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Posted: 2024-01-28 11:25:07

Debut Test series don't come much better than the one enjoyed by Shamar Joseph.

Even if the sum of the 24-year-old Guyanese rookie's achievements had been to be named player of the series after bowling his team to a famously unexpected victory at the Gabba, it would have marked a dream start to his Test career.

But the way in which he did it is how genuine legends are created.

Lying awake in bed at 3am, his toe throbbing and "in terrible pain" after being crushed by a vicious Mitch Starc bouncer earlier that night, even Joseph didn't think he'd be able to play a role other than cheerleader on day four.

"I wasn't expecting to play, so I came in my training kit to just watch on," Joseph said.

"At 11:30 [West Indies team Doctor Denis] Byam told me I need you at the ground.

"I said, to be fair I'm not feeling well but I will just come and support the guys.

"So the skipper come up to me this morning and said, '[Are] you ready? You're starting this morning.'"

Shamar Joseph looks out from under his cap

Shamar Joseph has only played seven first class matches, including the two Tests he has just played.(Getty Images: Cricket Australia/Albert Perez)

That led to another problem.

"I was in the dressing room [with] my shoes on, my boxers and my hat, just waiting for my clothes to come because I knew that my skipper needed me out here," Joseph said amidst much laughter.

It's a hilarious aside to a stunning tale. 

Joseph was, first, pressed into wearing substitute fielder Zachary McCaskie's kit while someone urgently went back to the hotel to get his.

Denied entry to the field until he had McCaskie's number and name taped up, Joseph eventually took to the field.

Soon after being reunited with his own playing shirt, Joseph was thrown the ball.

At the end of an 11.5-over spell, split only by a delayed dinner break, Joseph was wheeling away in pure ecstasy after castling Josh Hazlewood's off stump to hand the West Indies a first victory on Australian soil in 27 years.

"I think the pain was just off then," Joseph said with a grin.

"After getting that last wicket I didn't feel anything., It was just pure joy."

'Special' Joseph shows incredible heart

Shamar Joseph holds up his cap

Shamar Joseph has pledged his future to the West Indies Test team.(Getty Images: Cricket Australia/Albert Perez)

"From speaking to him, I knew he was special," West Indies skipper Kraigg Brathwaite said.

"He was just confident. He always has that self belief. He's a star.

"Today was a prime example.

"He told me, 'I'm not putting down this ball until the last wicket falls'.

"This was a guy who had an injury on his toe. I mean, that's just heart."

A bold and prophetic claim from a man who only made his first class debut for Guyana in February last year.

"I can't explain it, to be fair," Joseph said, having limped into the press conference with his player of the match medal around his neck and the Richie Benaud medal for player of the series firmly clasped in his grip.

"Having people that believe in you, that gave me a lot of confidence.

"When I met the captain — we met on this tour — having a captain like this, that doesn't know much about you, just from watching you play first class cricket but you still know that he believes in you.

"I say, 'just give me the ball. I'm not coming off.'

"Even if he want me to come off, I wouldn't come off.

"I just want to make him proud, I think i did make him proud and happy. I will always stick by his side. and he believed in me.

Shamar Joseph and Brian Lara walk next to each other

Shamar Joseph said he hoped that legends such as Brian Lara were proud.(Getty Images: Cricket Australia/Albert Perez)

"He said, 'just keep going, just keep going,' Alzarri [Joseph] came to me and said the same thing: 'Take that pain and get a wicket'.

"So I said I'd do it for him and the team."

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