The 20-year-old Queensland allrounder has impressed many around the game and credits his recent stint in English club cricket

Alex Malcolm04-Oct-2025The first-class debut of a former Australia Under-19 captain at the age of 20 wouldn’t normally feel like a slow arrival, but Hugh Weibgen has had to wait quite a bit longer than most of his 2024 World Cup-winning team-mates.Sam Konstas has already played five Test matches, while Ollie Peake has played three times for Australia A. Harry Dixon, Tom Straker and Callum Vidler have all been selected in Australia A white-ball teams while Mahli Beardman has been on a white-ball tour with Australia. Raf McMillan has played first-class cricket while Charlie Anderson also played List A cricket last year.Related

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Weibgen had to bide his time until this season to get his List A debut for Queensland but it was worth the wait as he thrashed 115 not out from 94 balls in just his second game batting at No. 6 to guide his side home to a chase of 323 having walked into bat at 38 for 4. It was an innings that impressed a lot of astute judges around Australia.The other benefit of the wait is that he enters Sheffield Shield cricket for the first time against Tasmania in the form of his life, having had the chance to develop his game away from the spotlight.”I love seeing all those team-mates going really well,” Weibgen told ESPNcricinfo. “Of course you want to be on those tours with them. But I think the slower build for me has been good. I’ve got to know my game a little bit. I went to England. I don’t think many people do that often anymore, which I thought was so beneficial for me.”Weibgen did not quite escape the spotlight entirely during an English summer where he played for Sunbury Cricket Club in the Surrey Premier League. It’s hard to go unnoticed when you pile up 1307 runs at 72.61, with five centuries, striking at 105.92 for the summer.

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