Sam Billings says he would be "honoured" and "jump at an opportunity" to succeed Jos Buttler as England's next ODI captain.
Buttler stepped down as his nation's white-ball skipper following their group-stage exit from the recent Champions Trophy, in which they lost all three matches.
Head coach Brendon McCullum and director of cricket Rob Key have not ruled out the possibility of the next captain coming from outside the current squad.
Billings has not played for England since November 2022, but is an experienced white-ball skipper, having led Oval Invincibles to victory in The Hundred in the last two season, as well as Dubai Capitals to the ILT20 in February.
"I'd be honoured, you would obviously jump at an opportunity like that," he said when asked about being linked with the England captaincy. "I feel like I can add value.
"I've not had a conversation with anyone, but from a leadership point of view, I've loved the time over the past few years where I've had some really good success.
"The talent in domestic cricket in this country is always there, certainly in white-ball cricket. You don't have to reinvent the wheel. It will just be a tweak here or there, picking a really nice, balanced side.
"It should provide a great opportunity for all of us in England. If you're going to stick your hand up and perform well, there are opportunities up for grabs, or there should be, in those formats."
Test captain Ben Stokes is among the leading candidates to succeed Buttler, along with white-ball vice-captain Harry Brook.
However, Stokes has not played white-ball cricket for England in 18 months due to various injury setbacks - including knee and hamstring operations.
With five home Tests against India and the Ashes tour of Australia coming up later this year, Billings believes Stokes should focus on the red-ball format.
"I can't speak highly enough of Ben Stokes," he added. "There's no better man in terms of captaincy and as an all-round cricketer. But his priority is the Ashes and the five-Test series against India.
"He is probably in the position where he can answer where his body can take him. Harry Brook is another one who fits similar criteria. You've got to balance it out. Playing all formats for England has never been tougher."