Shamar's a superstar: Windies rookie destroys Australia with all-time great spell to break 27-year drought in cliffhanger

By Paul Suttor / Expert

Rookie fast bowler Shamar Joseph spent Saturday night in hospital getting his suspected broken toe checked out but returned to the Gabba on Sunday to produce one of the all-time great spells to propel West Indies to an astounding eight-run cliffhanger Test victory over Australia.

The Windies had not won in Australia since 1997 but Joseph revived memories of the Calypso Kings’ glory days with a superb effort to destroy the world champions’ batting line-up after they had been cantering along at 2-113 in pursuit of 216 for victory.

Rated virturally no hope by all and sundry heading into their two-match series, the Windies broke their 27-year drought Down Under a week after they were thrashed by 10 wickets at Adelaide inside seven sessions.

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

After the Windies took six wickets in the opening Brisbane session on day four, Australia needed 29 to win after the break in nerve-wracking scenes.

Nathan Lyon clipped a four, was dropped on a return catch by Alzarri Joseph and then gone inside the first over when he nicked a pull shot to bring last man Josh Hazlewood to the crease.

But they fell short of their mission to peel off the final 25 runs despite Steve Smith hitting a ramped six off Alzarri Joseph in his lone hand of 91 not out when Hazlewood was bowled by Shamar for a duck with a brilliant delivery which sparked wild scenes of jubilation.

Shamar sprinted all the way to the boundary before his teammates and the touring party swamped him as the tears flowed.

All out for 207, Smith cut a dejected figure as he trudged off after carrying his bat through the innings with a 146-ball knock of defiance – the first time an Australian opener had achieved the rare feat since the man he replaced at the top of the order, David Warner, did so in the loss to New Zealand in Hobart in 2011.

Joseph, who had not even played first-class cricket 12 months ago, was grimacing in pain as the 24-year-old from Guyana poured every ounce of energy he could into his bowling as he soldiered through a 10-over spell in the opening session to take 6-60.

He returned after the break to finish off the boilover result to snare 7-68 from 11.5 remarkable overs.

Bowling in the high 140km/h range, he brought back memories of Curtly Ambrose tearing through Australia in Perth, Malcolm Marshall taking four five-wicket hauls in a row in 1984 or Michael Holding, Joel Garner, Courtney Walsh and co when they used to routinely bring the green and gold batters to their knees, figuratively and literally.

(Photo by Albert Perez – CA/Cricket Australia via Getty Images)

Perhaps the best comparison was to South African seamer Fanie de Villiers when he singlehandedly scythed through Australia in Sydney three decades ago when the home side also fell short of a modest victory target.

As he did in Adelaide when he bagged 5-94 on debut, Joseph dropped to the turf to celebrate his outstanding achievement.

After being hit on the big toe by a Mitchell Starc yorker and retiring hurt on Saturday night, Joseph was considered unlikely to play on day four but he not only took the field but unleashed a bowling spell that will etch his name into the rich history of West Indies fast bowling folklore.

Shamar, who was deservedly named player of the match and the series, told Fox Cricket straight after play he wasn’t even going to come to the ground this morning due to the toe pain but he paid tribute to the team doctor for getting him on the park.

“He’s an amazing doctor for me. He said to come to the ground even if it’s just to support the guys. He did something to my toe, I don’t even know what he did but something worked,” he said.

“Taking wickets after wickets, it was all positivity,” he added when asked about the mood in the camp on day four. “I was just sticking to the basics, just on top of off (stump). Even if I was driven for a boundary I wasn’t worrued about it because I was just trying to find my area and that was important for my team.

“I feel like we win the series even though it’s 1-1. It’s really amazing for my teammates, I must give a shout-out to them – they are really encouraging and I’m glad that I’ve made them proud to bring the Test match series to 1-1.”

Joseph joked that he couldn’t muster any more tears after the winning moment after doing so on the field because “I already cried after my five-wicket haul”.

Windies legends Brian Lara and Carl Hooper were in tears as they too were overcome with emotion in their respective commentary booths.

Australia got what they deserved. They were outplayed in all departments and were probably lucky to only trail by 22 runs on the first innings after Pat Cummins rescued them with an unbeaten 64 at No.9.

Smith’s first substantial knock in his new role at opener was the only bright side for the rejigged batting line-up.

Cameron Green failing again to cement his spot at four is not the only cause for concern with Marnus Labuschagne in the driest spell of his Test career, Travis Head going for a king pair and Mitchell Marsh’s counter-attacking tactics failing in both innings in Brisbane when the chips were down.

Following a couple of narrow escapes in their 3-0 series whitewash over Pakistan, then a 10-wicket win in Adelaide last week against the Windies, the loss at the Gabba means Pat Cummins’ team has fallen short of an unbeaten home summer after being below their best form.

They have a two-Test tour coming up against New Zealand before a lengthy red-ball break before next summer’s home showdown over five matches against India.

Windies veteran Kemar Roach said he told his comrades before Sunday’s play that “the team that stays the calmest will win the Test match”.

“That’s exactly what we did. We were very consistent in our areas and put the batsmen under pressure.

“We knew that something special was going to happen and that’s what Shamar did. That’s one of the best spells I’ve definitely ever seen.”

The Aussies started day four with Smith and Green at the crease and they took the overnight score of 2-60 along to 113 before Shamar started to wreak havoc.

He got the ball to leap off the pitch to catch Green on the glove and the all-rounder could do nothing to prevent the pink six-stitcher clattering into his stumps on 42.

After two cheap dismissals in his first two chances at No.4, this was his chance to show he can be Australia’s long-term middle-order mainstay but Green has again let an opportunity slip as pressure grows on the 24-year-old Western Australian.

Travis Head then suffered the ignominy of becoming just the third Australian to record a king pair when he was yorked first ball by Shamar.

After making 92 from the first 95 balls he faced in the first innings last year against South Africa, he has now been dismissed in four straight deliveries at the ground after registering a golden duck second up against the Proteas.

Head’s a match-winner and the Aussies are going to have to cop the good with the bad and vice versa with the South Australian left-hander but apart from his hometown ton, the 30-year-old has been scored 17 or less in six of his other seven innings.

Shamar sent Mitchell Marsh on his way when he edged to the cordon on 10 and when Alex Carey was bowled by the rookie starfor two, the Aussies had slumped to 6-136, still 80 shy of their victory target.

Mitchell Starc went on the front foot and blazed four boundaries in his 14-ball knock but he skied to debutanat Kevin Sinclair’s safe hands to give Shamar his second five-wicket haul in just his second Test.

Cummins has made a habit of scoring crucial runs down the order when most needed for Australia recently but he perished at the hands of Shamar on two when he couldn’t avoid snicking a leg-cutter through to wicketkeeper Joshua da Silva.

With Lyon at the crease and just two more wickets required for West Indies to win, the umpires extended the opening session but they couldn’t get any further breakthroughs and the match went into the break with Australia 29 shy of their target.

The Crowd Says:

2024-01-29T20:30:43+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


The upside they were thinking was that it would have been a lot harder for the West Indies’ openers to start under lights after a full day in the field, rather than fresh the next morning in the daylight. And they picked up one wicket plus had a catch dropped. Dropped catches were a bigger problem for us in this test than the declaration. We of course don’t know how many runs we would have scored, or how different the West Indies score would have been, but I don’t see it as a shocking decision to have declared.

2024-01-29T03:40:59+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


I am not struggling at all. That is the end of that particular comment, and as I said, if your are referring to the other comments, you only posted them after I said that Hazlewood not being able to bat is not a reason to declare. You are playing dumb to protect your ego again.

2024-01-29T03:33:53+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


I quoted the whole comment to you. You just seem to have no idea what you write. The comments that came later, if you are referring to those, are irrelevant because they were made only after I pointed out to you that Hazlewood not being able to bat is not a reason to declare.

2024-01-29T03:29:41+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Read the rest...Only you struggle with it.

2024-01-29T03:28:46+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Read the rest.

2024-01-29T02:24:12+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


"No Steve Smith at the other end." Again, this does not help your case and, again, if your are referring to the other comments, you only posted them after I said that Hazlewood not being able to bat is not a reason not to declare.

2024-01-29T02:20:45+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


What, quoting the evidence, that you cited, verbatim?

2024-01-29T01:47:11+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


How silly can one Opeo be?

2024-01-29T01:44:34+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Read the rest.

2024-01-29T01:14:59+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


"No Steve Smith at the other end."? That does not help your case champ.

2024-01-29T01:12:40+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Now read the rest.

2024-01-29T01:12:30+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


Perhaps it could help rugby. Something needs to.

2024-01-29T00:47:17+00:00

Insult_2_Injury

Roar Rookie


Shamar has shown the benefit of bowling at the Australian weakness; technique on the stumps! Shamar's pace and accuracy is a breath of fresh air to go with Nortje and Coetzee and the heart of Jansen. Tests will be refreshed if the ICC future tour program recognizes the emergence of talent, only now playing two test series! ----- Come on though Paul, Superstar? After five minutes? You may as well stick Hartley in that bracket too! What were the names of those two guys who took 16 in a Test and that footage gets rolled out as 'anyone remember these guys?' Who was that other Brathwaite everyone was raving about a coupla years ago when he burst on the scene and immediately went to franchise oblivion? Love Shamar's enthusiasm, but the reality of WI cricket is a franchise will throw a bucketload at him, while the WI board hope he stays in Tests as they can't match the payments.

2024-01-29T00:26:56+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


And gold kept WA in the compact. It's also the reason why WA play Australian Football

2024-01-29T00:17:06+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


JL is almost intolerable. He spent the whole summer just saying how Pakistan and the West Indies have to believe they can win, and he seemingly repeated this every time he got near a microphone.

2024-01-29T00:08:43+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


You are the one that said Hazlewood’s batting means that the declaration was a good decision. Good grief!

2024-01-29T00:06:22+00:00

Opeo

Roar Rookie


This you? “You’ve got that one wrong. You just saw Hazlewood bat. What makes you think anything would change in the first dig?” When I pointed out the flaw in your logic you started to change your story around. I am reading. You just seem to have no idea what you are writing. Demnetia?

2024-01-28T23:50:54+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


You're not reading.

2024-01-28T23:00:12+00:00

Geoff from Bruce Stadium

Roar Rookie


Hi Jeff. I think I've been following the conversation fairly well. You seem to be saying that if the Aussies hadn't declared they would or could have scored the 8 runs they lost by. Isn't that what you are saying? I And you couldn't see the value in bowling at the openers for 5 or 6 overs at the end of the night session given not many wickets had fallen at night in this match. I'm just surprised that you couldn't see that openers don't like having to face a tricky short session before stumps facing the new ball. I thought the declaration by Cummins was unexpected and pretty smart. Australia subsequently took with the wicket of Chanderpaul and Braithwaite should have been taken at slip. The Windies should have been 2/13 at stumps. How is that not a smart decision? The events of the following day are completely unrelated. Captains make decisions based on where the game is at the time. I thought Cummins made the right call.

2024-01-28T22:58:48+00:00

Jacko

Roar Rookie


I read the first 4 days of the test were sold out. Wellington I think. T20s up first tho.

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