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#69

George Inger

Bio

Starting at Turnford Netball Club, George Inger joined the Saracens Mavericks Pathway in 2016 and debuted in the NSL the same year. She won two league titles with Wasps (2017–2018) before returning to Mavericks in 2019 and later signing with New Zealand’s Southern Steel, where she recorded 92% shooting accuracy in 2022.

A serious knee injury in 2023 sidelined her for two seasons, but she returned in 2025 with Mavericks’ NXTgen side and was called up for NSL Round 14 against Manchester Thunder.

Internationally, Inger has 22 England caps, having first represented the Roses U17s at just 14!

Info

Date of Birth

30/09/1998

Nationality

England

Position

Attack – GS/GA

Height

188cm

Joined

2016
Inger has played on the highest stages of the sport, enjoying success in the Netball Super League, overseas in New Zealand, and on the international stage. Reflecting on her career so far, the attacker said:

“It’s really weird — I almost see it as a completely separate journey to where I am now. Obviously, yes, it’s one big journey, but it feels like a pre-injury journey and a post-injury journey.”

“I look back and think, oh my gosh, I can’t believe I did that. At the time, it just felt like something I’d worked and trained for and was everything I wanted.”

“Now I look back at that version of me as almost someone else, which was really exciting. But I can now look forward to my post-injury career, which I think will look very different.”

“So now I’m just taking all that experience and knowledge and putting it into what comes next.”

Despite exploring different teams and environments, Mavericks has always felt like home for Inger. On what drew her back to the club, she said:

“Mavericks is home for me, honestly. I started my career there, and I always go and I always come back. I guess I’m like a boomerang.”

“I also love working with Tamsin. I’ve worked with her on and off for years, and she really understands how my brain works and how to get the best out of me as a player.”

“I also love the family side of Mavericks. We care about the human being, not just the athlete, and that’s huge for me, especially after the journey I’ve been on.”