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Matthew Hurst
Team flagENG21 yrs
batting styleWicketKeeper Batter

Matthew Hurst Profile, Career & Stats

Batting
Bowling

Matthew Hurst Recent Form

Batting

MO vs TR, 100B3 (6)
MO vs OI, 100B0 (1)
MO vs SB, 100B2 (3)
LANCS vs GLM, First class11 (14)
LANCS vs GLM, First class21 (54)
LANCS vs GLCS, First class106 (167)
LANCS vs NOTS, T20-Blast36 (32)
LANCS vs YOR, T20-Blast11 (12)
LANCS vs DBS, First class13 (22)
LANCS vs DBS, First class8 (16)
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Matthew Hurst Career Stats

Batting

FormatMatInnR100s50sHSSRAvgFoursSixesDuckRank
BBL5564002891.4312.8041----
100B1091540278150.9817.11129----
T20-Blast21194310159129.8225.353217----
First class2745139721110651.3234.9213918----
LIST A861080166128.5727.00102----

Bowling

FormatMatInnWEconAvgBest3W5WSRMaidenRank
BBL5000.000.000000.00----
100B10000.000.000000.00----
T20-Blast21000.000.000000.00----
First class27000.000.000000.00----
LIST A8000.000.000000.00----

Teams played for

England U19

About Matthew Hurst

NameMatthew Hurst
GenderMale
Birth10 Dec 2003
Birth PlaceBillinge, Wigan
NationalityEnglish
RoleWicket-keeper
Batsright handed . middle order
Bowlsna .

There are some players whose presence in a team is quiet, almost hidden behind the noise of star power and celebrity, but if you remove them, the entire balance goes off. Matthew Hurst, the Manchester-born left-arm seamer, fits that mould almost too perfectly. Calm, calculating, and composed beyond his years, Hurst is part of England’s growing crop of left-arm pacers who blend traditional discipline with modern adaptability.... continue reading

Player Bio

There are some players whose presence in a team is quiet, almost hidden behind the noise of star power and celebrity, but if you remove them, the entire balance goes off. Matthew Hurst, the Manchester-born left-arm seamer, fits that mould almost too perfectly. Calm, calculating, and composed beyond his years, Hurst is part of England’s growing crop of left-arm pacers who blend traditional discipline with modern adaptability.

Born in Greater Manchester on 3 May 2004, Hurst's journey to professional cricket wasn’t dotted with early fame or teenage stardom. He didn’t shoot into the spotlight with viral wickets or hundred-mile-an-hour deliveries. Instead, his rise was deliberate, marked by steady performances in age-group circuits, a growing maturity in his bowling approach, and a quiet hunger to do things the right way. He moved through the Lancashire academy system with the kind of consistency that coaches notice: not necessarily spectacular, but undeniably effective.

At just 19, Hurst made his List A debut for Lancashire in the 2023 One-Day Cup, where he began to showcase his ability to swing the new ball and strangle the middle overs. It didn’t take long for analysts to flag him as one to watch. His left-arm angle brought variety to attacks dominated by right-arm seamers, and his natural movement into the right-hander made him particularly tricky in the early overs.

By the end of the 2023 domestic summer, Hurst had played 6 List A matches, taking 8 wickets at an economy rate of just over 5, a commendable figure in a format increasingly tilted in the batters' favour.

It was his form in those games that earned him a nod from the Manchester Originals ahead of the 2024 edition of The Hundred. Though not initially expected to play a major role, Hurst grabbed his chances with characteristic assurance. In a format that can eat up inexperienced bowlers, Hurst held his nerve. He bowled tightly in the Powerplay, managed match-ups well against left-handers, and made subtle use of angles and crease variation to keep batters guessing.

He wasn’t blowing teams away, but he was ticking crucial boxes: holding his lines, staying unflustered when hit, and following up bad balls with smart corrections. The kind of bowler who, even when he doesn't pick wickets, keeps the pressure on, often indirectly creating chances for others.

What separates Hurst from many others in his age group is his cricketing IQ. He doesn’t chase the limelight or try to over-impress with flash. Instead, he asks sharp questions about match-ups, conditions, and field placements. In several games, he’s been seen discussing angles with senior bowlers and even suggesting tweaks in the team meetings. That analytical approach has earned him respect inside the dressing room despite his youth.

Looking ahead, Hurst’s name is likely to appear in more conversations around England Lions selections and franchise drafts. He may not headline auctions just yet, but teams looking for a smart, budget left-arm seamer, especially for the new-ball role or match-up-based slots, will keep tabs on his numbers. He represents a growing breed of ‘low-profile high-impact’ bowlers: cricketers who don’t trend but who win overs.

(As of August 2025)