Stuart Broad has warned that sacking ECB managing director Rob Key could cause a domino effect and put Ben Stokes’ position as England captain at risk.
The inquest into England’s Ashes defeat is already in full swing after Australia secured comprehensive wins in Perth, Brisbane and Adelaide, preserving England’s Ashes defeat in record-matching time.
Despite England winning the fourth Test in Melbourne, finally ending a 15-year wait for victory in Australia, senior leaders Key, Stokes and head coach Brendon McCullum remain in the spotlight after an 11-day collapse.
Broad accepts there will be tough conversations, but remains steadfast in his support for Stokes and McCullum to remain in their positions.
“100 per cent (Stokes is the man for me),” Broad said on the Sky Sports Cricket Podcast.
“If Rob Key loses his position, Buzz[McCallum]will say, ‘I don’t need the job, he gave me the job, I’ll go.’ And Stokes will go, and if Buzz is my man, I’ll go. I’ve been nervous about that.
“We’ll have to talk about preparation, planning and selection, because in the end we lost 3-0 in the Ashes after three games against a team we thought we could beat pretty well.
“But I think they should continue. They also gave Baz a white-ball contract until the end of the 2027 World Cup, so they should respect that.”
“Regardless of the outcome of Sydney (the fifth Test), I will be patient with everyone in their position at the moment.”
Broad, England’s second-highest Test wicket-taker and a key figure in their triumphant tour of Australia in 2010/11, highlighted what he saw as a complete failure to adequately prepare for England’s recent demise Down Under.
He labeled the decision to schedule only one internal warm-up against the England Lions at Lilac Hill before the first Test as a “waste of time”.
“This tour has been really bad in the fact that we’re 3-0 after three games,” Broad added.
“Usually when we lose here it’s the players who get criticized, but the players are good enough. We just didn’t prepare properly and the players just didn’t have the right mental state and physicality to come here and win.”
“I know preparation is the word most used throughout this tour, but Lilac Hill, which doesn’t bounce higher than shin height, doesn’t prepare you for Optus or Gabba.
“They should have had WACA to prepare. There’s a net there, a net in the center, a place to practice in the center. They completely wasted their time at Lilac Hill.”
“They should have had a Test match ground to prepare properly, but that’s a mistake. I don’t know why it became an issue, but time is running out.
“You’ll be flying in from New Zealand to play a white-ball series a few weeks before the Ashes start. You don’t have three weeks to play three separate matches.”
Ashes Series in Australia 2025-26
Australia leads the five-game series with three wins and one loss.


