Who has missed the most Tests between appearances?
Also: fathers and sons in the Ashes, the most hundreds in a team innings, and the longest international careers of them all
Stuart Broad and Shaun Marsh faced each other in the 2017 Brisbane Test (and in the 2015 Ashes), and their fathers, Chris and Geoff competed in 1986-87 • Philip Brown/Getty Images
This is a first in the Ashes - or, rather, it was a first in the 2015 series, when Stuart Broad faced both Mitchell and Shaun Marsh. There's only one other father-and-son pairing for Australia - Ned and Syd Gregory in the 19th century - which cuts down the Ashes options. There have been several instances of fathers and sons on opposing sides in Tests, and I'm indebted to indefatigable researchers Arnold D'Souza, Aslam Siddiqui and Hemant Brar for ferreting them all out.
India's fine effort against Sri Lanka in Nagpur at the weekend was the 22nd time overall that a Test innings had contained four individual centuries, but only the third instance for India - they also did it against Bangladesh in Mirpur in 2007, and against South Africa in Kolkata in 2009-10.
Before being recalled for the opening Test of the Ashes series in Brisbane, Tim Paine had missed Australia's last 78 Tests - his previous cap came against India in Bangalore in October 2010. That equalled the Australian record: Brad Hogg also missed 78 Tests, between his debut in 1996-97 and his second match, in 2002-03. The Australian record in terms of time is held by Bob Simpson, who went almost ten years between 1967-68 and his recall, aged nearly 40, as captain during the World Series Cricket era - but Simmo missed only 71 Tests in that period.
The Middlesex fast bowler John Warr won two Test caps, both in Australia in 1950-51, and was indeed bowled in all four of his innings - the last three of them ducks. Warr was more famous for taking only one wicket (Ian Johnson) in the series, giving him a Test average of 281.00 that for around 40 years was the worst of all.
Sanath Jayasuriya played his first one-day international for Sri Lanka in Melbourne on Boxing Day 1989, and played his 445th and last ODI in England in June 2011, at The Oval. His ODI career lasted 21 years 184 days, and only Sachin Tendulkar had a longer one - 22 years 91 days, as this table shows. Javed Miandad also played ODIs more than 20 years apart.
Steven Lynch is the editor of the updated edition of Wisden on the Ashes