
Jofra Archer's England return is pure box-office as four years of frustration melt away in a beautiful moment of catharsis, writes OLIVER HOLT
The clock beneath him reads 2.45pm when Jofra Archer wanders over from mid-off, removes his cap and hands it to umpire Sharfuddoula.
A cheer of anticipation rings around Lord's. An elderly man in the lower level of the Grandstand, who has been berating Chris Woakes during the first over of India 's innings, which costs 13 runs, stills and locks his hands behind his head as Archer walks back towards his mark at the Pavilion End.
It has been more than four years since Archer last bowled a ball in Test cricket, against India in Ahmedabad in February 2021, four years that have been damned by serious elbow and back injuries and agonies of uncertainty and the torture of wondering what might have been.
He was 25 when we last saw him in the longer format of the game, about to enter his prime, fresh from delivering the Super Over that won England the World Cup here in July 2019, a player who seemed destined to be the spearhead of the attack for as long as he wished. How different would he be now to that player?
Framed by that august pavilion and its denizens, sweltering in the heat, Archer begins his run-up and gathers speed before unleashing his first ball at Yashasvi Jaiswal.
It squares up India's accomplished young opener but he gets his bat on it and pushes it into the off side.
England have grown used to bleeding runs in this series. They have had to accept the impotence of their bowling attack and chasing huge totals. Already, there is a different energy about this over. The ground starts to come alive.
Archer, 30, glides in for his second ball. Jaiswal plays at it outside the line of off stump but the pace and the movement beat him and the ball whistles through to Jamie Smith, who catches it somewhere just below his midriff.
Now the crowd is agog. The big screen between the Tavern Stand and the Pavilion shows Ben Stokes smiling. This is what England have been missing. We can already feel it. This sense of danger that Archer brings. This pace. This sense that we are watching a duel between a batter and a bowler.
As he runs up for his third delivery, the crowd claps and cheers and hollers as he quickens his stride. Archer arrows the ball at Jaiswal's stumps and it beats him for speed. The ball finds his leading edge and flies towards Harry Brook at second slip. Lord's holds its breath for a split second.
Brook takes the catch. The crowd erupts with joy. And Archer wheels away, his face full of elation. It is a moment of sheer release. A moment when four years of frustration and pain and worry fall away in one beautiful rush of catharsis.
Archer runs into the outstretched arms of Shoaib Bashir at backward square leg. And soon he is mobbed by the rest of his team-mates, who are celebrating and rejoicing and laughing at the glorious theatre of it all. His third ball after four years and now this. Only sport can do this.
Archer wheels away, his face full of elation - it is a moment of sheer release for the bowler
Eventually, Archer returns to his mark. Spectators who have taken a break from the heat after the end of England's innings are thronging the walkways behind the Grandstand to try to get back to their seats to witness this.
Usually, it is batters who are supposed to clear out bars but Archer's return is pure box-office.
A gasp goes around the ground. It shows that Archer's wicket ball was measured at just shy of 90mph. Archer runs in for his fourth ball. More clapping, and even louder cheering. The new batter is Karun Nair, who is not in the best of form. He plays at the ball outside his off stump and misses it.
There is a fever inside this grand old arena now. Everyone is gripped. It is taking us back six years to when Archer made his Test debut here and engaged Steve Smith in what turned into a battle for survival for the former Australia skipper.
This over is a spectacle, too. It contains that element that England's attack has often been missing since Archer's injury woes began: fear. Fear and intimidation, those great friends of fast bowlers everywhere. Mark Wood can call on them, too. He has also been unlucky with injuries.
The big screen flashes up in big figures that Archer's fourth ball was measured at 93mph. There is another gasp of delight and awe. The ground is in tumult. Archer runs in. The applause is even more raucous. Nair tries to fend the ball away to the off side but it squirts away towards midwicket.
One more ball of the over to go. The heat is unsparing but Archer is relishing every moment. Even when he was clean bowled by Jasprit Bumrah towards the end of England's innings, he raised his eyes to the sky and smiled at the craft of his opponent.
He is back in the arena, back in the thick of it, back on the biggest stage, back in the hearts of the England fans who have been longing for his return. Nair gets behind his sixth ball and prods it nervously into the leg side.
The over is done. It is a wicket maiden. Archer turns and takes his cap from umpire Sharfuddoula. Up on his plinth, Father Time has turned to face St John's Wood, but he is still removing the bails from his wicket.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Sky News
40 minutes ago
- Sky News
Thomas Partey: Ex-Arsenal player charged with rape to appear in court today
Former Arsenal midfielder Thomas Partey is due to appear in court today, charged with raping two women. The 32-year-old, who was charged four days after leaving the north London club when his contract expired back in June, faces five counts of rape and one count of sexual assault. He is accused of two counts of rape against one woman and three counts against another. The sexual assault allegation relates to a third woman, the Crown Prosecution Service has said. The alleged offences took place between 2021 and 2022. The Metropolitan Police said it first received reports of an allegation of rape in February 2022. Partey's lawyer Jenny Wiltshire has previously said the Ghanaian "denies all the charges against him" - and looks forward to the chance to "finally clear his name". Partey joined Arsenal from Spanish side Atletico Madrid in 2020 and became a regular for manager Mikel Arteta, who last month said he was "100% sure" the club followed the correct protocols. An Arsenal spokesperson previously said: "The player's contract ended on 30 June. Due to ongoing legal proceedings, the club is unable to comment on the case." Partey made 35 appearances for the Gunners last season, scoring four goals.


South Wales Guardian
2 hours ago
- South Wales Guardian
‘Amazing' series shows Test cricket is not dying
Nearly seven weeks of intense battle, fierce rivalry and knife-edge cricket came to a fitting end on the final morning of the Test summer, with the tourists forcing through a remarkable win. With England needing 35 to win with four wickets in hand for a mammoth chase of 374, they took the last four wickets for 28 runs in riotous scenes that instantly earned a place alongside the sport's most cherished moments. As the tension reached almost unbearable levels, Chris Woakes spent 16 excruciating minutes batting one-handed with a badly dislocated left shoulder. Gus Atkinson protected him from facing a ball but was ultimately unable to protect his own stumps from the indomitable Mohammed Siraj, who etched his name in history with his third wicket of the morning, fifth of the innings and 23rd of the series. Stokes, who missed the fifth-Test decider with a shoulder injury of his own, hurt for his team but accepted the conclusion was deserved. 'The series as a whole has been pretty much toe to toe for 25 days. From a cricket fan's point of view, 2-2 is probably fair,' he said. 'Two very good teams who have thrown everything at each other and left everything out there. We obviously would have loved to get a series win but it wasn't meant to be. 'We're bitterly disappointed we couldn't get over the line but it was another hard-fought game and both teams put so much energy and effort into the series, it's been an amazing one to be part of. 'There's a little bit of frustration there as well but as a massive advocate of this format and for Test cricket as a whole, this has certainly been one of those series that could hopefully keep off the narrative around 'Test cricket is dying'.' The game felt like it was won and lost on a number of occasions over the past few days but England looked to have settled it on the third afternoon, when the twin centuries of Joe Root and Harry Brook took them to 301 for three. From there they lost seven for 66, culminating in the high drama of Woakes' walking wounded cameo. Stokes paid tribute to his bravery but doubled down on his position that injury substitutes have no part in Test cricket. India's Rishabh Pant batted at Old Trafford with a broken foot and Shoaib Bashir took the winning wicket at Lord's with a broken little finger in his left hand. For Stokes, who bowled himself out of the series by pushing his body to the edge, that is how it must be. 'I'm sorry to say this but if someone gets injured, tough s***. Deal with it. That's how we view it,' he said. 'I am still heavily against it. It's just sod's law that this has happened the week after I said I was against it, but my view has not changed. 'There was never going to be a question in Woakesy's mind about what he was going to do. He spent yesterday trying to figure out if he was going to be left or right-handed. He was in a lot of discomfort running between the wickets…but he's out there trying to get his team over the line. 'It shows what it is to play for your country and try to win for your country.' Siraj, who bowled an epic 185.3 overs over the five matches, earned his place in the spotlight as the curtain came down. 'From the first day till the fifth game, fifth day, we have fought an unbelievable fight,' he said. 'God must have written something good for me, that's why I won this match and took the last wicket. When I woke up today, I thought I could do it. I downloaded a picture from Google saying 'believe'.'


The Guardian
3 hours ago
- The Guardian
Premier League 2025-26 preview No 3: Bournemouth
Guardian writers' predicted position: 10th (NB: this is not necessarily Ben Fisher's prediction but the average of our writers' tips) Last season's position: 9th Three months ago, Bournemouth won at Arsenal for the first time to maintain their hopes of qualifying for Europe with three games to go. It was an impressive comeback victory built on set pieces, Dean Huijsen heading the equaliser from Antoine Semenyo's long throw – cue the Chill Guy meme celebration – before Evanilson poked in a scruffy but well-worked winner from a corner. Bournemouth came up short in their quest to play in Europe as a positive season fizzled out after three wins from their final 15 matches. And now three of their back five from that day have departed – Huijsen for Real Madrid, Milos Kerkez for Liverpool and Kepa Arrizabalaga, who was on loan from Chelsea, for Arsenal. The expectation is that Illia Zabarnyi will become the next high-profile exit, with Paris Saint-Germain pushing to sign the 22-year-old. The fact Bournemouth sold Huijsen to Real in a £50m deal after a single season and 36 appearances serves as a reminder of the club's journey across the last decade, and their continued eye for smart business. The thing worth remembering is that while it appears Bournemouth have been decimated, those on the inside recognise this is how their buy-low, sell-high model works. The downside is the breakup of a brilliant, buccaneering defence. Whether Bournemouth can cope with a flurry of key departures remains to be seen but this summer they moved to find a permanent goalkeeping solution in Djordje Petrovic, a £25m signing from Chelsea. Finding a commanding No 1 capable of holding down the position had been a priority after acknowledging the stability rival clubs had gained from making similar moves. Petrovic, who shone on loan at Strasbourg last season, would appear a solid platform on which to build. But for a team that operated with a thin squad last season, it is impossible to shake the sense that starting over represents a daunting task. Andoni Iraola led Bournemouth to 56 points last season, their record tally in the top flight, as they finished ninth, equalling their best finish. His appointment two years ago, driven by the now Liverpool sporting director Richard Hughes, has proved a masterstroke and last term enhanced the reputation of Iraola, the definition of a hands-on coach, among rivals. The 43-year-old is into the final 12 months of his contract and while he prefers working on rolling contracts, another extension is up in the air. Iraola, who does a good line in self-deprecation, is a self-confessed fidget: he clicks a multi-colour pen throughout interviews and tapes over some of his fingers for superstitious reasons. 'It's stupid,' he said. 'But I have done it for so many years that I continue doing it.' Bournemouth's 80-year-old billionaire owner, Bill Foley, flew from the US in April to formally open the club's £35m state-of-the-art training complex and on the same visit he shared another welcome nugget: he has agreed a deal to buy their Vitality Stadium home, allowing Bournemouth to expand its capacity to about 20,000. The Cherries have been locked into an onerous lease with the property company Structadene, which bought the ground in 2005, then known as Dean Court, for £3.5m, a deal that helped the club avoid administration. Foley – via his Black Knight consortium – added the Portuguese club Moreirense to his stable, which includes investments in Lorient, Hibernian and Auckland FC. Sign up to Football Daily Kick off your evenings with the Guardian's take on the world of football after newsletter promotion There was so much noise about Kerkez's departure for Liverpool that the arrival of his replacement, signed before Kerkez officially headed for Anfield, went under the radar. Adrien Truffert has the tools to be a breakout star in the Premier League. Bournemouth sealed the signing of the 23-year-old Belgium-born left-back for an initial £11.4m from Rennes, a fee the Cherries – and some of their top-flight rivals who have tracked the full-back – regard a snip given his profile. Truffert, capped once by France in 2022, was captain of Rennes and made his 150th Ligue 1 appearance in May. Perhaps it is a quirk of fate that as a toddler he lived in Bournemouth for a year with his family. Daniel Adu-Adjei spent the first half of last season on loan at the bottom of League Two, scoring two goals in 17 appearances for relegated Carlisle, so it would be quite the jump if he is involved. The 20-year-old striker, born in Hammersmith to Ghanaian parents, has impressed in pre-season, scoring against Everton, and trained regularly with the first team at the beginning of this year. His father, William, regards Tony Yeboah as one of his closest friends, while Daniel is studying a nutrition course funded by the Professional Footballers' Association, his go-to dish a BBQ pulled chicken burger. 'At Carlisle, I lived by myself and had to cook all my dinners so I learned a lot,' he said. Few players had as satisfying a summer as Alex Scott. Even an awkward face mask, the result of a fractured jaw sustained against Aston Villa in May, could not dampen his spirits. Scott starred for England as Lee Carsley's under-21s won the European Championship in Slovakia, starting all five matches, though he was forced off through injury in the final. Bournemouth paid Bristol City £25m to sign Scott two years ago but his progress has been stop-start and he began only eight matches last season, largely owing to a lengthy knee injury. Scott, 22 this month, is a throwback midfielder, a cute passer with an endearing appetite to get his hands dirty. Everybody is craving to see more of his talent.