Mohamed Salah is only in his fifth full season as a Liverpool player, but he is on the verge of reaching a milestone which Premier League legend Thierry Henry and Dennis Bergkamp failed to achieve over a longer period.
Salah has already joined the league's '100 club,' with 111 of his 113 Premier League goals coming for the Reds, while he has already racked up 43 top-flight assists since moving to Anfield.
Another assist against Leicester City on Thursday - potentially his first game back after disappointment in the Africa Cup of Nations final - would take him to double figures for goals and assists in a single season for the third time.
Arsenal stars Henry and Bergkamp each only achieved the feat twice, but Salah still has some work to do if he wants to claim the all-time Premier League record.
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Salah has 16 goals and nine assists from his first 20 appearances in the league this season, and has never recorded more than 10 Premier League assists in a single campaign.
He ended up with 19 goals and 10 assists in the 2019-20 title-winning campaign, while his first season at Liverpool brought 32 goals and 10 assists.
Henry's two 'double double' seasons came in 2004-05, with a return of 25 goals and 14 assists which feels within Salah's grasp, and a frankly outrageous 24 goals and 20 assists in 2002-03.
Salah is one of three current Premier League players aiming for a third separate double-double, along with Son Heung-min (who is aiming for a third in a row) and Riyad Mahrez.
Spurs forward Son has eight goals and three assists so far this term, while Manchester City man Mahrez is on just six goals and four assists.
If Salah or either of his rivals make it to double-figures in both columns this season, they would join former Chelsea striker Didier Drogba in the all-time charts.
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Only three players have achieved the feat more than three times in Premier League history.
Frank Lampard and Eric Cantona have both done it four times, with all of Cantona's coming in the 90s and all of Lampard's after the turn of the century.
However, Wayne Rooney is way out in front with five - the first in 2006-07 and the last seven seasons later - with the current crop left with a lot of work to do to match the former England forward's achievement.
Salah is just one goal and one assist away from matching Rooney's 2013-14 tallies, and he will surely feel the total is well within his grasp.
If he stays at Liverpool for the long-haul, that high mark of five double-doubles might well be matched before he hangs up his boots.