The opener has emerged from some hugely challenging periods in his life to be in the mix for the Ashes

Alex Malcolm22-Aug-2025Australia has quickly become very interested in Jake Weatherald.It is unsurprising given last season he was the most prolific opener in the country and chair of selectors George Bailey has said he is “well in the mix” for the Ashes with uncertainty over the make-up of the top three.But it has been a long and at times very challenging journey for the 30-year-old.Related

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He took mental health breaks from the game in 2020 and 2022 during which there were some extremely low moments. He credits wife Rachel, his partner of 15 years and a health professional in Adelaide, with helping him recover and reach a place of contentment, both personally and professionally.”When I went through my dark times, and the times where I was going through all the mental struggles outside of cricket, she was someone who went, maybe cricket is a trigger, but maybe also there’s other life stuff, and how am I going to help you through it?” Weatherald tells ESPNcricinfo.”She was able to identify a lot of things and bring to light a lot of stuff that I didn’t know about myself, in terms of how I could help myself out, what I could do to be healthy.”I was able to take on experiences in a more holistic way, instead of being like, this is do or die. I’ve tried to make it like it’s just a great opportunity to play cricket, perform, hopefully do some cool things and meet some amazing people. She gave me the ability just to compete and enjoy it like I did as a kid really.”Born and raised in Darwin, Weatherald played eight seasons for South Australia before moving to Tasmania. A free-flowing stroke-maker, he thrashed 904 Sheffield Shield runs in 10 games last summer at an average of 50.33 and a strike-rate of 68.27. The next fastest-scoring top four batter with at least 300 runs on the seamer-friendly pitches was Sam Konstas at a strike-rate of 54.10.’I felt like I was the same player I am right now when I made those changes. I was hitting the ball just as well then as I am now, I just couldn’t get a game’•Getty ImagesThere is an air of simplicity to his play, a see-ball hit-ball method that mirrors his former team-mate Travis Head. There is a brashness and cockiness, too, which opponents have noted. But any perception he doesn’t think deeply about the game would be well off the mark.”I can come off sometimes as arrogant or confident,” Weatherald says. “I think half the time it’s a façade.”He works with a private mental performance coach, John Novak, to help get himself into the optimal frame of mind to perform at his best. Novak does not have many cricket clients but has worked with a range of athletes and coaches in other high-profile sports, including working with Australia’s most recent female golf major winner in Grace Kim.”I’ve been working with him for three years now,” he explains. “His way of thinking was always about being positive and reframing everything. And it took me a while to believe in that, and to believe in that sort of mindset, to see everything is an opportunity.”I think as a cricketer you are just naturally pessimistic about everything.

It’s just not beating around the bush…Obviously, I’ve done well, I feel like I’m going well. The question is, do you want to play? For sure, absolutely. And that’s all I can say.Jake Weatherald’s Test ambitions

“But I think for me, it was building up my confidence around who I was as a person, but also who I was as a cricketer. How I wanted to go about it, how I wanted to speak, how I wanted to interact with people, and all that sort of flowed onto my batting. I know if I walk out, everything is a reframe. I’ve got about four overs tonight, late in the day, I’m going to seize an opportunity. I might openly speak about this as an opportunity to score 20 or 30 runs tonight, or I’m going to get through it, I’m going to show them I’m ready to go here.”Johnny has had a big impact on that. He’s been probably the biggest influence over my direct mindset performance stuff.”Weatherald, who only played one four-day match in his first season with Tasmania and explored a move away, hasn’t been afraid to look outside the box for technical batting advice. He is a self-confessed tinkerer and believes it partly explains some of his inconsistent returns during his eight seasons with South Australia.He scored Shield centuries in all of them bar his first in 2015-16 where he only played four games. He twice scored multiple hundreds in a season, including two in a match in 2017-18, but never averaged more than 41 in any given season and averaged 34.25 for South Australia in 60 matches.He’s still grateful for his time there, working closely with batting coach Steve Stubbings, who has also been a key mentor for Head, before joining Tasmania under Jeff Vaughan, another who has had a significant impact on Head’s career, and Tasmania’s current batting coach Mike Smith.