Robert 'Rob' Key, former England batsman-turned-commentator, had suffered a mini-stroke during the weekend and has been in recovery ever since.
Key, 41, played in 15 Tests between 2002 and 2005, as well as five ODIs and a one-off T20I. He is more known for his amazing double century against West Indies which came in a Test at Lord’s. It was his maiden ton, but he only managed six more Tests.
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In English county cricket, he played for Kent in 17 years from 1998 to 2015, captaining the side for nine seasons in two separate spells, and scoring 19,415 first-class runs at 40.45, with 54 hundreds.
He led the club to promotion as Division Two County Champions in 2010, and also captained them at two Twenty20 Cup Finals Days, as well as the FP Trophy final in 2008. Since retirement, he is a member of the Sky Sports' commentary team.
Key shared the news of his stroke on his Instagram account on Monday. "Long weekend, Turns out I've had a mini stroke. Thanks to everyone at the kent and Canterbury hospital especially Charlie And dr baht. Now got to eat food with no flavour and take pills #triffic," he wrote.