I had a similar problem, with the difference I had to figure out how to make it work in a more complex case: the problem I was facing was how to make position sticky work if in the same page there are more tables, some of them with just one row into the thead element and others with 2 rows with th elements.
The solution I found was to use css pseudo classes first-child and last-child.
The following code show how to do the trick:
// 1st rule:
thead > :first-child th, thead > :last-child th
{
position: sticky;
z-index: 1;
}
//2nd rule
thead > :last-child th
{
top: 80px;
}
//3rd rule
thead > :first-child th
{
top: 50px;
}
Let's focus on the 2nd and the 3rd css rule: you may be tempted to write them logically ordered as first-child and next the last-child, but it will not work properly. In this solution, in order to work properly you must put the last-child of the 2nd:
thead > :last-child th
BEFORE the first-child that must be written as the 3rd rule:
thead > :first-child th
even if at first look seems to be illogical.
So the above is a versatile code that works even if you have either 1 or 2 rows into different thead elements in tables in the same html page because css rules are applied by the browser from top to bottom and after it finishes parsing the html-css content you get the right look of your th elements. But if you invert the 2nd and the 3rd it doesn't work anymore because it is needed that in case it has to parse a single th into a thead the 3rd rule must overcome the 2nd one to work properly. In fact if you have a table in witch thead you put just one row into, you may have a problems using just
thead th
or inverting the 2nd rule with the 3rd rule in my code like
thead > :first-child th {...}
thead > :last-child th {...}
because when you have a single row the first-child is simultaneously the last-child too so the browser does a mess applying to it the 80px position form the top, that is not what you want.