Interesting... any more details on her state of preservation though? The article states she's well preserved by then proceeds to describe the site (in a somewhat contradictory manner) thus:
The wreckage is reportedly solid oak and the seabed is strewn with bronze cannons...
Which would seem to suggest to may that much of the structure of the wreck has given way (I'd have expected most cannons on the gun-deck to have remained confined aboard if she was largely intact...).
Just, if they do decide they want to raise her they'd better get onto it soon. Back in the 1980s the poms' missed such a chance when the wreck of the 1670s vintage third rate
Stirling Castle emerged from the sand and discovered to be substantially intact (well preserved to gun-deck level... bloody amazing when sister ships lost mere kilometers away during the same storm are now just ballast mounds). Needless to say, no action was taken and the wreck in now in the process of collapse...