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'I'll be happy to play one Ashes Test': Archer

England pace bowling ace Jofra Archer believes that playing just one Test in the Ashes summer would be a success for him after his injury woes

Jofra Archer feels playing in only one Ashes Test this summer would constitute a success, such is his wariness about overextending himself following a long injury lay-off.

England have a natural urge to unleash Archer against Australia, especially as he seems to have lost none of the attributes that made him such an important weapon in the 2019 series between the two teams.

But the reality is Archer is just a couple of months into his comeback from well-chronicled elbow and back troubles and, even though he is making encouraging progress, England are proceeding with caution.

He has been kept on a strict diet of limited-overs matches so far and England's medical team warned not to field him in two ODIs in three days against both South Africa in January and Bangladesh last week.

When he will make his red-ball return is up in the air. After the final two T20 internationals against Bangladesh, Archer's Indian Premier League commitments are set to occupy him up to the end of May.

Image Id: 6EC01316BF854A7B81A5CAB78BE846F9 Image Caption: Archer bowls in the third ODI against Bangladesh in Chittagong // Getty

England's bid to regain the urn begins a couple of weeks after that but while Archer would relish some involvement in the series, he is content to play the long game given England's hectic fixture schedule.

"If I can play one game this summer, I'll be happy," he said. "If I play more than one, that's just a bonus.

"Coming back and playing cricket for England again means I have already done what I wanted to do.

"I said 18 months ago I was going to be back. Now I'm back, hopefully I have a long career, so it makes no sense doing too much, too soon.

"We have got so much cricket to play, genuinely playing for England you never stop – you're going 11 months a year, pretty much. There is a lot of cricket and I want to play a lot of cricket as well."

Archer intends to bowl with some red balls during his stint with Mumbai Indians and would have no qualms over playing his first first-class match in over two years in a Test against Australia.

But wickets will be a secondary concern to getting through a substantial amount of overs for Archer, who admitted he needs to shake off a "bit more rust" before he is firing on all cylinders.

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"If you're playing competitive cricket all the time, it doesn't matter," Archer said. "I've played in the Ashes already, so you know most of the things that comes with it.

"The pressures, the media, the situations are not going to be anything unknown. The only thing unknown at the moment now would be fitness and if you can actually get through a whole Test match.

"I don't have much expectation except to finish the game. That is the biggest part, to get through 20 (overs) in an innings, maybe 40 or 50 in a game. Obviously I want wickets, but getting overs in is more important."

In four ODIs and one T20 this year, Archer has combined figures of 41-2-220-13 against South Africa and Bangladesh, regularly exceeding 90mph and showcasing his armoury with cleverly-disguised slower balls.

Speaking ahead of the second T20I against the Tigers in Dhaka, however, Archer admitted he has had to adapt to the unresponsive surfaces he has been faced with in Bangladesh.

"To be honest, in Bangladesh I'm not going to be charging in trying to bowl 95mph," he smiled.

2023 Qantas Ashes Tour of the UK

First Test: Friday June 16-Tuesday June 20, Edgbaston

Second Test: Wednesday June 28-Sunday July 2, Lord’s

Third Test: Thursday July 6-Monday July 10, Headingley

FourthTest: Wednesday July 19-Sunday July 23, Old Trafford

FifthTest: Thursday July 27-Monday 31, The Oval