How many team-mates did Tendulkar have? And how many opponents?
Also: how many players have hit the first or second ball of their Test careers for six?
Graham Gooch had 113 team-mates in Test cricket: the record • Chris Cole/Getty Images
During his Test career, which has now stretched over 15 years, James Anderson has had 85 different team-mates. There have been 22 players who have taken the field with more, no fewer than 15 of them for England: John Emburey (86), Geoff Boycott and Mike Gatting (87), Godfrey Evans (88), Michael Atherton and David Gower (91), Jack Hobbs (93), Wilfred Rhodes (96), Denis Compton (96), Colin Cowdrey and Alec Stewart (97), Len Hutton (98), Wally Hammond (106), Frank Woolley (111, in only 64 matches) and the overall leader Graham Gooch, who played alongside 113 different men. Sachin Tendulkar lies third, with 110 team-mates: Shivnarine Chanderpaul had 105, Rahul Dravid 93, Younis Khan 92, Inzamam-ul-Haq 91, Brian Lara 90, and Daniel Vettori 86.
That's a good spot, because that match, at Trent Bridge last month, provided the very first instance of the top five batsmen reaching double figures in all four innings of a Test. There had been ten previous cases of 19, most recently by Bangladesh and Sri Lanka in Chittagong in 2013-14 (Tamim Iqbal was the man to miss out, with a second-ball duck in the first innings).
Rishabh Pant struck his second ball in a Test - from Adil Rashid - for six in the third Test, at Trent Bridge. Pant was the 12th player known to have got off the mark in Tests with a six, but the first from India. Eric Freeman of Australia also hit his second ball for six, off the Indian spinner Erapalli Prasanna in Brisbane in 1967-68. But one man went one better: the New Zealand offspinner Mark Craig hit the first ball he received in a Test - from Sulieman Benn of West Indies - for six in Kingston in 2014.
Moeen Ali followed 219 for Worcestershire in Scarborough last month with 6 for 49 as Yorkshire tumbled to a heavy defeat. This was only the eighth such performance in the County Championship, and the first since 1946, when Bill Edrich coupled an unbeaten 222 with 7 for 69 for Middlesex at Northampton.
There have now been 29 instances of a batsman scoring exactly 200 runs in a Test. Virat Kohli has done it three times - in addition to the first and third matches of this series, at Edgbaston and at Trent Bridge, he also scored 200 (in India's only innings) against West Indies in North Sound (Antigua) in July 2016.
Steven Lynch is the editor of the updated edition of Wisden on the Ashes