How many players have started their careers with three successive fifties in ODIs?
Also: who were the two uncapped players who played in the World XI in 1971-72?
Netherlands batter Max O'Dowd is one of only two men to score successive half-centuries in his first three ODIs • Peter Della Penna
The New Zealand-born Netherlands batter Max O'Dowd started his one-day international career with 86 not out and 59 against Zimbabwe in June 2019, and added 82 against Scotland in Rotterdam last week (his sequence ended when he was out for 8 in the next game).
The match concerned was a long time ago - in the early days of the official County Championship, in August 1893. During a game in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire's amateur wicketkeeper William "Sam" Brain ended Somerset's second innings by stumping three batters off successive deliveries from Charles Townsend, a big-turning legspinner who was only 16 years old at the time. Wisden called it "a sensational incident", while the Times noted that "the innings was finished in a summary manner by young Mr Townsend". Six years later, he played two Tests in the 1899 Ashes series.
The Bengal wicketkeeper Probir "Khokhan" Sen, who played 14 Tests for India, was born in 1926 in Comilla, which was then part of India but is now in Bangladesh. The only other male Test player I can see who was born in present-day Bangladesh appeared in the very first Test of all, for Australia against England in Melbourne in March 1877; Bransby Cooper was born in Dacca, as Dhaka was known at the time. Cooper had played county cricket in England for Kent and Middlesex before moving in 1871 to Australia, where he worked in the Customs department.
The World XI you're talking about undertook a full tour of Australia in 1971-72, replacing a trip by South Africa which was cancelled owing to the political situation there at the time. Garry Sobers reprised his role as World XI captain from 18 months previously in England, but this team was not as strong as that awesome 1970 line-up. After some criticism of his side's approach - they were bowled out for 59 in the second unofficial Test in Perth - Sobers unfurled one of the greatest innings of all in the next match, in Melbourne, spanking a memorable 254. "The innings was probably the best seen in Australia," said the watching Don Bradman, who played a few useful innings himself. "The people who saw Sobers have enjoyed one of the historic events of cricket. They were privileged to have such an experience."
The great West Indian Everton Weekes, who died last year, is the only man to score centuries in five successive Test innings, against England in 1947-48 and India in 1948-49 - the sequence was ended by a questionable run-out decision when he had scored 90 in the fourth Test in Madras (now Chennai). By coincidence, the wicketkeeper who whipped the bails off was Khokhan Sen, who is mentioned above. Weekes recalled: "I went forward and started running but came back into my crease and watched the whole thing happen. The umpire might have thought he had seen enough of me for the series…"
Steven Lynch is the editor of the updated edition of Wisden on the Ashes