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Shamar Joseph's Test record versus Australia actually speaking, if you were to think about it, highlights the key tenets of his bowling, which stands on the strong pillars of accuracy, speed and commitment to his craft. Shamar Joseph, who is yet to turn 26, has by virtue of consistent and respectable Test performances, in what is still a career in its nascent stage accumulated respect. That's down to his passion to not just perform but (perform) with excellence for his West Indies team that still even after all these years of an evident torrential decline, haven't really taken amazingly notable steps toward improvement. Where the team may get to and what stage of improvement in the Test rankings might they be able to achieve is something that is not known yet and can't be measured really! But what can be said for certain is that it is phenomenon like Shamar Joseph's Test record vs Australia that actually builds a lot of confidence in the youngster's skills and abilities.
So how good is Shamar Joseph's Test record vs Australia?
Shamar Joseph vs Australia in Tests
Matches 3 (6 innings) |
Bowling average 16.2 |
Wickets 22 |
Best figures 7 for 68 at Brisbane |
Truth be told, the kind of Test record Shamar Joseph has against Australia would not only mightily please the legendary names that have proudly represented the West Indies in the past, such as the great Brian Lara, Sir Curtly Ambrose, Courtney Walsh and even Andy Robers and Michael Holding, but it would even draw worthy praise from distinct luminaries of Australian cricket. Include the names like Sir Allan Border, the Waugh brothers, Glenn McGrath, Adam Gilchrist, and even names like Ponting and Hayden.
When he bowls against Australia, it could be sensed and one may not necessarily disagree, Shamar Jospeh tends to tick all the right boxes.
He comes not just a fearsome fast bowler, but he tends to go the extra mile especially when contesting against the giant forces of international cricket. He's already proven himself to be a thinking fast bowler, someone who likes to hit the deck hard (as how Sir Ian Bishop calls it) and can generate that extra bit of seam movement and pace that can together spell trouble for batters.
In the just recently concluded Test match in Barbados, that birthed Australia's fifth-ever victory at the noted and famous Kensington Oval, Shamar Joseph, a product of Guyana but a career built on immense hardwork and discipline, collected nine wickets in the contest.
After finishing Australia's first innings strongly with a respectable 4 for 46, he would come back even stronger to take his third five-wicket haul against the side, in claiming a 5 for 87.
He also claimed the big wickets during his latest five-wicket-haul, including the key dismissals of names like Travis Head, the usually strokeful batter who always contributes vital runs for Australia.
The new feather in Shamar Joseph's Test record vs Australia was added also thanks to the right arm seamer cleaning up their tail, including the big wicket of Josh Hazlewood and Mitch Starc, the latter who can always give the ball a good whack.
When batting, and batting for a team that tends to operate rather lazily, often combining thoughtless shot execution with a lack of planning, Shamar Joseph was clearly the man with the willow but also intent. He made 44 useful runs for this team that faced at a venue that used to be its fortress, a stinging defeat. And Joseph took just 22 odd deliveries to score 44 vital runs but in the end, none of that effort was enough to save West Indies from embarrassment.