How many Tests have been won by a team that was 200 runs behind after the first innings?
And Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid's only Test stumpings came off whose bowling?
Thrice Australia have won Tests in which they conceded a first-innings lead of 200 • Getty Images
Neatly, there are three more such matches, including the biggest first-innings deficit overturned for victory in a Test - 291, by Australia in Colombo in 1992-93. Australia had managed only 256 before Sri Lanka piled up 547 for 8, but they bowled Sri Lanka out in the second innings to win by 16 runs, with Shane Warne - in only his third Test - taking the last three wickets.
Rohit Sharma's double stumping - by Quinton de Kock off Keshav Maharaj - against South Africa in Visakhapatnam last October was the 22nd such instance in Tests. There's been another one since: Sikandar Raza was stumped in both innings by Niroshan Dickwella off Lasith Embuldeniya against Sri Lanka in Harare in January.
Sachin Tendulkar was dismissed 296 times in his 200 Tests, and Rahul Dravid 254 times in 164 matches - but you're right, each of them was out stumped only once. The bowler on both occasions is now England's director of cricket - slow left-armer Ashley Giles. Tendulkar was stumped by James Foster in Bangalore in 2001-02, while Dravid was deceived by Giles and stumped by Alec Stewart at Headingley in 2002. It wasn't entirely a triumph for Giles: Dravid had made 148 in a match India won by an innings, while Tendulkar had scored 90 in a rain-affected draw.
The leader here is the MA Aziz Stadium in Chittagong (now Chattogram), which staged eight Tests, all of which ended in positive results, from 2001-02, before being supplanted as the city's main international venue by the Zahur Ahmed Chowdhury Stadium. Bangladesh lost the first seven, but did pull off a victory - their first in any Test - in the eighth, against Zimbabwe in January 2005.
The match in which the tall offspinner Ollie Rayner achieved this considerable feat was for Middlesex against Surrey at The Oval in 2013 - he took 8 for 46 and 7 for 72, and also took three catches in the field.
Steven Lynch is the editor of the updated edition of Wisden on the Ashes