***Born in New Plymouth, Priest benefitted from having a cricket coach living next door to her, and grew up as the only girl in various boys’ teams. After making her debut for Central Districts, she moved to Wellington for a job and has since played in the HBJ Shield for Wellington Blaze. She got her break for New Zealand in 2007, when wicketkeeper Rebecca Rolls retired; the call came during a tea break at her summer job working in a fruit orchard.A decade on, Priest has made peace with her current situation, but when she was dropped two years ago, she came close to stepping away from the game.”Thinking back now, I would have thought I’m done with cricket. Being dropped from a team that I gave the last ten years of my life to was a difficult time for me,” she said. “I was really lucky that I had that KSL season to go straight into.”In a different environment and with a point to prove, she thrived, top-scoring in the 2017 KSL with 261 runs in seven games, and making 72 off 36 balls in the final to help Storm to the title. She credits a couple of Storm coaches for her turnaround: head coach Trevor Griffin and mental conditioning coach Jon Pitts.”Between the both of us, we were able to support Rachel through what was a tough time for her,” says Griffin, who also worked on certain technical aspects in Priest’s game. “We found her head was falling over sometimes. Then we added a bit to her game in terms of utilising the crease forwards and back and being able to access different areas thanks to that.”Priest was dropped from the New Zealand side in 2017 and has been playing in league and domestic cricket since•Getty ImagesThe performance wasn’t enough to help her retain her place in New Zealand’s T20I squad in 2017-18, but it earned her the gloves for Sydney Thunder after she was released by Melbourne Renegades. She has gone on to have her two personal best seasons with Thunder, this season ticking past the 300-run tally for the first time.A tweak in her wicketkeeping stance, where she does not squat as low as she did before, has improved her agility, and Griffin believes her glove work is the best it has ever been.”Rachel is still probably one of the best wicketkeeper-batters in the world, along with Sarah Taylor and Alyssa Healy,” reckons Griffin, who was Thunder’s assistant coach this season. When they aren’t working side by side, he monitors Priest’s game using Whatsapp video clips instead.When New Zealand failed to reach the World T20 semi-finals last November, questions floated around on social media as to why Priest was out in the cold while the national team was struggling to nail down an opening combination. While her keeping and batting in the leagues have matched international standards, perhaps what is holding her back is her fitness.”I would say that her fitness levels are similar to where I have seen them before; they certainly have not deteriorated,” Griffin says.Last week, Priest was left out of New Zealand’s T20I squad against India. The announcement came a day after she top-scored in the WBBL semi-final. She finished with 338 runs in the season – third in the list of New Zealand players and with 13 runs more than New Zealand captain Amy Satterthwaite.Ironically, her international snub might make her a more attractive option for the T20 leagues. Towards the end of their seasons, both the KSL and the WBBL had to let go of some overseas recruits because of their international commitments. Priest, meanwhile, remained available for the finals.Her story also raises questions about the transitioning process for cricketers who miss out on international contracts. Outside of Australia and England, where players’ associations work with female players to various degrees, cricketers face the inevitable financial and mental insecurities largely alone.”The fact that I may not have any contracts next year does play on my mind,” Priest says. “The mental side is not something we talk about enough. Cricket is a mentally tough game as it is. One day you can score a hundred, the next day you’re out for a duck. You’re always chasing that high, even though 90% of the time you don’t find it.”For now she lives in the present, not looking too far ahead. When recruiting season for the KSL begins, she will hope her phone beeps and that this endangered existence she loves so much endures for a while longer.

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