jofra-archer-eyes-test-comeback-after-long-injury-layoff

Cricket fans, take a deep breath โ€” Jofra Archer is back in business, and heโ€™s setting his sights firmly on Test cricket. After what feels like an eternity of injury setbacks and false starts, the England pacer has finally put in a full day of red-ball cricket.

โ€œI Made It to Stumps โ€“ Thatโ€™s a Win!โ€

Speaking after day two of Sussexโ€™s County Championship match at Chester-le-Street, Archer didnโ€™t try to sugarcoat the experience. The day was long. The pitch was flat. And the grind was real.

“Today could have been the longest day Iโ€™ve ever had โ€” and not because itโ€™s red-ball cricket,โ€ Archer joked. “Iโ€™ve been in the field for two-and-a-half days before, and it still didnโ€™t feel as long as today.”

But despite the punishing conditions, the 29-year-old fast bowler was all smiles. After his last first-class outing ended before tea in 2021, simply making it through the day felt like a huge milestone.

“I’m glad to just finish a day of four-day cricket,โ€ he said. โ€œThis is progress.”

No More Restrictions

Jofra Archer also revealed that there were no workload limitations placed on him by Englandโ€™s medical team โ€” a sign that heโ€™s being seriously considered for Test selection again.

“You canโ€™t have restrictions if you’re potentially going to go in [for a Test match]. You put your body through as much pressure โ€” safely โ€” as possible to put yourself in the best position,” he explained.

Itโ€™s a notable shift in tone from a player who, not long ago, was feared to be lost to the Test format due to chronic elbow and back issues.

The โ€˜Kitchen Cutโ€™ That Delayed His Return

Adding to the long list of Archerโ€™s unlucky breaks was a fractured thumb, sustained while batting during the IPL. But in classic Jofra fashion, he brushed it off with good humour.

“If you get cut in the kitchen with a knife, no one’s going to call it an injury. It’s similar with my thumb. I just got hit while batting, as we do all the time, but unfortunately, it got fractured,” he said.

โ€œIt just happened to be my bowling hand, so I had to give it care. If it was my left thumb, I could have carried on and no one would know.”

The thumb fracture delayed his County return, but heโ€™s now back on the field โ€” bowling without pain, without fear, and without excuses.

Four Years, Countless Setbacks

Itโ€™s been more than four years since Jofra Archer last played a Test โ€” back during Englandโ€™s 2020โ€“21 tour of India. Since then, heโ€™s battled a string of injuries that wouldโ€™ve pushed many players into early retirement. But not Archer.

“Injuries are injuries. Nobody gets injured on purpose, no one knows when they will happen โ€” it can be in the gym, in rehab, pre-hab, or whatever,โ€ he said.

โ€œIf you’re supposed to get injured, there’s nothing you can do to get away from it.”

Stay tuned to Brandsynario for the latest news and updates.