<p>Every successful team needs a special talent and England pace bowler Jofra Archer has the 'X-factor', former West Indies Twenty20 skipper Carlos Brathwaite has said.</p>.<p>England dropped Barbados-born Archer from the second test against West Indies after he breached <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/coronavirus-live-news-covid-19-latest-updates.html" target="_blank">Covid</a>-19 bio-security protocols but the 25-year-old could return for the deciding test starting on Friday.</p>.<p>"There's the traditional English way of doing it by the book, but all good teams need the X-factor. I think he brings that X-factor... Kevin Pietersen brought that X-factor," Brathwaite told the BBC.</p>.<p>"While you're hoping that the majority of the team are 75 percent consistent and they do everything by the book -- they are always early, they eat right, they do this and they do that -- you do need that rogue.</p>.<p>"I'm not saying that he is that, but every team needs that rogue, that X-factor, that doesn't play by the rules of the book and 'do it my way' type of character."</p>.<p>Brathwaite said Archer had the potential to become a leader like Ben Stokes, who captained the side in the opening game against the West Indies in the absence of Joe Root.</p>.<p>Stokes has had his share of troubles off the pitch, missing the 2017 Ashes series against Australia after sustaining a hand injury in a brawl outside a Bristol nightclub before being cleared of affray.</p>.<p>"If you think about it, Stokes not so long ago was seen as that type of character. Now he's seen as a leader," Brathwaite added.</p>.<p>"If England can find a way to transform Jofra into the leader that Stokes has become while keeping his X-factor on-field performance, then they are two serious cricketers to be contending with for the next five to 10 years." </p>
<p>Every successful team needs a special talent and England pace bowler Jofra Archer has the 'X-factor', former West Indies Twenty20 skipper Carlos Brathwaite has said.</p>.<p>England dropped Barbados-born Archer from the second test against West Indies after he breached <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/coronavirus-live-news-covid-19-latest-updates.html" target="_blank">Covid</a>-19 bio-security protocols but the 25-year-old could return for the deciding test starting on Friday.</p>.<p>"There's the traditional English way of doing it by the book, but all good teams need the X-factor. I think he brings that X-factor... Kevin Pietersen brought that X-factor," Brathwaite told the BBC.</p>.<p>"While you're hoping that the majority of the team are 75 percent consistent and they do everything by the book -- they are always early, they eat right, they do this and they do that -- you do need that rogue.</p>.<p>"I'm not saying that he is that, but every team needs that rogue, that X-factor, that doesn't play by the rules of the book and 'do it my way' type of character."</p>.<p>Brathwaite said Archer had the potential to become a leader like Ben Stokes, who captained the side in the opening game against the West Indies in the absence of Joe Root.</p>.<p>Stokes has had his share of troubles off the pitch, missing the 2017 Ashes series against Australia after sustaining a hand injury in a brawl outside a Bristol nightclub before being cleared of affray.</p>.<p>"If you think about it, Stokes not so long ago was seen as that type of character. Now he's seen as a leader," Brathwaite added.</p>.<p>"If England can find a way to transform Jofra into the leader that Stokes has become while keeping his X-factor on-field performance, then they are two serious cricketers to be contending with for the next five to 10 years." </p>