The Herald - Herald Sport

Key backs Archer to be England’s ‘special’ one at T20 World Cup

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ROB KEY has backed Jofra Archer to prove he is England’s “special” one at the T20 World Cup but admits he is still crossing his fingers over the seamer’s fitness after a year out of the game.

Once he was passed fit for England’s title defence in the Caribbean, Key had no qualms about selecting Archer in a 15-man squad, despite the 29-year-old suffering a long series of false starts and setbacks over the past couple of years.

He has not played profession­al cricket since the Indian Premier League last May, laid low by a recurrence of a stress fracture in his troublesom­e right elbow, but his status as an X-factor cricketer means he is pencilled in to lead the attack with high expectatio­ns.

All he has to do now is make the team flight to his native Barbados on May 31 without picking up any further injuries. “Jofra is a bowler that’s just so special you do everything you can to try to get him back playing,” said Key, England’s managing director of men’s cricket. “He’s one of those rare cricketers. When you look at the attributes you want for a bowler in internatio­nal cricket, Jofra has all of them. We’ve taken the longer road this time but, as always with Jofra, it’s fingers crossed until he’s out there playing.”

Archer is currently playing club cricket in Barbados and will turn out for Sussex’s second XI before featuring in a four-match warm-up series against Pakistan at the end of May.

The majority of England’s squad was long settled, with only a couple of tricky picks to work through. Uncapped left-armer Tom Hartley got the nod ahead of teenage leg-spinner Rehan Ahmed as back-up to Adil Rashid and Moeen Ali, with the Lancastria­n proving his mettle on the recent Test tour of India, while there were contrastin­g fortunes for Chris Jordan and Chris Woakes.

No pace bowler has taken more T20 wickets for England than 35-year-old Jordan, a close friend and Bajan compatriot of Archer, and an uptick in his batting output has tipped the scales in his favour. Woakes, meanwhile, was overlooked having struggled at key moments in last year’s 50-over World Cup wipeout.

Key commended Hartley for his “youth and optimism” and suggested Ahmed was already being primed for a standby role. Woakes could be handed a similar replacemen­t role in the event of injuries but may be edging towards red-ball specialism.

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