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Six dogs have been key to my recovery

Jofra Archer of England at his home with his five dogs in Barbados before the second Test against West Indies at Kensington Oval on March 14, 2022 in Bridgetown, Barbados - Getty Images/Philip Brown


Jofra Archer of England at his home with his five dogs in Barbados before the second Test against West Indies at Kensington Oval on March 14, 2022 in Bridgetown, Barbados - Getty Images/Philip Brown

Jofra Archer of England at his home with his five dogs in Barbados before the second Test against West Indies at Kensington Oval on March 14, 2022 in Bridgetown, Barbados – Getty Images/Philip Brown

Jofra Archer has spent much of the last 22 months patiently recovering from stress fractures of the elbow and back, and clearing up after his six dogs. It has been solitary and private, and he missed cricket so much that he considered travelling to Australia for November’s T20 World Cup as an England fan.

There will be nothing solitary or private for Archer this Friday when, all being well, he stands at the top of his mark for his first over back in an England shirt. He knows, then, that the eyes of the cricketing world will be on him, and is aware of the expectation and excitement that surrounds his return.

But Archer is also conscious that a single international appearance is just another step on the path to his summit, warning that many “hard yards” lie ahead if he is to scale the twin peaks of England’s 2023: the sort of Ashes-World Cup double that made him a global superstar in 2019.

“Hopefully it can be a repeat of 2019,” he said after bowling in Bloemfontein with a handful of England team-mates on Wednesday. “We’ve got a 50-over World Cup and an Ashes again in the same year so more of the same, please.”

Archer has been back on the field for a couple of weeks, and admits he is “still riding off that wave of emotions right now”. His first over back, for MI Cape Town, was a wicket-maiden: a dream start. Archer was just grateful he was not bowling at the batsman at the non-striker’s end: his England skipper Jos Buttler, although he did discomfort his team-mate Jason Roy.

Archer has been training hard with the England squad in the build-up to their ODI series against South Africa - Getty Images/Alex Davidson

Archer has been training hard with the England squad in the build-up to their ODI series against South Africa – Getty Images/Alex Davidson

“I guess I am glad Jos didn’t face most of the balls,” he smiles. “Having not playing for such a long time, I think everyone was watching and however that over went I probably wouldn’t have been judged for it. I am glad I was on the good end of it.”

He knows the same will be true on Friday but accepts “that is how sport goes”. After just five T20s (taking eight wickets, and borrowing his friend Marcus Rashford’s head-pointing celebration), playing a 50-over match will be a significant milestone for Archer.

“It is a nice thing [to tick off],” he said. “I probably won’t feel it until the eighth or ninth over, then standing in the field for the 21st over will feel very long! It is necessary. I have other things I want to achieve, especially in the summer, and I’ve got to do it.”

Those other things are the Ashes, from June, and October’s World Cup. England are carefully building up his workload, although when he will get to play first-class cricket before the Ashes is unclear, given he is going to the Indian Premier League. He has promised, though, that he will do whatever work is required to get there. At this stage, he only rates his fitness “at about 80 per cent”, but still topped 90mph regularly in the SA20.

“I know whenever I’m fully fit, I don’t think there’s much that can stop me, it’s just a matter of when that was going to be,” he said.

The routine of being a dog owner did a world of good for Archer's recovery - Getty Images/Gareth Copley

The routine of being a dog owner did a world of good for Archer’s recovery – Getty Images/Gareth Copley

“Overs are overs and you train and bowl until you feel good. Obviously I might have to do some extra bowling during the week in India [at the IPL], but that is absolutely fine because I want to play in the Ashes, so I’m going to have to do all the hard yards to tick those boxes.

“It is an exciting prospect to think about playing with the guys again, especially with the brand of cricket they are playing [under Ben Stokes] which is very exciting.

“But I think I need to spend the next two, three, four months fine tuning the body and making myself a bit more resilient. Let me sort that out first then I can look forward to holding the red ball in my hand again.

“It is the start for me and I’m very excited. This is our first ODI of the year so I’m very glad to be playing from the start and when we do get to India, hopefully I’ll be there, and everything will seem worth it.”

Archer says he did not “waste a day” while injured; having six dogs certainly helps. Archer has had Sheba, a French Mastiff, since he was 16. The more recent additions – Ace, Onyx, Ghost, Nova and Luna – are all American Bullies. It is little surprise that he reflects: “It’s their house, I just live there.”

“I went a bit crazy probably a month after I got back to Barbados, I got five dogs in the space of four weeks,” he says. “To be honest, just the routine kept me going – shovelling lots of poo and feeding lots of dogs!”



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