Who has bagged the most ducks in the IPL?
Also: who had the most innings in ODIs without ever being out for a duck?
You're right that Sam Northeast finished last season with an innings of 166 not out (for Glamorgan against Yorkshire in Cardiff) and started this one with an unbeaten 335 at Lord's - the highest individual innings there, as we noted last week. He added 14 not out in the second innings of that Lord's match, then in the last round of Championship matches was out for 11 (and 0) against Derbyshire in Cardiff.
Three players - all of them current - share the unwanted lead on this table at the moment: Glenn Maxwell (126 innings as I write), Dinesh Karthik (226) and Rohit Sharma (243) have all been dismissed for a duck on 17 occasions in the IPL.
The match you're talking about - the 58th and final Test for England's Wilfred Rhodes, the oldest-ever Test player at 52 - was a nine-day "Timeless Test" in Kingston in 1930 that nonetheless finished in a draw as the England team needed to catch their boat home.
The runaway leader in one-day internationals is Kepler Wessels, who had 105 innings - 51 for Australia and 54 for South Africa - and was never out for a duck. Next, a long way behind with 40 duckless innings, come Wessels' sometime South African team-mate Peter Kirsten, and the 1983 Indian World Cup-winner Yashpal Sharma.
Warwickshire's second wicket (Alex Davies for 256) against Durham at Edgbaston last week fell at 562: the only higher score at the fall of the second wicket in a Championship match was 569, by Yorkshire against Derbyshire in Chesterfield in 1898. The English first-class record is slightly higher: Somerset reached 571 for 1 against Cardiff MCCU at Taunton Vale in 2012.
Steven Lynch is the editor of the updated edition of Wisden on the Ashes