How many times has a team been bowled out twice in a day?
And which batsman with 5000 or more ODI runs has scored the most ducks?
Eoin Morgan's duck at Old Trafford against Australia was his 14th in ODIs • Getty Images
That amazing onslaught at Trent Bridge last week improved the record for the highest total in one-day internationals from 444 (by England against Pakistan in 2016, also at Trent Bridge) to 481. In 2016, England had bettered the previous record by just one run - Sri Lanka's 443 against Netherlands in Amstelveen in 2006.
Australia lost the fourth one-day international in Chester-le-Street last week despite Aaron Finch making 100, and Shaun Marsh 101. Rather surprisingly, perhaps, it was the 27th time a team had lost an ODI despite recording two individual hundreds. The first instance was in 1982-83, when Pakistan lost to India in Lahore even though Zaheer Abbas made 105 and Javed Miandad 119 not out.
England's captain (and new leading run scorer) Eoin Morgan is actually well down this particular table: he's bagged 14 ducks so far in 205 one-day internationals, the latest in the fifth ODI against Australia at Old Trafford. There are 35 scorers of 5000 runs above him on the list, which is headed by Sri Lanka's Sanath Jayasuriya - he made 34 ducks, four more than Shahid Afridi and six ahead of Mahela Jayawardene.
Afghanistan were bowled out for 109 and 103 on the second day of their recent introduction to Test cricket, against India in Bengaluru. This was the first time a team had suffered this fate in their inaugural Test, if that's what you mean: it has happened only three times overall. India were bowled out twice by England on the third day of the third Test at Old Trafford in 1952. And Zimbabwe have done it twice in recent years, both against New Zealand: in Harare in 2005, and in Napier in 2011-12.
The lowest total in one-day internationals to include an individual innings of 150 or more is Sri Lanka's 229 for 5 in Mumbai in May 1997, when Sanath Jayasuriya led the chase of India's 225 for 7 by hammering 151 not out from 120 balls. Shane Watson did better percentage-wise in clubbing an unbeaten 185 of Australia's 232 for 1 to overhaul Bangladesh in Mirpur in 2010-11. In third place - with the highest for an all-out innings, and also for someone who ended up on the losing side - is Tony Ura's 151 out of Papua New Guinea's 235 against Ireland in Harare during the recent World Cup Qualifier in Zimbabwe in March.
Steven Lynch is the editor of the updated edition of Wisden on the Ashes