He didn't need to sit on the edge of his seat on Saturday night, neither did any of us, as the All Blacks steamrollered their way to victory over their old foes, the Springboks.
For Bill English the outcome of the test match was more keenly anticipated than for the rest of us. If the Boks had played as well as they have done in the past and given us a run for our money the Prime Minister would have been gritting his teeth and for good reason.
A test loss a week out from the election would have had an impact on our feel good factor and that translates into votes, overseas studies show it can affect the vote by around two percent. So it was no surprise to anyone that one of the first visitors to the players' dressing rooms after the match was English, posing beside Captain Kieran Read.
There's nothing like associating with the All Black brand, capitalising on a winning formula. His predecessor John Key was never far away from it, falling over himself to give former Captain Ritchie McCaw a knighthood even though McCaw wasn't too keen on the idea himself.
English would love the election victory this Saturday to be as easy as it was for the All Blacks but even though Labour just two months looked as though the game plan was beyond it, the emergence of their star player changed all that.