Rarely has there been a more stark example of the financial inequality that is strangling rugby's ability to truly become a global sport.
Rarely have things been so obviously rotten and unfair, but what else to think when a sold out Twickenham is estimated to deliver profit of around $12 million for the RFU and none of that is destined to find its way into Samoan coffers.
From that windfall England will be able to pay their players a match fee of close to $40,000, with the RFU on track to post revenue of around $200 million.
That compares with Samoa who have debts of around $1.7 million and will be paying their players a match fee of about $1000 each and can't be sure they will be solvent by the end of November.
The Samoan Rugby Union has written to the RFU, pleading for a $300,000 share of the match profits to help them cover some of their November tour costs.
"Our fate is dictated by our situation and we are close to insolvency," Samoan Rugby Union chief executive Vincent Fepuleai has been quoted in the English press as saying.
"Without desperate support from our government, we would have been a closed shop a long time ago. We have had debts of almost £1million and we are still making a loss. It's a huge struggle. I wouldn't like to speak about the worst-case scenario. We don't want to go down the road where there is no Samoan national team because our people have a lot of passion. This must not happen."
The RFU will inevitably talk about setting an unwelcome precedent if they pay out and highlight that they have invested millions of dollars in rebuilding Twickenham.
Their argument will be valid but they also have to consider why they are about to invest $800 million in their development over the next four years.
They want to be the world's premier rugby force, but maybe they will be the world's only rugby force if they and all the other Tier One nations don't agree to some kind of change in rugby's financial distribution model.
England are by no means alone in their stance. Every other Tier One nation is just as self-interested and just as reluctant to change the system for the greater good.
The current financial set up is a reciprocal one where the host nation pays the in-bound costs of the team they are playing.
It works for the Tier One unions as they tend to have an equal amount of home and away games in a calendar year.
But the Tier Two nations such as Samoa hardly ever host any games against Tier One nations. The reciprocal thing doesn't work for them, which is why they have their hand out at the moment, unquestionably bemused that England can't see that the world they want to conquer may not have Samoa in it.