Australia resumed on 92 for 4—merely 82 ahead—but their middle order refused to blink.
Travis Head dropped on 21 when Justin Greaves shelled a regulation chance at second slip, punished the reprieve mercilessly. Cutting and driving with authority, the left‑hander crafted a polished 61—his second half‑century of the match and 19th in Tests—while newcomer Beau Webster matched him stroke for stroke.
Together, the pair added a brisk 102‑run stand that drained West Indian resolve. Head’s milestone arrived with a languid extra‑cover drive off Greaves, and Webster’s with a deft steer to third man off Jayden Seales immediately after lunch. When Head fell lbw to a Shamar Joseph shooter minutes before the interval, Australia were already beyond 150 and climbing.
Carey’s counter‑punch and Joseph’s lion‑heart
Webster’s assured 63 ended when he feathered a leg‑side glance to Shai Hope, but wicketkeeper‑batsman Alex Carey launched a counter‑attack that tilted momentum decisively. His run‑a‑ball 65—laced with seven fours and two towering sixes—stretched the visitors to a competitive 310 all out, leaving West Indies a mountainous 300 on an ever‑wearing surface.
For the hosts, the indefatigable Shamar Joseph collected 5‑87 (match figures 9‑133), his fourth Test five‑for, but lacked sustained support. Misfields and the earlier drop of Head proved costly footnotes.
Hazlewood’s opening salvo: Four wickets in 20 deliveries
Chasing 300, West Indies required composure; instead they confronted Josh Hazlewood in venomous rhythm. After Pat Cummins nipped out Kraigg Brathwaite for 4, Hazlewood ripped the innings open:
John Campbell gloved a misguided paddle to Carey. Next ball, Brandon King inside‑edged to gully off pad and bat. Two runs later, Roston Chase repeated the mistake, offering Sam Konstas a simple short‑leg chance. Hazlewood then jagged an inducker under Keacy Carty’s bat to clatter off stump.
In a single, brutal burst, the scoreboard lurched from 47 for 1 to 49 for 5. Cummins deepened the crisis by bowling Hope with a delivery that refused to rise, and Hazlewood returned to pouch Jomel Warrican via a thin edge—his 13th Test five‑wicket haul, sealed at 5‑43.
Joseph’s late fireworks, Lyon’s final word
At 73 for 8, defeat seemed academic, but Shamar Joseph briefly turned the evening into a Caribbean carnival. The fast‑bowling all‑rounder belted 44 off 22 balls, peppering the stands with four fours and four sixes in a 55‑run ninth‑wicket spree with Justin Greaves. The fun ended when Nathan Lyon found extra bounce to have Joseph caught, and Lyon struck again next ball to pin Jayden Seales—West Indies all out for 141.
The day—and by extension the match—pivoted on Greaves’s early lapse off Head. From that moment, Australia’s resolve swelled while West Indies’ frayed. Hazlewood’s clinical spell merely formalized a momentum shift already set in motion on a sun‑soaked Barbados morning.
“Opportunities define Test cricket,” Head reflected afterward. “We knew if we could bat an hour and a half this morning, the game would open up. Josh finished it in style.”

















