Windies skipper shreds Aussie great over 'pathetic, hopeless' dig, Lara in tears over miracle win

By The Roar / Editor

Shamar Joseph’s fairytale start in Test cricket with a stunning seven-wicket haul to defeat Australia in Australia for the first time since 1997 – on a day in which he considered not even coming to the ground due to a toe injury.

The Guyanese quick took 7/68, including the winning wicket of Josh Hazlewood, leaving the cricket world stunned at the performance of Joseph in just his second ever Test.

And immediately after the victory, captain Kraigg Brathwaite took aim at former Aussie bowler Rodney Hogg in a combative post-match interview.

“I must say we had two words that inspired us in this Test match – Mr. Rodney Hogg said that we were ‘pathetic and hopeless’. That was our inspiration,” he said.

“We wanted to show the world we’re not pathetic. And I must ask him: are these muscles big enough for him?

Shamar Joseph celebrates dismissing Travis Head. (Photo by Chris Hyde – CA/Cricket Australia via Getty Images)

In the media conference after the win that drew the series at 1-1, Brathwaite elaborated on Hogg’s comments.

“He expressed himself about how he felt about us as a group and we wanted to let him know that we heard him. We planned well as a group, but we saw his words and that was extra motivation for us as well,” he said.

“Test match cricket is never easy (or) winning Test matches. When you have a guy disrespecting West Indies, and us players that are playing, it is hurtful.” 

Tears were flowing in the commentary box from Brian Lara when Hazlewood’s off-stump went cartwheeling.

“Unbelievable! 27 years to beat Australia in Australia,” said the Windies legend.

“Young, inexperienced, written off, this West Indies team can stand tall today! West Indies cricket can stand tall today! Today is a big day in West Indies cricket.

“Congratulations, congratulations to every single member of that West Indies team. What a wonderful occasion.”

Adam Gilchrist added that moments of high emotion such as this were why the longest format was the pinnacle of the sport.

“Look at the emotion here,” he said.

“(This is) exactly why Test cricket is so special to all of us who know anything about the game. That’s exactly what you’re talking about.

“A hero is born. The name Joseph will ring long into the future of West Indian cricket.”

Ian Smith paid tribute to the 24-year-old fast bowler.

“What sore toe?” he said.

“Seven wickets and a lap of the Gabba. The lights don’t go out in Barbados or anywhere in the Caribbean.

“He holds the ball aloft for just the second time in his short Test career. It was special in Adelaide, but honestly, this is one of the most special things I’ve seen in Test cricket from a newbie – ever.

“Last night, this fellow hobbled off the ground in tears because he couldn’t bat anymore and probably wasn’t going to bowl today. And now, he’s won a Test match.”

Lara, who has worked extensively with the West Indies team, had the final say.

“It’s a very young group, very impressionable. They want to learn, they want to get better. They’ve been thrown in at the deep end.

“The name Shamar Joseph – you’re going to hear his name loud and clear in world cricket from today.”

Joseph was struck on the toe late on Saturday night and retired hurt and was a long shot to bowl, but produced a miraculous spell to dismiss Cameron Green, Travis Head, Alex Carey, Mitch Marsh, Mitch Starc and Pat Cummins within a session.

Two of his balls, to Head and Carey, were picture perfect yorkers of the sort that hit Joseph himself the night before, with Marsh and Cummins nicking behind, Green chopping on and Starc skying a ball to midwicket.

“I knew I had Shamar probably an hour before play,” reflected Brathwaite.

“The doctor said he got an injection and he’s quite good and then he told me he’s going to do it. I had to back him.

“He’s a superstar and I know he’ll do great things for West Indies in the future. Just his belief. It’s a great example for this team to follow.

“This is the beginning. We have to continue and play with heart and keep fighting for West Indies. I would love more Test cricket for sure.”

The superb showing on Day 4 prompted Windies legend Ian Bishop to call for the West Indies and regional governments to back the side more in the hope that players like Joseph could be kept in Test cricket.

“Important for the board, Guyana govt & cooperate bodies to find a way to allocate funds to compensate Shamar Joseph & 1 or 2 other fast bowlers to keep them in the Caribbean & control how much cricket they play. Their pace is everything. Don’t allow burnout,” he tweeted.

“This has been one of the best test matches I’ve been privileged to witness. Shamar Joseph is a superstar in the making. What a first test match tour.”

Joseph was hit on the full and given out lbw for three at the Gabba on Saturday night, but the dismissal was reversed when replays showed Starc had bowled a no-ball.

The No.11 was unable to continue though, looking in severe pain as he immediately removed his shoe and was assisted off the field.

Joseph’s departure meant the West Indies innings was closed, the visitors setting Australia 216 to secure a 2-0 series clean sweep.

The quick did not return to the field as Australia moved to 2-60 but was later assessed and cleared of any fracture. 

At the time, his participation in the fourth innings was in doubt.

“That’s a painful blow, you saw him straight away, right on the front of that boot,” Michael Vaughan said in Fox Sports commentary.

The 24-year-old has been a shining light for the visitors, taking a five-wicket haul on Test debut in Adelaide including the scalp of Steve Smith with his first delivery.

The tourists have not won a Test in Australia since 1997, going five completed series since a Brian Lara century set up a 10-wicket triumph in Perth 27 years ago.

Amazing Head stat revealed after king pair

Travis Head is one of the best bats that Australia has – just not at The Gabba.

The South Australian was left with a king pair after a second innings stunner from Joseph that left his stumps in ruins.

As a result of the wicket, Head’s last four balls in Brisbane are WWWW – four consecutive wickets.

He was bowled today and caught down the leg side off the bowling of Kemar Roach in the first innings.

Last year against South Africa, he was also strangled down leg by Kagiso Rabada first ball of the second innings and dismissed for 92 by Marco Jansen – which, obviously, was the last ball of that innings.

Under pressure Green named ‘next Jacques Kallis’

Nathan Lyon reckons Cam Green can be Test cricket’s next Jacques Kallis and has laughed off concerns over Steve Smith.

Green returned to the team in his preferred position for the Adelaide Test after Smith was shuffled forward to open in place of the retired David Warner.

Kemar Roach celebrates dismissing Cameron Green in Brisbane. (Photo by Albert Perez – CA/Cricket Australia via Getty Images)

Lyon’s view, though, is that the case is already closed.

“There is so much confidence in that change room around all the guys and not just Smithy batting at No.1 and Cameron at number four,” he said after taking 3-42 in 22 overs on an oppressively hot Saturday.

“I have had the challenge of bowling to Greeny in Shield cricket with him batting at No.4 and he has given me a lot of headaches. 

“I actually enjoy seeing him bat at number four and I feel like he could be the next Jacques Kallis of international cricket at number four.”

South African allrounder Kallis averaged 55 with the bat and 32 with the ball across 166 Tests, managing an incredible 45 centuries to go with 292 wickets.

West Australian Green has a first-class batting average of 46, mostly batting at No.4, along with 71 wickets at 33.

He looked to have found his home in Australia’s Test team when he notched a maiden century in India early last year.

But he has a highest score of 42 (from the second innings at the Gabba) in 12 Test knocks since and was eventually replaced by Mitchell Marsh during last year’s Ashes before slotting back in once Warner left the scene.

The Crowd Says:

2024-01-28T22:01:04+00:00

Short Arm

Roar Rookie


He should of given the South Australia premier an uppercut as well.

2024-01-28T18:56:15+00:00

kingplaymaker

Roar Guru


It would be good if someone who represents the Australian team disowned what Hogg said more loudly.

2024-01-28T14:53:48+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


"Rice bowls, Paddy fields"

2024-01-28T10:15:18+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


They could always say the Dizzy line about "I haven't got anything to say but a friend of mine reckons it was terrible" (gist of)

2024-01-28T09:49:45+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


still early days in his career and he has a couple more games this summer to hopefully find some form. I agree though, his career to date has been handled strangely.

2024-01-28T08:53:54+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


Good on Brathwaite for going hard - and honestly from his perspective- in publicly responding to Hogg. Agree with Brathwaite or not, but it was a refreshingly honest and non-PR-managed response. Wore his heart on his sleeve and actually said what he felt.

2024-01-28T08:18:02+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


I agree

2024-01-28T08:13:11+00:00

Blink

Roar Rookie


You can only compare averages at the end of careers but as we have seen, averages have plumetted in Oz over the past three years. Seamers are having a seaming ball nearly everywhere. Kaillis was a great but there were as good SA all rounders before him who didn't see enough test cricket. Maybe Proctor was one. There is another whose name escapes me at present.

2024-01-28T08:08:07+00:00

Blink

Roar Rookie


No, its fine. It is exactly the right move at this stage and hopefully he will deliver the potential we see. We just lost but that is ok in the overall scheme of things. Much better than losing to the Poms, India or NZ. The test series this summer have been excellent viewing.

2024-01-28T06:08:57+00:00

DaveJ

Roar Rookie


Interesting to compare Kallis with Green. At similar stage - after 3 years, 1 month and 25 Tests - Kallis was averaging 36 with the bat and 29 with the ball (42 wickets). So maybe not as far behind as we imagine. He averaged 12 overs per innings across his entire career, a bit more than I thought.

2024-01-28T05:36:18+00:00

Barb Dwyer

Roar Rookie


It is very unfair on Green.

2024-01-28T03:02:26+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


I agree, Green's batting needs to improve but I think he will get there. As for his bowling, his problem is partly how he is being used. It is difficult with our existing bowlers as he generally doesn't get the ball until it's 50 overs old. It also appears that he has been regularly instructed to bowl short. So, for the time being, Green is playing a supporting role as a bowler. His bowling is unlikely to be at a peak for another 3 or 4 years. So the period from now till then is development and learning. He has good role models in Cummins and Hazelwood so I expect him to be a world class bowler in his late 20's.

2024-01-28T02:25:56+00:00

Ben Pobjie

Expert


It’s not a bad idea, Mick. I mean it’s not like any of them are ever going to answer a question about a teammate with “yeah we’re really worried about him, he looks absolutely awful doesn’t he?”

2024-01-28T02:24:32+00:00

Ben Pobjie

Expert


Pretty sad that Lyon feels the need to underrate Green so badly.

2024-01-28T01:32:46+00:00

Geoff from Bruce Stadium

Roar Rookie


Will be interesting to see how Green's bowling progresses. I think Kallis was only chipping in with a handful of overs when he first started. I'd be happy to have Green chip in with 5 to 10 overs per innings - depending upon the conditions. Kallis was the fourth pace bowler behind Donald, Pollock, Ntini etc and was bowling between ten and twenty overs at times when he was well into his career. Incredible to have someone of that quality to turn to along with your other 3 strike weapons. Would have been no relief for opposition batsmen. For Green to be a high quality all rounder it really hinges on whether he can sort his batting technique out. He still seems to be pre-committed to a forward defensive shot to every delivery he faces - which fast bowlers are going to exploit. Can't recall Kallis having this problem - maybe Tony Greig? Maybe Green's height inhibits his footwork. Surely the coaching staff can work on this with him. He looked very vulnerable just outside the off stump last evening but somehow managed to get through it. Weather forecast looks ordinary - hopefully there are enough gaps in the rain to get a result.

2024-01-28T01:08:16+00:00

BigGordon

Roar Rookie


Yeah, it's tough to compare these guys, simply because they were such wonderful all-round cricketers. I'm just glad I managed to see them play, even it was on film.

2024-01-28T01:03:00+00:00

Ace

Roar Rookie


Sobers, Kallis or Miller...I'd like to think Green would get close but , like Green, we will have to be patient. I've had the pleasure of seeing all three live or on TV and I lean toward Kallis . Always have and said it on here. What an all rounder.

2024-01-28T00:07:15+00:00

Mick Cooney

Roar Rookie


Put a media ban on all the players.Most of them talk rubbish.

2024-01-27T23:51:06+00:00

Lance Boil

Roar Rookie


It's late January in Brisbane and it's pissisting down. Shame

2024-01-27T23:34:18+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


I hope it doesn't rain because it'll spoil a good contest.

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