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Harjas Singh

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Australian cricketer (born 2005)
Harjas Singh
Personal information
Full name
Harjas Singh
Born (2005年01月31日) 31 January 2005 (age 21)
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
BattingLeft-handed
BowlingRight-arm medium
RoleAll Rounder
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
2026/27–presentNew South Wales
Source: ESPNCricinfo

Harjas Singh (born 31 January 2005) is an Australian cricketer who plays for New South Wales. He is a right arm medium pace bowler and a left-handed batsman.[1] He plays his club cricket for Western Suburbs in NSW Premier Cricket.

Personal life

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Harjas Singh was born on January 31, 2005, in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, to Indian origin parents who had migrated from Chandigarh in 2000. He began playing cricket at eight, initially featuring as a substitute for the Revesby Workers Cricket Club in New South Wales.[2]

Singh was coached by Neil D’Costa—who has trained several prominent cricketers, including Michael Clarke, Phil Hughes, Mitchell Starc, and Marnus Labuschagne. Raised in a Punjabi household, he attributes his strong wrists to the martial art of Gatka, which simulates sword fighting with wooden sticks and shields. "You have to have very strong wrists for that," Singh noted.[3]

Originally a right-handed batter, Singh switched to batting left-handed as a child to avoid breaking windows while playing in the backyard, though he continues to bowl and throw right-handed. Reflecting on his journey, he has spoken about the challenges of standing out as a cricketer of Indian heritage, emphasizing the need for extra effort to establish his identity in the sport.[4]

Career

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Singh notched his Youth Test career debut in September 2023 against England U19s in Northampton. He scored 100 runs off 169 balls in the first inning and 31 off 36 in the second inning. He also bowled 17 full overs conceding 57 runs while forcing 5 maiden overs and taking 1 wicket, leading to an eventual win for Australia U19s.[5] Singh then made his youth ODI debut for the Australia national under-19 cricket team against Bangladesh U19 in January 2023. He played for Australia U19 and helped secure a win in the final of the 2024 Under-19 Cricket World Cup against India, scoring a match high of 55 runs off 64 deliveries, including 6 total boundaries and 3 sixes.[6]

In October 2025, Singh rose to prominence by scoring 314 off 141 balls in a 50-over game in NSW Premier Cricket, playing for Western Suburbs against the Sydney Cricket Club at Pratten Park. Singh's innings included 35 sixes, and was the third highest ever score in the history of NSW premier cricket, and the highest limited overs score in first grade premier cricket anywhere in Australia.[7] Singh was called up to New South Wales's Second XI team the following week.[8] Singh also received a last minute call up to the Sydney Sixers squad as a local replacement player on the eve of the 2025-26 Big Bash League season,[9] however didn't play a game for the team.

Following Singh's rise to prominence the previous season, he was rewarded with his first state contract with New South Wales, receiving a rookie contract.[10]

References

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  1. ^ "Harjas Singh Profile --ESPNcricinfo".
  2. ^ "Who Is Harjas Singh? Indian-Origin Batter Who Guided Australia To U-19 World Cup Win".
  3. ^ "'I just slap spinners': How Sikh martial art of gatka helped Harjas Singh become Under-19 World Cup champion".
  4. ^ "Who Is Harjas Singh? Indian-Origin Batter Who Guided Australia To U-19 World Cup Win".
  5. ^ "AUS Under-19 vs England U19, 2nd Youth Test at Northampton, ENG-U19 v AUS-U19, Sep 15 2023 - Full Scorecard".
  6. ^ "AUS Under-19 vs IND Under-19, Final at Benoni, U19 World Cup, Feb 10 2024 - Full Scorecard".
  7. ^ "Australia U-19 star Harjas Singh smashes triple century in 50-over grade game". ESPNCricinfo. 4 October 2025.
  8. ^ "Six-hitting phenom earns maiden state call-up after record-breaking triple-hundred". Fox Sports (Australia). 10 October 2025.
  9. ^ "Welcome to the Sixers, Harjas". Sydney Sixers. 13 December 2025 – via Instagram.
  10. ^ "Sydney record-breaker lands first state deal as Blues lock in squad". Cricket.com.au. 12 May 2026.

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