Mercury (Hobart)

THAT’S MY NEW TRICK

Short’s draw shot cost him a ton, but he meant it

- ADAM SMITH

THE shot that should have delivered Big Bash star D’Arcy Short his second BBL century was no fluke.

Short has revealed he has been working on getting a “draw” shot into his repertoire as he continues to evolve into the competitio­n’s most devastatin­g batsman.

The Hurricanes blaster pulled out the shot — deliberate­ly closing the face of the bat to full-pitched deliveries as late as possible to get the ball to fine leg — against the Melbourne Stars at the MCG, and it should have led to him becoming just the third player in the history of the BBL to register two centuries.

However his wizardry in squirting a near yorker from Dwayne Bravo to the fence was incorrectl­y given four leg byes by the umpire, with the left-hander finishing unbeaten on 96 as Hobart romped to a 59-run victory.

Usman Khawaja and Luke Wright are the only two batsmen to have chalked up multiple tons in the BBL, but Short, who cracked 122 not out against the Brisbane Heat last year, now has four scores of 90-plus, two more than any other player.

“It is something I have kind of worked on a little bit and trying to get it fine if they are going at my toes,” Short said.

“I don’t really have the lap [sweep], so I have to try and have something to get it down there. [To practise you have people] throw them at your feet and try and get them as fine as you can. Some of it is a bit of instinct as well, it’s just something I have kind of got there and will use it where I can. Unfortunat­ely it didn’t go my way with the umpire, but it was his decision.”

Short’s innings rocketed him back to the top of the BBL runmakers with 355 at 59.1 at a strike rate of 141.4, and he now has four half-centuries in seven innings.

A feature of his tournament has been his improvemen­t against spin — considered a weakness and a reason he was left out of Australia’s ODI side — but if he continues to take down the slow bowlers it will only be a matter of time before he earns a national recall.

For the first time in the BBL, Short’s strike rate against spin (166 runs from 116 balls at a strike rate of 143.1) is better than that against the quicks (189 from 135 at 140.0).

“Stats only speak for themselves, if I can do better against them, which I have this year, hopefully I get back in the ODI squad,” he said.

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