ANDREW Tye became just the second Australian bowler to concede 100 runs in a one-day international during Tuesday night’s record-breaking defeat to England.

Tye registered figures of 0-100 off nine overs in Trent Bridge, becoming the first Australian to leak 100 runs since Mick Lewis in 2006 against South Africa.

Lewis conceded a record 0-113 off 10 overs in Johannesburg and never played for Australia again.

Tye is only the 11th bowler to have ever conceded 100 runs in an ODI and only the fourth to have done so without bowling his full allotment of overs.

His economy of 11.11 runs an over is the 33rd worst (minimum 30 balls bowled) in history and fourth among Australians, behind Stuart Clark (12.42 v West Indies, 2006), Mitchell Johnson (11.33 v New Zealand, 2015) and Lewis (11.30 v South Africa, 2006).

The unwanted feat is a cruel blow for Tye, who has been one of Australia’s more reliable bowlers in the absence of Mitchell Starc, Pat Cummins and Josh Hazlewood.

HIGHEST EVER MEN’S ODI TOTAL
Nearly two years ago England broke the record for the highest total in men’s ODI history, hammering 3-444 against Pakistan at Trent Bridge.

On Tuesday (local time) Eoin Morgan’s men surpassed that score with four-and-a-half overs to spare, going on to finish with a total of 6-481.

There is good news of sorts for Australia however. Alongside avoiding the ignominy of becoming the first List A side to ever concede 500 runs, the Australians did not concede the highest total in ODI cricket. In fact, it wasn’t even the biggest score posted in ODI cricket this month.

New Zealand’s women’s team posted a total of 4-490 against Ireland in an ODI on June 8.

AUSTRALIA’S WORST EVER ODI LOSS
Tim Paine’s side shattered a 32-year-old record against England.

The 242-run loss is the biggest margin of defeat in terms of runs Australia has ever suffered in ODI cricket, eclipsing the 206-run loss Allan Border’s XI suffered against New Zealand in 1986. On that occasion Australia was bowled out for 70 after the Kiwis posted a total of 7-276 at Adelaide Oval.

Australia’s defeat in Nottingham is the 12th worst in men’s ODI history. New Zealand inflicted a record-setting 290-run defeat on Ireland in 2008.

ENGLAND’S BIGGEST EVER WIN
This is England’s biggest ever win in an ODI in terms of runs. And you have to mind the gap to second, which is the 210-run win the team enjoyed against New Zealand in 2015.

It is comfortably the biggest margin of victory England has enjoyed over Australia, eclipsing the 101-run win Mike Brearley led the country to in 1977.

The biggest win Australia has enjoyed over England is 162 runs — a benchmark set in 1999.

MOST RUNS SCORED IN BOUNDARIES IN AN INNINGS
Things could have been worse for Australia. Despite England posting a record-total, the hosts’ batsmen actually wasted over a third of the deliveries they faced as Australia’s eight-bowlers produced 107 dots.

The reason England still scored 481 runs — and possibly the reason there were so many dots — is because the batsmen weren’t looking to trade in ones and twos. Two-hundred-and-ninety of England’s runs came in boundaries. That is 18 more runs than the 272 South Africa scored in fours and sixes against India in 2015.

In total, England hit 21 sixes and 41 fours. That is the second most sixes in an innings, behind the 22 New Zealand hit against the West Indies in 2014.

SIXTH-HIGHEST RUN-RATE
England posted the highest total in men’s ODI history, so obviously the team also set a new record for highest run-rate (9.62) in a completed innings.

What is remarkable is the fact that run-rate is the sixth-highest in a men’s ODI without any form qualification. The longest innings played where a team has scored runs faster is 21 overs. On that occasion New Zealand battered 283 runs against the West Indies at a run rate of 13.47.