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Nathan Edward Jersy
Nathan Edward
Team flagCAR20 yrs
batting styleleft-arm fast Bowler

Nathan Edward Profile, Career & Stats

Batting
Bowling

Nathan Edward Recent Form

Batting

LIT vs TTL, T201 (1) *
LIT vs GRR, T2028 (32)
WI U19 vs SL U19, ODI13 (39)
WI U19 vs ENG U19, ODI49 (80) *
WI U19 vs SCO U19, ODI27 (56) *
WI U19 vs SA U19, ODI12 (14)
CCC vs WNI, LIST A4 (20)
CCC vs TNT, LIST A4 (18)
BR vs RR, T206 (3) *
BR vs GG, T203 (7) *
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Bowling

LIT vs TTL, T200-26
LIT vs WII, T202-21
LIT vs WII, T201-30
LIT vs GRR, T201-44
LIT vs TTL, T200-19
LIT vs BBP, T205-27
LIT vs JMT, T200-25
TKR vs GAW, CPL3-19
TKR vs SKNP, CPL1-37
WI U19 vs AUS U19, ODI3-32
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Nathan Edward Career Stats

Batting

FormatMatInnR100s50sHSSRAvgFoursSixesDuckRank
ODI22240017100.0024.0030----
CPL2000000.000.0000----
LIST A5460015157.1420.0060----
T2014438002888.3738.0050----

Bowling

FormatMatInnWEconAvgBest3W5WSRMaidenRank
ODI2225.8232.002/460033.00----
CPL2249.6014.003/19108.75----
LIST A5545.4940.752/390044.50----
T201414147.9224.435/270118.50----

Career Debut Information

ODI Debut
England U19 v West Indies U19 Kent County Cricket Ground Beckenham, 8-9-2021
CPL Debut St Kitts & Nevis Patriots v Trinbago Knight Riders Warner Park, Basseterre, St Kitts, 1-9-2024
LIST A Debut
West Indies U19 v Sri Lanka U19 Conaree Sports Club, Basseterre, St Kitts, 21-1-2022
T20 Debut
Bahawalpur Royals v Hyderabad Hunters Gaddafi Stadium, Lahore, 7-10-2022

Teams played for

West Indies U19

About Nathan Edward

NameNathan Edward
GenderMale
Birth29 May 2005
Birth PlaceSt Maarten
NationalityCaribbean
RoleBowler
Batsleft handed . lower order
Bowlsleft-arm fast . Faster
In the sleepy hush of a St Maarten afternoon, where cricket fields are more playground than arena, and ambitions rise quietly between the rustle of coconut trees, Nathan Edward found rhythm, not in headlines or highlight reels, but in repetition. Ball after ball, over after over. Cricket didn’t arrive with fanfare for Nathan. It arrived like muscle memory, like breath. He wasn’t the loudest in the nets. He didn’t need to be. His game spoke in subtleties, just like his personality.

Born on May 29, 2005, Edward didn’t have the infrastructure of a Test-playing nation behind him. But he had enough: a patch of turf, a willing coach, a community that believed, and a hunger that didn’t waver. By 17, he was already on the selectors’ radars. Not because he fit the archetype of a West Indian tearaway, but because he didn’t. Edward was precise. Measured. Capable of swinging the new ball with control and adding value with the bat when things got rough. He played like someone who understood the game deeper than his years suggested.... continue reading

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Player Bio
In the sleepy hush of a St Maarten afternoon, where cricket fields are more playground than arena, and ambitions rise quietly between the rustle of coconut trees, Nathan Edward found rhythm, not in headlines or highlight reels, but in repetition. Ball after ball, over after over. Cricket didn’t arrive with fanfare for Nathan. It arrived like muscle memory, like breath. He wasn’t the loudest in the nets. He didn’t need to be. His game spoke in subtleties, just like his personality.

Born on May 29, 2005, Edward didn’t have the infrastructure of a Test-playing nation behind him. But he had enough: a patch of turf, a willing coach, a community that believed, and a hunger that didn’t waver. By 17, he was already on the selectors’ radars. Not because he fit the archetype of a West Indian tearaway, but because he didn’t. Edward was precise. Measured. Capable of swinging the new ball with control and adding value with the bat when things got rough. He played like someone who understood the game deeper than his years suggested.

It was in the year 2024 that Edward truly broke through. The Under-19 World Cup was pivotal for the cricketer. In a super-six encounter against England, Edward delivered a performance that rippled across continents, 49 not out off 80 balls, three wickets, and two sharp catches in the deep. It wasn’t just a man-of-the-match performance. It was a statement. He wasn’t here to be a passenger. He was a fulcrum. By the end of the tournament, he had been named in the ICC's Team of the Tournament, finishing with 11 wickets and over 100 runs, averaging 50.5 with the bat. Numbers aside, it was his temperament that impressed most. He looked like a senior player trapped in a teenager’s frame.

His domestic trajectory across formats has been steady, not sensational, and that’s what makes it sustainable.

But if there’s a thread that runs through Edward’s young career, it’s this: he performs when it matters. Whether it’s a clutch innings under pressure in a World Cup game or a seaming spell that turns the match in domestic cricket, he shows up when the game leans toward chaos. And not with theatrics, but with calm.

Coaches have spoken highly of his cricketing intelligence. He doesn’t bowl at lightning pace, but he reads batters. Adjusts angles. Finds movement. His left-arm angle offers variation to any attack, and his fielding, often undervalued, has become another string to his bow. He’s taken important catches in pressure situations and fields with intent.

There’s also a maturity about how he handles failure. In one game during the domestic season, he went wicketless despite bowling tidy spells. There were no tantrums. No theatrics. Just quiet reflection and better execution in the next outing. For a player barely in his twenties, that’s gold dust.

Edward still has time to develop into many things. A frontline seamer. A handy all-rounder. A quiet leader. The tools are there. But more importantly, so is the temperament. He’s not chasing stardom. He’s chasing improvement. And that makes him dangerous, in the best way.

(As of August 2025)