The Guardian (USA)

‘An absolute honour’: England appoint Rob Key as director of men’s cricket

- Ali Martin

Rob Key will begin working on an overhaul of England’s coaching and selection setup after the former Kent captain turned Sky Sports pundit was named as the new director of men’s cricket on Sunday.

Key has replaced Ashley Giles, who was fired after the winter’s calamitous 4-0 Ashes defeat. With no Test captain or permanent head coach in place, or anyone in charge of selection currently, the 42-year-old has a relatively blank canvas to work with.

Ben Stokes is the obvious choice to become Test captain after Joe Root resigned on Friday, while Key is also expected to hire separate head coaches for the red and white-ball teams given the markedly different stages of their developmen­t. The national selector role, cut by Giles last year, is also tipped to return.

Key, who will leave his role at Sky after six years, said: “It is an absolute honour to take up this role. The chance to have an impact and make a difference is an opportunit­y given to very few and I will give it everything I have to try to shape the next great era of English

men’s cricket.”

Once the head coaches are hired – names such as Gary Kirsten, Mahela Jayawarden­e and Stephen Fleming are believed to be in his thoughts – Key’s role will be to line-manage England’s centrally contracted players and support staff, while also working closely with county directors on best practice.

The former batter will similarly oversee and challenge the men’s performanc­e pathway, which includes the national academy at Loughborou­gh, the Under-19s team and the England Lions; fresh eyes from outside the existing system mean all three department­s are braced for a shake-up.

The game as a whole is under the microscope, with Key to also play a central role in the so-called “High Performanc­e” review that was triggered by the winter’s Ashes debacle and could lead to a restructur­e of domestic competitio­ns – and a possible reduction in first-class county matches – from 2023 onwards.

This review is being run by Andrew Strauss, who returned as director of men’s cricket in an interim capacity in February and oversaw the recruitmen­t process which resulted in his former Sky colleague and England teammate being hired.

Like Strauss before him, Key is light on direct experience of sports administra­tion or coaching after moving from an 18-year playing career with Kent – during which he amassed nearly 20,000 first-class runs and won 15 Test caps – into television punditry.

That said, nine seasons as captain at Kent saw Key heavily involved in the day-to-day running of the club. He has also previously sat on the England and Wales Cricket Board’s cricket performanc­e committee and been a longstandi­ng mentor to Zak Crawley, the current England opener.

Tom Harrison, the ECB chief executive, said: “Rob stood out in a very competitiv­e field. His passion and knowledge of the game at domestic and internatio­nal level is outstandin­g. He is a proven leader and combines an approachab­le nature with fresh original thinking and resilience which will stand him in good stead.”

 ?? ?? Rob Key scored more than 28,000 runs in his playing career, and played 21 times for England across all formats. Photograph: Visionhaus/ Getty Images
Rob Key scored more than 28,000 runs in his playing career, and played 21 times for England across all formats. Photograph: Visionhaus/ Getty Images

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