Garner first came to the attention of
Somerset whilst playing for Littleborough in the Central Lancashire League. He replaced Sir Garry Sobers as the club's paid man for the 1976 season, continuing in the role for the 1977 and 1978 seasons. During his three-year stay at Littleborough he amassed over 1500 runs with the bat and took 334 wickets at 9.34 runs apiece. Joel Garner signed for Somerset for the start of the 1977 season.
Brian Rose, who captained Garner at Somerset thought that when Garner bowled, his bounce was "always too steep to drive, often to even play forward". He took 338 First Class wickets at an average of 18.10 during his time at Somerset and was considered the best fast bowler to play for the county. Garner said of Somerset “The people are relaxed and I found people friendlier here. They never hassled you, you could go about your business and I just fit in”. and in the 1981 Benson & Hedges Cup final at Lords, Garner took five wickets for 14 runs to help defeat
Surrey. Garner appeared in 58 test matches for the West Indies between 1977 and 1987 and took 259 wickets at an average of barely above 20, making him statistically one of the most effective bowlers of all time. He made his test debut against
Pakistan in 1977 and took 25 wickets in his debut series. Garner took seven five wicket bags in test cricket but never took ten wickets in a test match. As he shared the bowling duties with
Michael Holding,
Andy Roberts,
Colin Croft, and later
Malcolm Marshall, competition to take wickets was plentiful. At 6 feet 8 inches (an inch taller than
Jason Holder, who stands at 6 feet 7 inches), he was, at the time, the tallest
fast bowler to play test cricket. Garner was dropped for the final test of the Indian tour of the West Indies in 1983 and again for the West Indies tour of India later that year. Battling injuries, he spent the time building his fitness and returned for the 1983-84 one day series in
Australia. Garner missed six one day games due to a knee injury but was able to return for the final few games where his form and fitness had returned. In the following Australian tour of the West Indies, Garner took 31 wickets in the test matches. He described himself as "probably the most happiest man on the team. Dropped from the side the previous season, called washed-up even by friends I hoped hadn't meant it, plagued by recurring injuries to knees and shoulder, I still bowled 208 overs in the tests". However, it was in
limited overs cricket that Garner put his height to use with devastating effect: in 98 matches he took 146 wickets. He had the ability to unleash a devastating yorker, as well as generate more bounce. As of January 2020, he is one of only two players with more than 100 ODI wickets at an average of under 20
runs per wicket, while his economy rate of 3.09 runs per over is the best ever for any bowler who bowled at least 1000 balls. He is the all-time highest ranked ODI bowler. His 5 for 39 in the
1979 Cricket World Cup final against
England remains the best ever performance by a bowler in a final; it included a spell of 5 wickets for 4 runs, and he was on a hat-trick twice. He was also the part of the West Indian team which was runner-up in
1983 ICC Cricket World Cup. In the first league match with India, he, along with
Sir Andy Roberts, set the highest ever 10th wicket partnership in World Cup history (71), but chasing 262, West Indies were reduced to 157-9 but Garner and Roberts added 71 runs to make 228 and West Indies lost by 34 runs. Garner played for
Barbados in the West Indies, for
South Australia in the
Sheffield Shield and alongside
Viv Richards and
Ian Botham for
Somerset in the English
County Championship. In
Barbados, his club team was
YMPC. During his time playing for Barbados, he was captain in 1986. He revealed his tactics to
Derek Pringle as “It’s quite simple. Me and Macko
[Malcolm Marshall] open the bowling and nip out the top order. We have a rest and the other bowlers come on and keep it tight. Then me and Macko come on and blast out the tail. We have a bat, get a hundred lead and bowl them out again.” == After retirement ==