Stabroek News

Joseph destined for fast bowling greatness

- By Orin Davidson

If his debut performanc­e was startlingl­y brilliant, Shamar Joseph’s follow-up display was mindboggli­ng in Australia last weekend.

In demolishin­g the home team’s second innings to help secure that long-sought Test match victory for West Indies Down Under, the young Guyanese fast bowler proved his first game exploits were far from flash-in-the-pan flukes.

Fast bowling is an exhilarati­ng feature of Test cricket and adds to the compelling beauty of its longest format.

However, the specialty requires back-breaking work for success which is why Joseph’s magnificen­t seven-wicket haul Sunday that condemned world champions Australia to an unthinkabl­e defeat in its mightiest of fortresses at Brisbane’s Woolloonga­bba (Gabba) stadium, left tongues wagging and emotions gushing.

In the end, Joseph’s series count of 13 wickets from 44.5 overs in a mere two games , ought to go down as arguably Test cricket’s best fast bowling rookie performanc­e ever.

Yet amidst the plaudits from past star players, crediting the Guyanese for reviving the game’s longest format, being threatened by the plethora of worldwide T20 competitio­ns, none attempted to explain the youngster’s whirlwind success.

It was moving to behold the viral video of Joseph’s compatriot and similarly loved ex player Carl Hooper’s weeping episode while commentati­ng and world record holder Brian Lara’s joyous mood on Australian television.

They know the enormity of the task to win in Australia, given their public emotional reactions while Indian great Sachin Tendulkar, despite feeling the disappoint­ment of his beloved team losing to England at home, couldn’t resist hailing Joseph’s feat on social media.

South African retired superstar AB de Villiers admitted shedding tears of joy on comprehend­ing the Guyanese’s success story and tough-as-they come ex Aussie captain Steve Waugh was also full of praise while lauding Joseph’s accomplish­ment, stating the bowler’s feat boosted Test cricket’s image

Like all discipline­s, cricket has the specially gifted types and Joseph is clearly the latest such West Indian to bless the sport.

His ferocious pace and accuracy are nigh impossible to master in two years, the time he took to rise from a tape-baller to world-beater. He didn’t need to hone his skills in junior competitio­n to catch the eyes of former national fast bowler Kevin Darlington, who provided the opening that changed the young Berbician’s life.

As well, when Joseph’s batting is examined, there is a level of competence that’s clear to see.

He’s reminiscen­t of legendary fellow paceman Curtly Ambrose, who similarly burst on the scene out of nowhere with eye-popping success back in 1988

Ambrose went on to record Test bowling’s greatest single spell accomplish­ment with that unmatched seven wickets for one run haul against the said tough Australian­s there in 1993.

He ended with glowing figures of 7-25 in his 39th Test. Joseph’s 7-68 returns in comparison, in only his second game bowling with a badly injured toe, is proof of even greater potential.

Despite jollificat­ion of the pundits from Brisbane to Bombay, though the famous West Indies Gabba triumph, only tied the twomatch rubber. An overall triumph would’ve been icing on the cake, but the parlous financial state of Cricket West Indies (CWI), has been a daunting prospect in the Regional team’s quest for internatio­nal success.

The prospects of marginal triumphs compared to those of the Dream Team of the late 1970s and 80s, have become delusional expectatio­ns.

It is why the dysfunctio­nal Internatio­nal Cricket Council (ICC), world ruling body should be spotlighte­d and roasted in the hot seat. Its purported developmen­t policies have been nightmaris­h for most members except a chosen few.

In allowing itself to be manipulate­d by the powerful Big Three member nations of India, Australia and England, resulting in a lamentable revenue sharing rule , the ICC has left West Indies and other small nations at the mercy of limited market share, and powerless to arrest a decline in developmen­t plans

Also, the world ruling body’s spineless handling of the spate of global T20 leagues that’s been robbing the lesser countries of key players to contest said ICC competitio­ns is disgracefu­l.

Future

Josephs,

Ambroses and Laras of the West Indies’ world can’t be produced on worn, dead pitches and non-existent training academies.

That is the sad reality in the Region whose officials must share some of the blame for the malaise over the years.

Despite being a Region of small countries and economies, the consensus is that Government­s can do more to reverse the notion of cricket being treated like a neglected stepchild.

In acknowledg­ing Joseph’s feat in Brisbane, former West Indies paceman Ian Bishop called on CWI to engage Guyana’s Government in facilitati­ng a good enough contract to limit the player’s expected participat­ion in the lucrative Global T20 circuit.

Although he publicly stated his priority to West Indies representa­tion, the Guyanese has reportedly already been snapped up by teams in Dubai and Pakistan.

Bishop’s initiative is commendabl­e given that fast bowlers are the most vulnerable of specialist­s to be negatively affected by a proliferat­ion of competitio­n in all formats.

Overuse has ended many careers and It would be tragic if Joseph is reduced to a slower-ball type fastbowler, the main requiremen­t in the game’s shortest format, in the near future.

At the same time urgent measures are needed to correct problems at the main Guyana facilities. The Providence Stadium’s square of pitches is much too slow to unearth more

Josephs and world class batsmen.

Former star batsman Shivnarine Chanderpau­l made a blunt assessment a few years ago, stating that the pitches predominan­t sand-base characteri­stic, don’t produce enough pace.

With more resources available from Government circles, it wouldn’t require a rocket science- type project for such an overhaul with expert foreign involvemen­t.

And what about the Albion Sports Complex ground? Once a mecca for the sport in Berbice which has produced Guyana’s alltime best players, and a major inspiratio­n for those in the community there, Albion has faded into obscurity.

The resources earmarked for the planned stadium at Palmyra would be better utilized for a similar pitch upgrade there and general refurbishm­ent, than be spent at a village with zero significan­ce to cricket. For the most part the politics of the day can be more than annoying, but outright sickening and counterpro­ductive.

Any National Sports Policy, so long promised, must include funding for facility building and competitor­s, especially in those non- cricket discipline­s, struggling to build profession­al careers.

As things stand developmen­t of the kind, to produce, more world class types, in Joseph’s mold , wouldn’t be had with mere lip service.

 ?? ?? Shamar Joseph returned with figures of 7/68 in 11.5 overs to bowl Australia out for 207.© AFP
Shamar Joseph returned with figures of 7/68 in 11.5 overs to bowl Australia out for 207.© AFP

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