Jamaica Gleaner

I feel like we have won the series, says Gabba hero Joseph

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SECOND TEST hero Shamar Joseph revealed that he was still in bed nursing a painful toe three hours before the start of the penultimat­e day’s play at the Gabba and never thought he would take any further part in the contest.

Forced to retire hurt the previous evening after being struck by a Mitchell Starc yorker, the 24-year-old was subsequent­ly cleared of any fracture but remained in severe pain and was unable to bowl as Australia reached 60 for two at the close of Saturday’s third day.

However, Joseph said team physio Dr Denis Byam instructed him to come to the ground instead of remaining at the hotel, and following treatment, he was able to take the field.

He then destroyed the Aussie innings with a pacey spell of seven for 68, the hosts losing their last eight wickets for 94 runs as West Indies clinched a nervejangl­ing eight-run victory to draw the two-match series 1-1.

“He (Dr Byam) called me this morning. I was in my bed after 11 a.m. The bus [was] leaving at 12:15 p.m.,” recalled Joseph, who only made his Test debut last week in Adelaide.

“He asked me how I was feeling, and I said not well. [I was] really in pain, and all these things.

“And he said ‘Come to the ground. I have a reason’. I didn’t know this was the reason, but it was for a good reason: to win the Test match for [my] team.

“I must shout out to him. I am very happy he got me here today, and I did well for my team once again.”

West Indies found the breakthrou­gh difficult to come by inside the first threequart­ers of an hour as opener Steve Smith (91 not out) and Cameron Green (42) extended their third-wicket stand to 71 in pursuit of the victory target of 216.

However, Joseph’s introducti­on changed the trajectory of the chase. He struck in only his second over, bowling Green and Travis Head (0) with consecutiv­e deliveries, before taking the next four to reduce Australia to 187 for eight at lunch.

Alzarri Joseph knocked over Nathan Lyon for nine in the first over after the break before Shamar Joseph removed number 11 Josh Hazlewood’s off-stump without scoring three overs later to seal West Indies’ first Test win on Australian soil in nearly three decades.

“[The talk in the dressing room] was just positive, that’s all. Just go out there and do it. Take wickets after wickets. It was just all positivity,” Joseph said of the mood in the camp before the start of play.

“I was just sticking to the basics, just on top of off-stump. That worked a lot for me throughout this Test, even in the first Test.”

He continued: “I feel like we’ve won the series. Even though it’s 1-1, I feel like we’ve won the entire series with this Test.

“And it’s really amazing for my teammates. I must give another shout-out to them. They’re really encouragin­g, and I’m glad I’ve made them proud.

“Tears could’ve come to my eyes [when we won], but I already cried for my fivewicket haul … but it’s just happiness. That’s the emotion coming out here right now. “

Joseph, one of seven uncapped players in the touring squad, proved a revelation in the opening Test, which West Indies lost by 10 wickets, picking up a five-wicket haul in the first innings.

He managed only a single wicket in the first innings here but his seven-wicket haul in the second carried him to 13 scalps, earning him Man-of-the-Match and Manof-the-Series honours.

 ?? AP ?? West Indies fast bowler Shamar Joseph raises the ball after taking seven wickets in his team’s eight-run win over Australia on the fourth day of the second Test in Brisbane, Sunday, January 28, 2024.
AP West Indies fast bowler Shamar Joseph raises the ball after taking seven wickets in his team’s eight-run win over Australia on the fourth day of the second Test in Brisbane, Sunday, January 28, 2024.

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