Seven goals in five Euro 2020 qualifiers for England and seven for Spurs this season — once again the numbers stack up for Harry Kane, although they tell just a small part of the story.
In Sofia yesterday, England's captain conceded the club he returns to this week find themselves in a "tough period", ninth in the Premier League and already 13 points behind leaders Liverpool.
In May, Kane was one game from a Champions League winners' medal but now Tottenham look further away than ever.
This looms as a crucial season in the career of a striker who emerged from nowhere five years ago and now, with every goal, seems to be passing another august name from England's past on the all-time scorers' list. His penalty in Prague last week took him past Bryan Robson and level with David Platt on 27 and one more will take him to 11th, alongside Steve Bloomer.
Kane's was a rare standout performance in the defeat by the Czech Republic that put the brakes on England's qualifying campaign, for his judicious use of the ball and two eye-catching passes to Raheem Sterling, one in each half.