Joseph forces Khawaja to retire hurt, but Australia complete easy win

SUMMARY: West Indies 188 all out from 62.1 overs (Kirk McKenzie 50, Shamar Joseph 36; Pat Cummins 4-41, Josh Hazlewood 4-44) and 120 all out from 35.2 overs (Kirk McKenzie 26, Justin Greaves 24, Joshua Da Silva 18, Alzarri Joseph 16, Shamar Joseph 15; Josh Hazlewood 5-35, Nathan Lyon 2-4, Mitchell Starc 2-46) vs Australia 283 all out from 81.1 overs (Travis Head 119, Usman Khawaja 45, Nathan Lyon 24; Shamar Joseph 5-94, Justin Greaves 2-36, Kemar Roach 2-48) and 26-0 from 6.4 overs (Steve Smith 11*, Usman Khawaja retired hurt 9*)

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Australia wrapped up a 10-wicket victory before lunch on the third day in Adelaide as Josh Hazlewood claimed career-best match figures, but there was late drama when Shamar Joseph drew blood from Usman Khawaja with a bouncer when the scores were level, forcing him to retire hurt.

Shamar Joseph again showed his batting prowess at No. 11, which will surely mean a promotion in the near future, as he and Kemar Roach added 26 for the last wicket to follow the 55 they put on in the first innings.

It meant a brief second innings for Khawaja and Steven Smith. Oddly, Shamar Joseph, who claimed Smith with his first ball in Test cricket, was not given the new ball. He was eventually introduced in the fifth over with 14 needed and after being cut to the boundary first ball by Khawaja produced a lovely delivery beat Smith’s edge.

Then came a lifter that beat Khawaja before an awkward bouncer clattered into his helmet around the jaw area as he tried to sway out of the line.

Khawaja had blood coming from his mouth and after a few moments left the field leaving Marnus Labuschagne to hitting the winning runs. In more ways than one, Shamar Joseph had left an indelible mark on his debut.

Shamar Joseph (right) shares a moment with Steve Smith whom he dismissed with his first ball in Test cricket (Photo: Getty Images)

West Indies had resumed 22 behind with four wickets in hand after losing Justin Greaves to the final ball of the third day. They whittled the deficit down to 11 before Joshua Da Silva gave his innings away by falling for the well-telegraphed short-ball plan, top-edging a hook to deep backward square off Mitchell Starc.

Alzarri Joseph showed a solid technique and played a brace of strong cover drives against Starc but got a thin edge from around the wicket. When Gudakesh Motie became Hazlewood’s fifth wicket, shouldering arms to one that was far too tight to leave, West Indies were still a run behind.

However, that lasted just one more delivery as Shamar Joseph played a first-ball cover drive that would have pleased a top-order player, bringing huge cheers from a healthy crowd who had flocked in despite the risk of very little cricket.

Each run added by the last-wicket pair was greeted by warm applause, while it added to Australia’s recent difficulties over getting through lower-order stands. The return of Nathan Lyon, who had started the day bowling a single delivery, ended the resistance when Shamar Joseph charged and missed.

The second Test begins in Brisbane on January 25 and will be a day-night encounter. (ESPNcricinfo)

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