Since then, Mike Delany has plied his trade in the top professional leagues in Japan, France and England before returning home to once again wear the No 10 jersey for the Steamers.
His impact at the age of 35 has been a revelation. Bay of Plenty had the worst goalkicking statistics in the whole Mitre 10 Cup last year but Delany has missed just one shot from the opening two games.
His goalkicking and field kicking is just one part of the whole package. He runs the cutter from first-five with confidence and all that rugby experience behind him.
Some of his plays to set up tries against Hawke's Bay showed his form has not waned over the years. If anything he looks a more complete footballer now than he did when the All Blacks picked him for the end of year tour in 2009.
Every year the average age of the players in the Mitre 10 Cup seems to get lower. Playing live on Sky TV for your First XV one minute and then the next for a major provincial union seems the norm these days.
But that rapid transition means no time to learn the ropes, to gain the intangibles that come through experiencing the highs and lows of the game before stepping up to provincial rugby.
Everything is fast tracked these days which is not always a positive thing.
That is why players like Delany are absolute gems in the Mitre 10 Cup.
I hope last year's NZ Barbarians Secondary Schools star and Bay of Plenty Academy player Kaleb Trask is picking Delany's brain as often as he can. At 18, Trask is deemed too young to play Mitre 10 Cup, but his time will come and so will the accolades.
But to learn from a wily old fox like Delany will quicken his apprenticeship more than anything.
I hope NZ Rugby will encourage older players to come home and add their experience and skills to make the Mitre 10 Cup an even stronger competition.
Meanwhile, it was great to see the Black Ferns win the Women's Rugby World Cup against England yesterday morning in a superb performance.
I look forward to catching up with the three Rangataua club players Kelly Brazier, Sarah Goss and Les Ketu when they return home.