Irish cricketer
George Ross Adair (born Holywood, County Down ,[ 1] [ 2] 21 April 1994) is an Irish cricketer and former rugby union player.
He plays for the Northern Knights in domestic cricket.[ 3]
His younger brother, Mark Adair , is also a cricketer, who has played for Ireland in all formats.[ 4] [ 5]
Cricket career
He made his Twenty20 debut for the Northern Knights in the 2020 Inter-Provincial Trophy on 20 August 2020.[ 6] He made his List A debut on 30 June 2021, for Northern Knights in the 2021 Inter-Provincial Cup .[ 7]
In December 2022, he earned his maiden call-up to the Ireland cricket team for their T20I series against Zimbabwe .[ 8] He made his Twenty20 International (T20I) debut for Ireland, on 12 January 2023 in the first T20I match.[ 9]
In May 2024, he was named in Ireland’s squad for the 2024 ICC Men's T20 World Cup tournament.[ 10]
Adair would hit his maiden T20I century on 29 September 2024 against South Africa in the 2nd T20I of their series in Abu Dhabi . He would finish on exactly 100 (58) and hit nine 6s along the way[ 11] He was just the third Irish man to achieve the feat and fifth Irish cricketer overall alongside Kevin O'Brien , Paul Stirling , Amy Hunter and Gaby Lewis .
Rugby career
Adair played schools rugby for Sullivan Upper School , impressing in the Ulster Schools' Cup in 2011.[ 12] He played for the Ulster Ravens in the British and Irish Cup ,[ 13] and made one senior appearance for Ulster in the Pro12 , scoring a try against Dragons in 2015.[ 14]
He played for Jersey Reds in the RFU Championship for two and a half years, making more than 40 appearances before a degenerative hip condition ended his professional career. Following two operations, he returned to rugby at an amateur level with Ballynahinch RFC ,[ 15] with whom he won the Ulster Senior League in 2019,[ 16] and was named Club Player of the Year in the Ulster Rugby awards.[ 17]
References
^ "Rugby: Meet Jersey’s four new players" , Jersey Evening Post , 14 April 2015
^ Cricket: Ireland squad , BBC Sport, retrieved 2 June 2023
^ "Explosive Ross Adair hoping for Knights start" . Belfast Telegraph . 30 June 2021. Retrieved 30 June 2021 .
^ "Ross Adair" . ESPN Cricinfo . Retrieved 20 August 2020 .
^ "Ross Adair delighted at Knights call-up" . Cricket Europe . Retrieved 20 August 2020 .
^ "1st Match, Bready, Aug 20 2020, Cricket Ireland Inter-Provincial Twenty20 Trophy" . ESPN Cricinfo . Retrieved 20 August 2020 .
^ "12th Match, Belfast, Jun 30 2021, Cricket Ireland Inter-Provincial Limited Over Cup" . ESPN Cricinfo . Retrieved 30 June 2021 .
^ "Ross Adair: Ex-Ulster rugby player brought into Ireland squad" . BBC. 20 December 2022. Retrieved 20 December 2022 .
^ "1st T20I, Harare, January 12, 2023, Ireland tour of Zimbabwe" . ESPNcricinfo . 12 January 2023. Retrieved 12 January 2023 .
^ "Ireland's 15-Player Squad for ICC Men's T20I World Cup" . ScoreWaves . Retrieved 11 June 2024 .
^ "Adair brothers star as Ireland level series" . ESPNcricinfo . Retrieved 30 September 2024 .
^
He went on to earn two International caps for Ireland at U19 level.
"The Front Row Union Awards 2011" , The Front Row Union, 5 September 2011
^ "Ravens: Wallace Returns for Ayr Battle!" , The Front Row Union, 6 December 2013
^ "Dragons 26 Ulster 22" , Ulster Rugby, 8 March 2015
^ Liam Heagney, "'The pain was almost like a ripping across my abdomen. I'd no idea what was going on'" , Rugby Pass, 28 January 2019
^ Ian Callender, "So near yet so far for Ross Adair" , Sunday Life , 10 June 2019
^ Darren Fullerton, "2019 Ulster Rugby Awards: Retiring captain Rory Best is named Heineken Personality of the Year" , Belfast Live, 9 May 2019
External links