England fast bowler Jofra Archer found his World Cup winner’s medal after he said on Saturday that he had “gone mad” looking for the prized piece of silverware while moving.

Last year saw the Sussex quick establish himself on the global stage as he helped England win their first men’s 50-over global title, with Archer’s 20 wickets at 23.05 the most taken by any member of the champions’ squad

The 25-year-old, who only made his international debut in 2019, was also given the daunting responsibility of bowling the Super Over in the final at Lord’s.

Archer, however, held his nerve brilliantly as England edged out New Zealand in a thrilling finish decided on boundary countback after the teams’ scores were level after both regulation play and cricket’s answer to ‘extra time’.

But the Barbados-born quick, asked Saturday about where his medal was now, told BBC Radio: “I had it hanging off a portrait someone did for me and sent to me, I had my medal hanging on that.

“I moved flat and the picture is on the new wall but there’s no medal. I turned the house upside down for about a week but I still haven’t managed to find it. I know it should be in the house so I will keep eyes out for it but I’ve gone mad looking for it already.”

Later on, he posted a picture on Twitter saying he found it:

Archer, who returned to the United Kingdom from Barbados last month, said the fact all major cricket worldwide, including the start of the English season, was suspended because of the pandemic at least gave him time to continue searching for the medal. “There’s nothing else to do in isolation. It’s all hands on deck.”

Although Archer may have seemed the ‘go-to’ option for England captain Eoin Morgan when it came to picking a bowler for the Super Over, the paceman himself was reluctant to press his own claims given he’d not long been in the side.

Archer, asked when he knew he’d been chosen for the Super Over, replied: “Pretty late. I wasn’t sure until I had to go down there and warm up.

“That doesn’t mean I didn’t want it, I just didn’t think I was in a position to volunteer. I was just coming into the team, I’d played the least amount of games in the squad. I didn’t think it was my time to volunteer.

“It was the only Super Over of the whole tournament, I never actually thought about it or planned for the situation, it just happened,” he added.

(With agency inputs)