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Rob Key: 'Pure talent' Jofra Archer ready to hit the ground running

England Men's managing director unconcerned about throwing fast bowler straight back into Test cricket

Andrew Miller
Andrew Miller
27-Jun-2025 • 7 hrs ago
Jofra Archer celebrates a wicket on his comeback, Durham vs Sussex, County Championship, Chester-le-Street, June 23, 2025

Jofra Archer claimed the wicket of Emilio Gay on his return to red-ball cricket  •  PA Photos/Getty Images

Jofra Archer will be ready to hit the ground running, as and when his return to Test cricket comes, despite having bowled just 18 overs for Sussex against Durham in his long-awaited comeback to first-class cricket at Chester-le-Street last week.
That is the view of Rob Key, England Men's managing director, who is confident that Archer's slow but steady return from a series of career-threatening injuries means he'll be ready to slot straight back into England's starting XI, either in next week's second Test against India at Edgbaston, or - perhaps more likely - in the subsequent third Test at Lord's, beginning July 10.
Archer was this week named in England's 15-man squad for the second Test, meaning he is in line to play the format for the first time since the tour of India in February 2021. England have played 52 Tests in the intervening years, during which time Archer's career was left in limbo due to multiple operations on his right elbow, and a stress fracture of the back.
However, he made a successful return to white-ball cricket for England in May last year, with appearances at each of the last two ICC global events: the T20 World Cup in June 2024, and the Champions Trophy in February this year.
Though a broken thumb sustained at the IPL delayed his return to red-ball cricket, Archer himself confirmed this week that his body was ready to hold up to the demands of the longer format, having returned figures of 18-8-32-1 on a flat deck against Durham in the County Championship.
"To see him back will be brilliant," Key said at a Rothesay media event in London. "He's an unbelievable talent, and it's been such a long road. For two years now, [we've] mapped it out: from T20s and four-over spells, into 50-over cricket to build up his robustness, to now. He has been doing so much work in the lead-up - even when he's not playing - to building up that resilience to being able to play, because he's a serious talent."
England's impressive victory in the series opener at Headingley, allied to the nine-day turnaround between games, might persuade the selectors to stick with an unchanged frontline seam attack of Chris Woakes, Brydon Carse and Josh Tongue. That could also enable Archer to be released for at least two days of Sussex's next County Championship fixture against Warwickshire, after his county coach Paul Farbrace suggested he might benefit from more red-ball overs under his belt.
However, Key liked what he saw of Archer's rhythm at Chester-le-Street, having tracked his performance on the county live stream, and insisted he was ready for selection, come what may.
"Jofra is such a talent," Key said. "He was straight on the money. Bowling on a slow pitch, with good pace. He ain't gonna forget how to bowl, so when we have that call, we're not concerned. He will be fit and available for both [Tests]. Whether he could play both, we'll find that out afterwards, if he did play at Edgbaston."
Despite his long absence from red-ball cricket, Key likened Archer to Mark Wood - currently injured, but on course to be available for next month's final Test of the series - for his ability to pick up from where he left off, without the need to build up his workloads.
"The spectrum for that is Mark Wood to other guys who you feel need a longer [lead up]," Key said. "You saw those guys playing in the last Test; they got better the more they bowled. Mark Wood is someone that could just turn up after bowling a bit in the nets, like he did at Headingley in the Ashes, and bowl 96mph, swinging in and hitting a length.
"On that sort of scale, Jofra is close to the Mark Wood end. He's a pretty pure talent. There's not a lot of moving parts to his action in terms of complications, and he's 30 years old now, so he knows exactly what he's doing and what he's about. So it's more of a question of him just getting back into red-ball cricket.
"We've picked him in the squad, and we'll see how the conditions are. We've got decisions to make because these next two Tests are very close together, and you want to be able to sustain that pressure throughout these back-to-back Test matches. So we'll cross that bridge when we come to it. At the moment, he's in the squad [but] any of those players can go back to county cricket as well."
"We don't know who's the next great England opening partnership - the next Broad-Anderson - because there's a number of those options that could be the mainstay of England bowlers for years. I can't wait to see who that will be."
Rob Key on England's bowling stocks
With Jamie Overton and Sam Cook also in England's Test squad, plus last season's break-out star Gus Atkinson likely to come into contention later in the series, Key was upbeat about the state of England's bowling stocks - both for the remainder of this summer, and the Ashes tour to follow.
"There was a time where you thought it was all about Wood and Archer, and we needed that X-factor pace - but now we've got a few of them," Key said. "It's so encouraging. You need bowlers for all conditions, [and] not just the Ashes. You need a pack of bowlers that all complement each other.
"Jofra is another piece in that puzzle as Woody will be if he comes back at the end of the series. We don't know who's the next great England opening partnership - the next Broad-Anderson - because there's a number of those options that could be the mainstay of England bowlers for years. I can't wait to see who that will be."

Andrew Miller is UK editor of ESPNcricinfo. @miller_cricket