Jofra Archer’s tortuous search for full fitness has taken another frustrating twist, with the fast bowler ruled out of the remainder of the Indian Premier League season and returning immediately to England to recover from his latest elbow surgery and improve his chances of participating in the Ashes.
Archer has played only five of Mumbai Indians’ first 10 games in the IPL and will now miss their four remaining regular fixtures, including Tuesday’s against Royal Challengers Bangalore at Wankhede Stadium, and any in the post-season playoffs. He had minor elbow surgery in Belgium last month and despite rapidly returning to action has not felt comfortable.
“Archer has been recovering from right elbow surgery,” the England and Wales Cricket Board said in a statement. “However, pushing through the discomfort while playing, hoping it will settle, has proven challenging. Therefore, it has been agreed for him to return to the UK for a period of rest and rehabilitation to give him the best opportunity for a full recovery.”
It is more than three years since Archer’s elbow injury first flared up, forcing him out of a Test match in South Africa in January 2020, and two years since the first operation intended to cure it. At the time, the England bowling coach, Jon Lewis, shrugged this off as “a small blip on his journey”.
Last month was the fifth time Archer had undergone surgery on the same joint, and the player’s continued struggles with the relatively light workloads of Twenty20 cricket make his participation in this summer’s Ashes, which starts in just over five weeks, look increasingly remote. His early return from India will, however, allow the ECB’s medical department to oversee his recovery with that target, and perhaps the 50-over World Cup that follows in the autumn, in mind. The ECB is confident Archer is fit enough to play T20s but feel he would recover better without doing so.
After news broke of his latest surgery, the 28-year-old said he had been enduring “a worrying and troubling time” but that he continued to target a return to England’s Test side. In an interview with Cricinfo last month Archer said: “It’s a huge year. I think everything is intertwined; everything bounces off everything else. If I can get through [the IPL] then I’ll be in a good position to play in the Ashes, and then everything else will follow with it.”
Reacting to Archer’s setback on Instagram, the England Test captain, Ben Stokes, wrote: “This guy’s got a heart of a Lion. We know what you’ve been through and what you’ve put your body through.”
Meanwhile, the broadcaster and former England international Ebony Rainford-Brent is to become a non-executive director of the ECB for a three-year term, with her appointment to be ratified at Wednesday’s AGM.
“Ebony is a unique talent, a trailblazer who was a winner on the pitch and has achieved so much off it,” said the ECB chairman, Richard Thompson. “Her Ace Programme has already made a huge impact in creating opportunities for youngsters from Black communities, and she shares my impatience for making further progress in creating a truly inclusive sport.”
Rainford-Brent is joined on the board by Pete Ackerley, whose many previous roles in the sport include a spell as the ECB’s head of development. He is currently chief executive of the British American Football Association and Chair of Trustees of Wembley National Stadium Trust.