Flintoff: Rob Key is 'best captain England never had'
Former allrounder credits friend and ex-team-mate for bringing him back to the sport he loves
ESPNcricinfo staff
19-Oct-2025 • 12 hrs ago
Andrew Flintoff's return to coaching was engineered by his friend Rob Key • Ashley Allen/Getty Images
Andrew Flintoff has credited his friend and former team-mate Rob Key for creating the conditions that have allowed the England men's set-up to flourish under Ben Stokes and Brendon McCullum, and says that the team's positive outlook is a key reason why he wanted to come on board as England Lions head coach.
Speaking to the Beard Before Wicket podcast, Flintoff reiterated that Key's friendship had been a crucial factor in his return to public life, following the horrific car-crash on the set of Top Gear in December 2022.
However, it was Key's vision for English cricket that persuaded Flintoff to make a full return to the sport in a coaching capacity, initially as a consultant for the men's white-ball squad, and latterly as Lions coach, including for this winter's tour of Australia, which will run parallel to the main Ashes campaign.
The pair have been close friends since their days in the England Under-19 set-up, and Flintoff declared that Key was "England's best captain never to a captain the side".
"His cricket brain works in a different way to a lot of other people," he said. "He's similar to Shane Warne and people like that, they see the game differently.
"You're always going to have your critics. You can go into Wetherspoons down the road, and there'll be 15 people who know better than Pep Guardiola. Everyone's got an opinion, but I think he enjoys being the one making the decisions. He loved playing, but by doing this job, he can make an impact, and he wants to do it his way.
"I think what they've done - himself [Key], Brendon, Stokes, now Harry [Brook]'s taken over in one-day cricket - as a fan, it's been amazing. The way they play and the players they pick, they seem really good lads from the outside. I suppose that's one of the reasons I wanted to be involved in this.
"English cricket's going forward. We're leading the way in a lot of respects, and I want to be a part of that. By doing the Lions, I'm getting a chance to get involved and hopefully bring the next lads through. I'm very much on the same page of what they're trying to do with England, and I feel fortunate to be a part of it."
England head into this winter's Ashes with Ben Stokes looking to cement his legacy as captain with a first series win in the country since 2010-11. Flintoff himself captained England to a 5-0 loss in the 2006-07 campaign, and while he recognised there were similarities between the two men as players, he insisted Stokes was on a different level as a leader.
"I do see similarities, but as a leader, he's incredible," Flintoff said. "I captained England, and I was terrible. I really was. It wasn't for me, but you see him … he's got that atmosphere. He's got that aura.
Three lions: Steve Harmison, Rob Key and Andrew Flintoff celebrate England's 2004 series win against West Indies•Getty Images
"One of the things which I prided myself on as a player was, when the game's on the line, that's when the best of me came out. And I see that with Ben. Playing against Zimbabwe in Harare, I'm probably not going to at be my best, you know, but in the big moments, that's when I came alive, and that's when Ben does."
Both players have been prone to bowling long, punishing spells as captain - with Flintoff once bowling more than 50 overs in a drawn Test against Sri Lanka in 2006.
"I just ran myself into the ground," he said. "I've seen him do that a little bit as well, but Ben's got Baz and good people around him, just to save him from himself. I never had that."
Elsewhere in the interview, Flintoff recalled how Key had helped to coax him back into the public domain, first by inviting to attend the 2023 Ashes series in a private capacity, and then by offering him a chance to work behind the scenes with England's squads.
He admitted that he had been "bricking it" prior to his first involvement with the men's squad, for their white-ball series against New Zealand in September 2023, at which stage he had still not been seen in public since his crash.
However, the welcome he received from the squad reminded Flintoff that "actually, this is this is where I want to be, this is where I feel comfortable".
"Cricket did save me," he added. "It got me out of the house, and it got me focused on something, but more importantly, surrounded by people who have got something in common. I genuinely love it. I love the culture. It's so much fun."