Jofra Archer rested as England name XI for T20I opener vs India in Durham
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
England have named their playing XI for the first T20I against India at Chester-Le-Street, Durham on Wednesday, 30 June, with fast bowler Jofra Archer left out of the side as part of a managed rest alongside fellow pacer Josh Tongue, both of whom featured in England's recent Test series against New Zealand.
Two Changes from the World Cup Semi-Final XI
England have made two alterations to the team that fell to India in the semi-finals of the 2026 T20 World Cup. Saqib Mahmood comes in to replace Jamie Overton in the pace department, while Luke Wood fills the slot vacated by Archer. The management has been careful to frame both absences as precautionary rest rather than injury.
Brook Doubles Down on England-First Commitment
Captain Harry Brook, 26, used the pre-match build-up to restate his unequivocal commitment to international cricket. The Yorkshire batter, who guided England to the World Cup semi-finals, has voluntarily stepped away from the bulk of the global franchise circuit — a stance he says is central to his preparation across all three formats.
'I've committed completely to England cricket. I've said that I don't want to play any franchise cricket except for the Hundred,' Brook said. 'Everything I do is to play cricket for England. Whatever I do on and off the field is to perform as well as I can for England. That's why I don't play in the IPL, PSL, or any other franchise competitions.'
Brook added that the gaps in his calendar created by skipping franchise tournaments are used deliberately. 'The fact that I don't play franchise cricket means there are times in my calendar when I'm not playing. I'd focus on my fitness and get ready to play all three formats, which has been my dream since I was a child.'
Test Captaincy Question Sidestepped
Brook is widely regarded as a frontrunner to succeed to England's Test captaincy, but he was measured when pressed on the subject. 'If I am or am not the captain for England in Test cricket, I'd be happy just to still be playing for England,' he said, deflecting speculation without closing the door.
Notably, this series against India arrives on the back of a high-profile World Cup campaign, making it an early test of how England regroup and whether Brook can cement his standing as the side's long-term leader across formats.
England's Playing XI
England have named the following side for the first T20I: Phil Salt, Jos Buttler, Harry Brook (captain), Jacob Bethell, Tom Banton, Sam Curran, Will Jacks, Liam Dawson, Saqib Mahmood, Adil Rashid, Luke Wood.
What to Watch
With Archer and Tongue rested, England's pace attack will lean heavily on Mahmood and Wood against a powerful Indian batting line-up. Brook's form with the bat and his leadership under pressure will be closely scrutinised as the series unfolds.