The importance of New Zealander Ben Te'o to the British and Irish Lions backline has just increased significantly following the thigh injury to Owen Farrell which has ruled the Englishman out of tomorrow's match against the Maori in Rotorua.
Te'o, a second-five who grew up in Orewa, north of Auckland, played rugby and league before leaving for Australia and the NRL as a 17-year-old, has already shone on this tour as a player who will almost certainly be in the mix for the first test against the All Blacks.
At 1.88m tall and well over 100kg, he is big, direct, and with good hands and feet - a handful on defence and attack for the opposition which he showed against the Crusaders.
He is, in other words, perfect for coach Warren Gatland's game-plan of putting the opposition in a vice and squeezing until the mistakes come.
There is a suspicion that Farrell, originally viewed by Gatland as a No10 on this tour, could play a part at second-five in the first test next Saturday. His quadriceps injury isn't seen as major, but if he isn't fit then Te'o will almost certainly start.
A year ago, Te'o returned to Australia on England's tour under Eddie Jones but didn't play due to injury. Since then, the Worcester Warriors player who qualifies for England and the Lions via his mother, has won eight caps under Jones (including helping England's crucial Six Nations fightback against Wales in Cardiff) and finds himself on a tour of his homeland in the famous red jersey.