Trevor Bayliss feels England's methods during his tenure as head coach over the last four years have been vindicated by them winning the World Cup for the first time in their history.
England ended 44 years of hurt at Lord's in the most dramatic of circumstances, defeating New Zealand in the final by virtue of registering more boundaries as the teams finished level in both the match and then after a super over.
While heartbreaking for the Kiwis, England capped off their one-day international transformation under the axis of Bayliss and captain Eoin Morgan by hoisting aloft their first global 50-over trophy.
He said: "He's still good enough to be in this team for a while longer yet. There's a T20 World Cup coming up in 12 months which I'm sure he'll be more than up for."
Bayliss is set to stand down from his position at the end of the summer. While England are revelling in their success, attention will turn to the Ashes following a one-off Test against Ireland at Lord's later this month.
He said: "There's still six very important matches to go in this summer, so we won't be taking our foot off the pedal.
"I've not even thought about the Ashes at the moment, so there's still some planning to do."