored 162 runs on his Victoria Shield debut, but later broke his arm during a match, ruling him out for the finals. At the same time he moved to play for Victorian side Melbourne Stars in the Big Bash.

In 2019/20, Maddinson was the leading run scorer in the Sheffield Shield, making 780 runs at an average of 86.66 runs an innings. He made two centuries and five half-centuries and set a new highest first-class score of 224 runs. He was awarded the joint Shield player of the year award.

In 2024/25, Maddinson returned to play for New South Wales and also joined the Sydney Thunder in the BBL.

In March 2025, at the end of the 2024/25 cricket season, Maddinson was diagonsed with testicular cancer, for which he underwent surgery and nine weeks of chemotherapy. He resumed full cricket training in September after recovering from the cancer, and missed the early stages of the 2025/26 domestic season.

International career

As a 19-year-old, Maddinson was selected in both the one-day and four-day Australia A squads for the 2011 tour of Zimbabwe, playing in three one-day matches in a tri-series with Zimbabwe and South Africa.

He went on to make his full international debut for Australia in a Twenty20 International match against India at Rajkot in October 2013, scoring 34 runs from 16 balls. In November 2016, Maddinson made his Test match debut in the third Test against the touring South Africans. His baggy green cap was presented by Simon Katich. He played in three Tests during the summer batting at number six, making a duck on debut against South Africa and then scores of 1, 4 and 22 in three innings against the touring Pakistan side before being dropped for the final Test of the summer.

References

References

  1. "Where are they now?: Australia's last Under-19 Cricket World Cup winners from 2010 all grown up". The West Australian.
  2. (2010). "2009/10 Cricket NSW Annual Report & Yearbook". Cricket NSW.
  3. "Sydney Sixers young gun Nic Maddinson replaces injured Moises Henriques as captain".
  4. ESPNcricinfo staff. (27 April 2014). "Coulter-Nile, Maddinson ruled out of IPL". ESPNcricinfo.
  5. (5 June 2018). "MADDINSON JOINS SURREY FOR VITALITY BLAST".
  6. "Moises Henriques and Nic Maddinson named joint Sheffield Shield players of the season". ESPNcricinfo.
  7. Malcolm, Alex. (17 October 2025). "Maddinson reveals 'daunting' battle with testicular cancer".
  8. Coverdale, Brydon. (23 June 2011). "Maddinson learns from idol Langer". ESPNcricinfo.
  9. "Scorecard: Only T20I: India v. Australia at Rajkot, 10 October 2013". ESPNcricinfo.
  10. "Renshaw, Maddinson, Handscomb to make Test debuts". ESPNcricinfo.
  11. "South Africa tour of Australia, 3rd Test: Australia v South Africa at Adelaide, 24–28 November 2016". ESPNcricinfo.
  12. (25 November 2016). "'Prediction' prompted Rabada's send-off". Cricket Australia.
  13. "Scorecard: 2nd Test: Australia v Pakistan at Melbourne, 26–30 December 2016". ESPNcricinfo.
  14. (30 December 2016). "Nic Maddinson dropped as Australia recall Agar and O'Keefe for SCG Test". The Guardian.
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