On Thursday at Lord’s, Key said England will not rush the decision and have “plenty of options”, but he sees a greater alignment between Test and 50-over cricket, when compared to the T20 format.
It could be a possibility that Stokes combines the 50-over leadership with the Test side, working alongside a different T20 captain.
“I believe that Test cricket and 50-over cricket are probably closer than T20s, which is the outlier now,” said Key.
Key also mentioned current white-ball vice-captain Harry Brook and limited-overs specialists Phil Salt and Liam Livingstone, who have both led England in the past year.
If Stokes or Brook take a white-ball leadership role, their workload would come into consideration, particularly in a year when England face marquee Test series at home to India and away to Australia.
A home white-ball series against West Indies begins only four days after a one-off Test against Zimbabwe in May, while the summer ends with limited-overs matches against South Africa and Ireland.
England play a white-ball series in New Zealand prior to the Ashes, which is then followed by a T20 World Cup in India and Sri Lanka early next year.
Stokes was man of the match when England won the 50-over World Cup in 2019 and played a major role when they were crowned T20 world champions in 2022.
He retired from 50-over cricket in the summer of 2022 and reversed the decision to play in the 2023 World Cup.
“We’ve got to get the most out of our best players,” said Key. “We want them playing for England.
“That’s important and that’s going to take some work because you’re also throwing franchise cricket into that.
“But I believe our players are committed to playing for England as much as they can.”
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