Cricket
Shashank Kishore in Vijayawada 6y

D'Arcy Short learns to embrace the chaos

AUS-A in INDIA 2018, India A Team Tri-Series, Cricket

For D'Arcy Short, Vijayawada is starkly different to his hometown Kununurra, further north from what many term the world's most isolated city - Perth. The chaos of the main arterial road, filled with a pile of cars and the sound of horns trickles into the corridors of Australia A's team hotel. This is a massive difference from Short's quiet life in the Northern Territory outback, where at times he is not used to seeing people for days together.

Chaos, however, is a constant when it comes to touring life, one he learnt immediately upon arrival for the first time in India three years ago. The hassle for taxis and the drive itself, he described, as the "scariest ride of his life", was his first memory of the country. Two trips with Australia's national indigenous squad and two months at the IPL with Rajasthan Royals earlier this year have given him time and space to embrace the chaos.

"I'm more used to it now than previously," he tells ESPNcricinfo. It was only a week prior to boarding a flight to India for the IPL that he was woken up by a distressful message from the courier company that threw him into a state of chaos. "I'd like to clarify. I didn't lose my passport, the courier company did after visa stamping," he interrupts, and breaks into a laugh.

Two weeks of acclimatisation to Jaipur's summer heat - where temperatures can at times touch 40 degrees even at night - was whittled down to less than 48 hours. Even before he had overcome the jetlag, he was back into the ring of chaos - opening the batting for Royals in front of a packed Sawai Mansingh Stadium.

As if the chaos that preceded his arrival wasn't enough, he added to it by running himself out. "Phew, that was forgettable." Could it have got worse? Probably not, but he was run out in the next game too. Soon, the 'short puns' would follow him and the chaos wouldn't disappear for the rest of the season. He would finish his debut IPL stint with 115 runs in seven games, unable to do justice to his talent or auction bid of INR 4 crores (800,000 AUD approx).

After all, he had just stormed into the IPL auction on the back of a humungous BBL season with Hobart Hurricanes, where he was the highest run-getter. Prior to that, he had helped Western Australia win the JLT one-day competition too.

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As a kid, Short learnt the ropes at the indoor cricket facility his parents ran. On weekends and during the holiday season, they organised tournaments where Short would play for multiple sides whenever they had to fill in the gaps. "It just allowed me to keep playing - sometimes even at 12 midnight when I probably should've been in bed three hours before," he recalls.

A routine that involved playing all sport - baseball, soccer, volleyball - changed when he watched his heroes in action, when the Marrara Oval in Darwin hosted its first Test against the visiting Bangladesh side in 2003. The Test featured Steve Waugh, Glenn McGrath, Justin Langer, who would become his mentor, Adam Gilchrist, Brett Lee and Jason Gillespie - those who made him fall in love with the game.

It wasn't until he was 16 that Short decided to give cricket a proper crack. With pathway to cricket in the Northern Territory not very easy, Short wasn't left with too many options. He enrolled to school via correspondence and took off to Adelaide, where he lived with his grandmother, to try and give shape to his "real ambition." Then, he moved to Perth and played grade cricket in a bid to get selected for Western Australia.

"Darwin is quite a laidback place, a good place if you don't like the hustle and bustle of the big cities. Good place to grow up and play sport," he says. "The opportunities you had in Northern Territory were always limited, but I was always going away and playing junior state cricket and things like that. But we always knew if we wanted to go further, we had to move states at some stage in our lives. I thought of moving at 16-17 and finally did so when I was 19-20."

The decision to move away and train in a different setting helped. At 21, he was handed a List A debut in 2011. He made three off 15 balls, and would struggle to break into the squad for the next five years. For three years following his debut, Short "did just enough to not get dropped" in grade cricket. It wasn't until a tour with the Australian indigenous team in 2014 that Short decided to give his cricket another crack.

He stoked the fire by seeking out Langer, who by then had completed his playing career with Australia and Somerset, and was back coaching Western Australia and Perth Scorchers. "I met him at his office, and it was a tough chat, there were hard words on what I was and needed to get to play the level I aspired," Short remembers. "It really was my last opportunity if I wanted to make a mark as a professional cricketer. I took it on board and am here earlier than expected."

Langer was quoted as saying by the Cricket Australia website: "The perception around Western Australia is you've got some talent - you can hit a six - but you don't make any runs, and you're really out of shape. That to me is a sign of your discipline and your focus, and your commitment to the game."

Short found a mentor in his girlfriend Gemma, a personal trainer, who ingrained into him a training routine and the need for a healthier lifestyle. Over the next 18 months, Short would dedicate a better part of his training towards his fitness and knock off 15 kilos. In the process, he also discovered an alternate passion: physical training.

"I really had no back-up for cricket, but PT is something that would come close now," he says. "I always knew I could make it in cricket, but I just didn't push myself hard enough until three years ago. PT could have been my fall-back plan. I started it off because it was a job, a necessity, but then it became more of an obsession."

A rejuvenated Short returned to the national indigenous squad for another tour in 2016, where he averaged "60-odd" against the National Performance Squad and Australia A in Queensland, one he refers to as a turning point. Greg Shipperd, a member of the support staff, was astonished at the transformation. "This wasn't the D'Arcy I knew three years earlier," he had said. "This wasn't the guy who wasn't punctual, but here he was, asking people to be in time for the bus"

In December, a BBL debut followed, where he hammered a 29-ball 61 for Hobart Hurricanes. It wasn't until the following season where he left an imprint, topping the run charts: 572 runs in 11 innings at a strike-rate of 148.57. That was followed by a T20I tri-series in New Zealand, and an ODI debut on the tour of England after the IPL.

Now in India, amidst his improving white-ball credentials, the long-form ambitions too are real, even if "smelling the leather" and "leaving balls" aren't words associated with his game. But the next tick on the bucket list is undoubtedly next year's World Cup.

"The IPL didn't go too well, it was a learning curve, to get the opportunity to come back and play here in India, I can put forward my IPL learnings here. This tour is massively significant to claim my place, the World Cup is coming up next year and If I can do well here, and also in games back home in the summer, hopefully, can press my case. The chats I've had (with Justin Langer and Graeme Hick) are about being positive, backing myself, watch the ball bit harder, and pick and choose deliveries I'm going to go at.

"The England tour (where Australia lost 5-0 in the ODIs) was a great experience too. We trained hard, obviously results didn't go the way we wanted, but what I learnt out of that is you still back yourself in such situations. JL (Langer), he wants me to change a few things, which I did just before this tour. Hopefully can put them to use here."

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Short's rejuvenation is significant not just for the yards he's put in, but also because he is also the first indigenous Australian batsman to represent his country and just the sixth indigenous cricketer overall after Dan Christian, Jason Gillespie, Scott Boland, Faith Thomas and Ash Gardner. He was to be part of the Aboriginal XI for the historic indigenous tour of England to mark the 150-year anniversary of the first tour made in 1868, but his first international call-up superseded that trip.

Short prides himself as a role model now, and hopes his story can inspire many others in the region. There's always been a pathway there, we just never had a team to go into. We always knew we had to move elsewhere," he says. "Whether there will be a team out there in the future, there's definitely a pathway that can lead you into playing state cricket for another state. There's a Strike League going for the last two years and that has been going quite well, David Warner went up there to play this year. So it's looking up."

For now, it's back to embracing the chaos that has become a constant, one far different to his life in the outbacks. All that will be worth it, if his World Cup dream takes shape.

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