Bristol Post

I’d love to be a regular part of England’s coaching team - Lewis

- Rory DOLLARD

JON Lewis, one of the frontrunne­rs to join England’s revamped coaching team, would relish the chance to continue his work at the highest level and believes he could help guide Jofra Archer’s journey from “part of the family” to “the best bowler in the world”.

Lewis already has an important day job in charge of England Under-19s but has been an increasing­ly familiar figure around the senior set-up in recent months, working with the limited-overs squad during the summer before being seconded to the recent tour of South Africa and next month’s trip to Sri Lanka.

There has not been a full-time pace specialist on the backroom staff since Chris Silverwood was promoted to head coach in 2019, but the England and Wales Cricket Board is set to rectify that in the new year amid a round of new appointmen­ts.

Lewis is well placed, well thought of and well known to many of the squad, but none more so than Archer - who is rested from next month’s Sri Lanka trip but could lead the country’s attack for a decade with good management and a fair wind.

When Archer first swapped Barbados for Sussex as a teenager in 2015, Lewis was not only on hand as a seam bowling mentor but an impromptu landlord as well.

“Jofra lived with me at home for two years, he was part of the family,” Lewis, the former Gloucester­shire pace bowler and captain, told the PA news agency.

“I worked with him coming through at the club and he’s just grown and grown. When he first started out as a profession­al he had all the attributes now he’s a more rounded player.

“It’s really satisfying to see guys progress and I love to see him flying. To play a small part in that journey is really rewarding. I know he wants to be the best bowler in the world and he’s not far away already.

“At this moment if you’re picking a World XI across all three formats, there’s a pretty good chance he’d be up there for selection among the best three or four around. The world is his oyster.

“Whether or not I’m part of the journey going forward is not up to me but I’d love to be part of this team.”

Lewis has long-standing links elsewhere in the squad, bonding with Chris Jordan at Hove and playing in Tom Curran’s List A debut for Surrey, not to mention a deep working knowledge of the next generation of internatio­nal prospects. He won 16 caps for England across all three forms - with one Test appearance and a memorable T20 outing against Australia - in the Ashes summer of 2005, but could be set for an even more impactful career behind the scenes.

“This team look like they going places and are ready for success,” he said. “There are very few fulltime jobs with the senior team and it was Covid that created this opportunit­y for me really. But it’s exciting working right at the sharp end of sport and I feel like I’ve been able to contribute.

“With the Under-19s you work on having great basics, you’re trying to ignite their thinking, inspire them and connect with them.

“When you’re with the England team all those fundamenta­ls are in place already, you’re just trying to bolt things on. The conversati­ons are around the tiniest margins of their game - can you make them just a little bit better? - but the most important part is making sure they walk out on the field relaxed and confident.

“There’s not a player in the history of the game who hasn’t had any self doubt, so it’s about ensuring they feel confident and working out the right time to make an interventi­on.”

 ?? Picture: Shaun Botterill/Getty ?? Jon Lewis at an England nets session in Cape Town, South Africa, this month
Picture: Shaun Botterill/Getty Jon Lewis at an England nets session in Cape Town, South Africa, this month
 ??  ?? England speedsterJ­ofra Archer
England speedsterJ­ofra Archer

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