Michael Vaughan claims England would be ‘selfish’ to give Ben Stokes white-ball captaincy

Reports suggest that England’s Test skipper and Harry Brook could split the white-ball captaincy duties

Rory Dollard
Friday 04 April 2025 09:07 BST
Comments
Ben Stokes is under consideration for a leadership role in England’s white-ball sides
Ben Stokes is under consideration for a leadership role in England’s white-ball sides (PA)

Michael Vaughan believes it would be “selfish” to hand Ben Stokes England’s ODI captaincy, with reports suggesting he and Harry Brook could be offered a white-ball job split.

Brook recently served as deputy to Jos Buttler before the latter stood down and looks increasingly likely to take the reins of the T20 side.

The Yorkshireman is also a candidate for the 50-over job but it is almost impossible to play a leading role in all three England teams given the demands of the schedule.

Enter Stokes, who has proved a natural skipper in the Test arena and was publicly mooted as a cross-format option by Rob Key, the director of men’s cricket.

While there is an obvious temptation to extend his partnership with Brendon McCullum in the limited-overs arena, where England have struggled badly since their heyday under Eoin Morgan, he is currently recovering from his second hamstring tear in the space of six months.

He retired from ODI cricket in 2022 to manage his workload and prioritise the Test team, later agreeing to return for the 2023 World Cup.

Vaughan has no doubt the 33-year-old would answer the call again but thinks it would be an irresponsible move.

Michael Vaughan does not want Ben Stokes to be given the ODI captaincy
Michael Vaughan does not want Ben Stokes to be given the ODI captaincy (PA)

Speaking at the MCC’s Cowdrey Lecture at Lord’s, he said: “In a way, I think it’s quite selfish to even consider him. He will say yes because he is Ben Stokes. He will do whatever England ask him to do. Just don’t ask him and let him be.

“He gives absolutely everything, not just when he’s playing for England but when he’s training. He is all or nothing. It’s an absolute nonsense to think that Ben Stokes is going to play white-ball cricket.”

England’s first game of the summer is a one-off Test against Zimbabwe from 22-25 May, with their white-ball campaign beginning four days later against the West Indies.

PA

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in