NEW CHANDIGARH: Eight years after his IPL debut, and after repeated injury interruptions, Rajasthan Royals’
Jofra Archer has returned to the thing he does best: bowl fast and hit the stumps.
This isn’t just another good season for Archer. This looks like the closest we’ve seen to his peak version since he first electrified the IPL with that zipper pace, that uncanny bounce, that aura of a bowler who simply doesn’t believe in compromise.
In IPL-2026, Archer has finally found rhythm, form, and most importantly, fitness. His three-wicket spell in the Eliminator dismantled Sunrisers Hyderabad’s top order comprising Abhishek Sharma, Travis Head and Ishan Kishan in the Powerplay itself. It was a knockout performance from Archer, a statement that he’s back, and he’s better than he’s been in years.
The numbers tell part of the story. After an inconsistent 2025 season, Archer has transformed into the strike bowler RR always wanted when they paid Rs 12.50 crore for him. He is bowling at 150-plus kph regularly, the kind of pace that used to be his trademark but disappeared during years of elbow surgeries, stress fractures, and the long, frustrating road back.
But the real story isn’t in the speed gun. It’s in the body language.
Watch how he celebrates now. When Abhishek Sharma top-edged a 150kph-plus rocket to the wicketkeeper off Archer’s bowling in the first over of SRH’s chase on Wednesday, Archer sprinted all the way to fine leg, celebrating with the same fire like Imran Tahir used to do during his playing days. Archer is not just bowling anymore; he’s enjoying every moment, every wicket, every sprint.
The contrast with previous seasons is stark. In 2025, Archer was inconsistent (11 wickets in 12 games; avg: 39.18, economy: 9.5), often pushing himself too hard, trying to prove he was still the same bowler who had taken England to the 2019 ODI World Cup final. This season, he’s different. He’s bowling with purpose, not desperation.
Archer produced a big spell with the new ball on Wednesday to blast out SRH’s big three: Sharma for a duck, Head for 17, and Kishan for 33. No other bowler has dismissed all three of them in a single innings since they got together at SRH in 2025.
“Apart from the figures, I thought I bowled pretty alright,” Archer said afterwards. “Usually the team that gets most wickets in the Powerplay wins, and we did that.”
“Bowling to the SRH top order, you just got to hold your nerve. Your good balls and bad balls are going to the boundary, so you have to hang in there,” he added.
James Franklin, SRH’s pace-bowling coach, identified precisely what made Archer a differentiating factor. “He’s got speed and he’s got bounce,” Franklin said. “He can get the ball to move in the air and off the pitch as well. So, they’re pretty good starting points. He still went for runs, he didn’t escape going for runs, but he got three massive wickets. Our top three batters in that three-over spell he bowled in the Powerplay... that puts a big dent into any side. The point of difference for him was that he could produce wicket-taking deliveries.”
A blunt message from RR coach during the season changed everything. “I don’t care what you do, I don’t want any more pace-off from you.” Archer listened. He stopped slowing down. Now, he just bowls fast.
That’s the secret to his resurgence. He’s not trying to be a different bowler. He’s being the bowler he always was — fast, bouncy and fearless.
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