A hard-hitting left-handed middle-order batsman, Joslin was a champion schoolboy cricketer at
University High School, Melbourne. In 1966–67, his first season for
Victoria, he made 525 runs at an average of 43.75, helping Victoria win the
Sheffield Shield. He hit his first
first-class century, 126, against
Western Australia while he was still only 18, adding 107 for the fourth wicket with his captain,
Jack Potter. His other century, 121 not out, came in 1967–68, when he and Potter added 177 for the fourth wicket in 130 minutes against
New South Wales. He was included in the team for the Fourth Test against
India in Sydney, but made only 7 and 2, dismissed both times by the Indian spinners. Joslin finished the 1967–68 season with 565 runs at 51.36, and was selected to
tour England in 1968. In 13 first-class matches on the tour he made only 344 runs at 21.50, and was never in the running for a Test spot. On his return to Australia he played the 1968–69 season and most of the 1969–70 season, but never regained his earlier form and lost his place in the Victorian side, having played his last first-class match not long after turning 22. Joslin played eight seasons of
district cricket for
Footscray from 1964–65 to 1971–72, averaging 30.6 with the bat. Through lower level cricket in the mid-1970s he developed into an all-rounder, and returned to district cricket for a single season with
Fitzroy in 1977–78, when he averaged 39.6 with the bat and took 25 wickets at 18.5. He was also an
Australian rules footballer in the
Victorian Football Association, playing with
Yarraville in the early 1970s, and coaching
Werribee in 1978 and 1979. Outside sport, Joslin worked in the tobacco industry, and then for a stud-breeding operation in
harness-racing. ==References==