The rise and rise of Alex Carey

This article originally appeared in Stumps

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September 16, 2016. The West End Redbacks have just finished their final training session ahead of their departure for the Matador Cup; a gruelling fixture which will see them spend the next month on the road between Sydney and Perth as part of an increasingly hectic summer schedule for Australia's domestic cricketers.  

Which is a problem. Because Alex Carey hasn’t taken his headshots yet.

A member of the SACA communications team dials Alex’s number. He has no real reason to be nervous, by all reports Carey is a really nice guy. But hauling a new player into the office for a media commitment they’ve forgotten about is never a fun call to make.

Carey picks up on the third ring. Pleasantries are exchanged as the two chat (they’ve only spoken a couple of times since Carey came into the squad) before the staff member nervously arrives at the purpose of the call: the headshots. And more specifically, their necessity.

At the other end of the line there’s a brief pause before Carey groans in realisation and apologises. He’d finished his weights early, and - after checking to see if there was nothing else in his calendar - had headed home to spend the afternoon with his new wife Eloise before flying out the next day, forgetting to stop by the office to have the photos taken.

The mix-up is hardly Carey’s fault, he should have been sent a calendar invite to remind him. Luckily, the comms member has a solution. The photos don’t need to be taken in a studio, so he can come down and take them at his house if he has a spare five minutes that afternoon.

It’s a good compromise that won’t affect Carey too much; the shots won’t take long, and he doesn’t have to travel all the way back to Adelaide Oval from his home in the southern suburbs. But at the other end of the line, he doesn’t sound satisfied.

“Won’t you then need to come back to the office afterwards?” he asks.

“Well, yes…” the staff member begins, before being cut off.

“It’ll take you ages mate. I should have remembered; I’ll head back now. See you in an hour or so.” Carey says, and hangs up.

The comms member stares bemusedly back at his phone, and then looks across to his manager.

“That was Kez. He’s coming back in for the photos.”

The manager’s own expression turns to confusion. “Did you tell him we could take them at his place? It was our stuff-up.”

The staff member nods. “He said it would take me too long to get there and back.”

The two stare at each other for a moment.

“Who is this bloke?”

* * *

Andy Shearer, one of Alex’s best mates from school, laughs when he hears the story.

“Yep, that sounds like Alex,” he says.

“We went out to dinner the other night and I was with a young bloke from my footy club. Kez had just been picked for Australia A and I was pretty keen to hear about it, but we hardly ended up speaking about it.

“He wouldn’t stop asking the young guy questions about how he went in his first local A-grade game on the weekend. It’s just the way he is.”

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'Enthusiastic' seems a common descriptor for the South Australia’s newest rising star. It’s also what his new wife, Eloise, says first drew her to him when the pair met back in 2012.

“He’s just interested in everything,” she laughs.

“I just remember thinking what a positive person he was when we met. He’s fascinated by everything and new ideas. In the off-season he always comes home and tells me all about something new he’s learned about; yoga, meditation, anything that he thinks could make him better.

“When he came home from the NPS camp in Thredbo [a pre-season camp in the snowy mountains with Cricket Australia’s National Performance Squad] all he could talk about was how he wanted to start doing more camping and outdoor stuff.”

Image Id: D3F483E361184FF19496E62ECDA8CAD1Honing his craft // SACA Media

A positive attitude alone though isn’t what’s driven Carey to become one of cricket’s hottest young prospects on the domestic scene.

A natural athlete, Carey was blessed by the sporting gods from a young age. A composed midfielder with a talent for reading the play as well as a star left-handed batsman in junior cricket, the southern suburbs boy was a regular selection in junior representative teams for both sports, but football in particular.

In fact, by the time he started attending Brighton High School as a fifteen-year old he was already lacing up his boots against grown men in Glenelg’s reserves SANFL side, although according to Andy you wouldn’t know it.

“I remember just thinking he was a good bloke initially, one of the guys. It wasn’t until you saw his name in the paper that we realised he was playing ressies on the weekend,” he recalls.

“He certainly didn’t draw much attention to it. The only clue you ever got was when he would order a sandwich instead of burger and chips when we were out, or offered to be designated driver on a night out because he had training or a game the next day or something.”

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Was Carey the type of introverted, reserved character immune to the temptation of a fast food binge or a big night out?

“Not really. It wasn’t that he didn’t like going out or socialising, he was just super disciplined,” Andy says.

“He knew what he wanted to do and what was required to get there. That was it.”

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Carey’s dedication paid off. Despite being surprisingly overlooked in the national draft after an impressive Under 18 national championships, the young ball magnet was picked up by the fledgling Greater Western Sydney franchise - themselves still a year off from entering the AFL.

Football, it seemed had won the battle for the promising dual-sport star, and it wasn’t long after completing his Year 12 studies that the 18-year-old’s bags were packed for Breakfast Point, Sydney to play alongside future AFL stars like Dylan Shiel, Tom Bugg and Adam Treloar.

But even sandwiched amongst a bevy of the nation’s most talented young draft picks, Carey stood out. Named captain of the young GWS side that competed in the TAC Cup in 2010, he not only lead the inexperienced Giants to the finals, but also took out the club’s inaugural best-and-fairest award, even after missing the final four matches through injury.

But despite a seemingly stellar season on and off the field, an AFL contract wasn’t forthcoming at the end of 2011; a lack of explosive pace cited as the chief concern about his game translating to the next level.

“He was shattered,” Alex’s older brother Adam recalled about the axing.

“He’d spent two years away from home after passing on a Redbacks rookie contract the year before he left and he’d thought he’d done everything he could have to earn a spot on the Giants list.

“That was the hardest part for him I think, knowing that he’d given it his absolute best shot and believing he was good enough, but being told he wasn’t.”

With little else than a now-defunct AFL dream tying him to New South Wales, Carey returned to Adelaide in 2012 with the intention of playing football for Glenelg, who he’d won a reserves premiership with in 2009. But a week before the Tigers’ first internal trial, he informed them he’d decided to return to cricket once again after a conversation with then-SACA high performance manager, Jamie Cox.

“Coxy had a chat to him and basically said that if he decided to commit to cricket he was still very much on their radar,” Adam said.

“He’d always loved cricket, and after all the heartache with football I think he thought it’d be a good fresh start for him.”

“He was still hell-bent on being a professional athlete. He didn’t talk about it much, but you could tell that’s what he wanted to do.”

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Carey’s return to cricket, though undoubtedly successful, was far from a linear trajectory.

But despite a bumpy road back to state cricket, Emerging Redbacks coach Shane McDermott says there were signs from the get-go that Carey belonged at the level.

“That first season when he decided to come back he was working in a finance job of some sort, but you’d hardly know it. He seemed to always be in the nets hitting balls,” he remembers.

“Three times a week he’d be in during his lunch break or either before or after work outside of their other training requirements. He had the attitude of a pro right from the start, he was always looking to get the most out of himself.”

And from the start, it was clear there was still plenty to extract. After averaging close to fifty in all formats for Glenelg in 2012/13, Carey’s form was so strong that that by February he made his List A debut for South Australia at number three in the Ryobi Cup, scoring a solid 38 against New South Wales.

But whilst a first-class debut soon followed, success wasn’t anywhere near as immediate.

After a string of failures that saw him average a meagre 10.1 runs from his first six innings at first-class level, Carey was eventually dropped from the side, but showed enough to secure a rookie contract for the following season. However a disappointing 2013/14 season saw the young code-hopper fail to add to his games tally for South Australia as he missed out on an upgrade to the senior list - another blow for his dream of becoming a professional athlete.

But if he was discouraged, McDermott said it didn’t show in his approach to training.

“He was so eager to get better that I just reckon he was trying to adjust his game too much every time he got out,” he said. “He was overthinking it a bit.”

“The other thing was that as hard as he’d been working, he’d only been back playing cricket for less than 12 months. He was always going to go through a flat patch at some point.”

Whilst a blow at the time, the axing did provide the impetus for Carey to assess his position as a specialist batsman – an introspection that would eventually see him break into the first XI as a keeper-batsman rather than as a top-order player.

“At the time he was keeping for Glenelg, but we had Ludes and young Harry Nielsen in the Redbacks squad, so he was only playing as a batsman for us in Futures League,” McDermott said.

“He was considering giving up keeping altogether to fully concentrate on his batting, but we encouraged him to persist with it. He clearly had a lot of natural ability.”

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Eventually an opportunity behind the stumps arose in the Futures League, to which Carey took full advantage. Not only was his glovework clearly up to standard, but batting down the order seemed to provide a new lease on life for the former first-drop; who was always a great player of spin, but had struggled at times against the new ball during his comeback.

Meanwhile, the following season saw the runs return once again in Premier Cricket, before a breakout season in 2015/16 that saw him average 90.22 for the Seahorses from ten outings, leaving little doubt he was a cut above the competition.

The rest, as they say, is history. A call-up for the final four rounds of the Shield competition (including the final) preceded a record-breaking 2016/17 season, in which Carey not only played every game for South Australia, but also broke Wade Seccombe and Chris Hartley’s single-season keeping record with 59 dismissals.

Add that to the 594 runs he scored - making him just the fourth keeper-batsman in Shield history to achieve the rare 50-dismissals 500-run mark - and it’s not hard to see why he’s being labelled as one of Australia’s most promising young stars a mere 12 months after arriving on the domestic scene.

In fact according to McDermott, it’s the height of his ceiling that’s exciting his advocates just as much as his ever-growing highlight reel.

“He’s so athletic that he gets to everything and pulls off some incredible catches, but he’s actually still got a huge amount of upside with both his keeping and batting,” McDermott said. “As good as he is, he can get better.”

“The best part about that is, the way he trains you know if there’s a way he can get more out of himself, you can be sure he’ll find it.”

Carey's top five dismissals of 2015-16

 

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“Why does everyone want to see him succeed so much?”

On the other end of the line, both Eloise and Andy pause to think about their answers for a moment.

The question is well-founded. Despite its eventual cancellation due to the ongoing pay dispute, Carey’s selection as the sole gloveman in both the one-day and four-day Australia A squads signifies an arrival of sorts in cricket. The return of a talent that, despite being tipped for national representation from an early age, was nearly lost to the sport has been met with a flood of positive sentiment beyond even what would be expected for a local player on the cusp of the big-time.

So what is it about Carey’s rise that has captured not only those who know him well, but others from afar?

“I think it’s the way he celebrates the success of other people,” Eloise eventually says after a few moments thought.

“People get excited for him when things are going well because he gets so excited for them. He’s just one of those people that genuinely cares about other people. He’s very genuine.”

Similarly, Andy agrees that his mate’s positivity is a big factor in terms of popularity, but adds that his story is what he thinks gives the young gloveman such widespread appeal.

“To me, it’s what he’s had to go through to get to where he is now,” he says thoughtfully.

“He had so much talent growing up, but he’s had to go through a lot to get to where he is now. There were plenty of people with talent running around in juniors, but once they suffer a setback like he did, they don’t come back.

“He’s had to earn everything that’s come to him, and when you combine that with just him being such a good bloke, it’s hard not to want to see him succeed.”

Which is lucky, because if current trajectory is anything to go by, there could be plenty more of it left yet.

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