# Gregor Maiden

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Gregor Maiden Personal information Full name Gregor Ian Maiden Born (1979-07-22) 22 July 1979 (age 46) Glasgow, Scotland Batting Right-handed Bowling Right-arm off break Role Wicketkeeper International information National side Scotland ODI debut (cap 41) 15 June 2010 v Netherlands Last ODI 13 July 2011 v Sri Lanka T20I debut (cap 15) 2 August 2008 v Ireland Last T20I 4 August 2010 v Kenya Domestic team information Years Team 2003 Lancashire Career statistics Competition ODI T20I FC LA Matches 7 3 8 60 Runs scored 84 0 118 533 Batting average 21.00 0.00 11.80 14.02 100s/50s 0/0 0/0 0/0 0/1 Top score 31 0 40 62 Balls bowled 48 60 445 1,338 Wickets 0 2 11 23 Bowling average – 29.00 21.72 47.56 5 wickets in innings – 0 0 0 10 wickets in match – 0 0 0 Best bowling – 1/20 3/24 2/27 Catches/stumpings 5/– 1/– 5/– 22/3 Source: CricketArchive, 25 January 2025

**Gregor Ian Maiden** (born 22 July 1979) is a Scottish former [cricketer](/source/Cricketer) who played for [Scotland](/source/Scottish_national_cricket_team).[1] During the 2003 season he played for [Lancashire](/source/Lancashire_County_Cricket_Club).

Maiden was born in [Glasgow](/source/Glasgow) and attended [Hutchesons' Grammar School](/source/Hutchesons'_Grammar_School), before going on to study at [Loughborough University](/source/Loughborough_University) along with fellow Scotland cricketers [Fraser Watts](/source/Fraser_Watts) and Simon Smith. After three years, he graduated with a 2.1 honours degree in Sports Science.

A frontline batter and off-spin bowler, Gregor had a nomadic club career, having spells with several clubs in the West of Scotland and a brief stint at Lancashire (he suffered a cruciate ligament injury shortly after signing for them), until in 2004 he signed for the popular Grange club in [Edinburgh](/source/Edinburgh), where he has played since.

In his only List A appearance for Lancashire CCC, in 2003 vs India 'A', his stand of 130 (Maiden scored 62) alongside Chris Schofield created a List A World Record for the Highest 9th Wicket Partnership. The record has since been beaten by Chris Read and Andrew Harris in 2006.

After his cricketing career, Maiden worked in the banking sector in Edinburgh.[2]

## References

1. **[^](#cite_ref-1)** ["Gregor Maiden"](https://cricketarchive.com/Archive/Players/8/8174/8174.html). CricketArchive. Retrieved 12 March 2010.

1. **[^](#cite_ref-2)** ["Where are they now? Scotland – 1998 NatWest Trophy giantkillers"](https://web.archive.org/web/20190417170209/https://www.thecricketpaper.com/features-and-columns/1318/where-are-they-now-scotland-1998-natwest-trophy-giantkillers/). *The Cricket Paper*. Archived from [the original](https://www.thecricketpaper.com/features-and-columns/1318/where-are-they-now-scotland-1998-natwest-trophy-giantkillers/) on 17 April 2019. Retrieved 17 April 2019.

## External links

- [Gregor Maiden](https://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/player/25102.html) at [Cricinfo](/source/Cricinfo)

v t e Scotland squad – 2007 World Twenty20 4 Blain 5 Maiden 8 Lyons 10 Haq 12 Watts 17 Nel 22 Sheikh 23 Brown 24 Drummond 25 McCallum 27 Watson (c) 28 Poonia 37 Hamilton 55 Smith (wk) 99 Wright Coach: Peter Steindl

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