The Chelsea nightclub scandal left England managing director Rob Key in a state of “disbelief and anger”. As speculation swirled around Ben Stokes‘ future and reports emerged that the England captain was even considering his international career in the aftermath of the incident, the ECB made its first major move 48 hours later by dropping both Stokes and Gus Atkinson for the second Test against New Zealand at The Oval.
But it was the accompanying captaincy decision that raised the biggest questions.
Rather than turning to Harry Brook, England’s vice-captain in Tests and current white-ball skipper, the ECB handed the role to Joe Root on an interim basis. The move immediately sparked debate about what it could mean for Stokes’ future as captain.
On paper, Brook appeared the obvious choice. Had Stokes been unavailable because of injury or workload management, Brook would almost certainly have stepped in as captain. However, England’s current predicament is far from routine. The team is dealing with an ongoing investigation involving its captain, while Brook himself was fined by the ECB after a late-night incident in Wellington ahead of an ODI against New Zealand last year.
Yet Key insisted Brook’s disciplinary history was not the decisive factor. Instead, he pointed to the scale of the challenge, the scrutiny surrounding the role and Brook’s existing responsibilities across formats.
“I just don’t feel that it is the right time,” Key told the BBC. “That’s the decision we came to. The Test captaincy is a massive job, even on an interim basis, especially going into this next Test match and everything Harry would have to deal with.
“Harry is also getting his head around white-ball cricket while being one of the best Test batters in the world. It just didn’t feel like the right time for a number of different reasons.”
Key also highlighted England’s trust in Root, who previously captained the side in 64 Tests.
“English cricket is incredibly fortunate to have Joe Root. English cricket has relied on him not just as a batter. Every time you’re 10 for 2, Joe Root is the man who gets England out of a hole. Yet again, Joe Root doesn’t question anything when you ask him to do something.”
What does the decision mean for Ben Stokes?
At first glance, the appointment of Root instead of Brook appears significant.
Had England viewed this as the beginning of a permanent transition away from Stokes, Brook would have been the natural candidate to take charge and begin establishing himself as the long-term leader. By opting for Root — a trusted senior figure and former captain — England have effectively chosen a caretaker rather than an heir.
That keeps the door open for Stokes.
The move suggests the ECB is not yet ready to make a long-term captaincy decision while investigations remain ongoing. It also avoids burdening Brook with additional responsibilities at a time when he is already leading England’s white-ball sides and remains a key batter across formats.
However, it would be premature to interpret the decision as a full endorsement of Stokes.
During his media briefing at The Oval, Key repeatedly declined opportunities to publicly back Stokes as captain, insisting the ECB would allow the process to run its course before deciding what comes next.
“In terms of can Ben captain again, we’ve just got to let that play out,” Key said.
“The decision moving forward is about what’s best for the team and what’s best for Ben. It’s not just about what happened on Sunday night. It’s about the best thing moving forward and that’s why we need time because that’s a big decision.”
Key also admitted the incident had damaged months of work aimed at rebuilding trust between the England team and the public.
“We have spent a lot of time over the past few months trying to make sure what we’re portraying to the public is helping us regain their trust.
“We haven’t done that with what’s happened here. That’s such a shame because what I saw the team do on the field was such a good win against an excellent New Zealand team.
“All the things we’ve been working on, every single thing within the dressing room and within that side, all the work we’ve tried to do to reconnect the game — it feels like we’ve just been smashed in the face with that. That is incredibly frustrating.”
For now, the ECB’s message appears clear: Joe Root is a temporary solution, not a permanent successor.
Whether that ultimately proves to be good news for Ben Stokes depends on what the ongoing investigations conclude — and whether England’s captain can rebuild the trust that Key admits has been damaged.
