February 22, the 13th day of competition for New Zealand at the Winter Olympics.
Unlucky 13? Not for New Zealand, whose winter sports community should be in a state of near delirium courtesy of the country's most celebrated 16-year-olds, Zoi Sadowski-Synnott and Nico Porteous. Doubt that and you're wrong.
It won't last but the administrators say this is a case of striking while the iron in the snow is hot. The sports bosses can now look at the future with vastly different minds from a fortnight ago.
Sadowski-Synnott and Porteous are also bright young people who, along with their team-mates and friends back home, view the world through a slightly different prism from most of us. The language, for a start. "Sick" and "insane" are words more commonly used in different situations, with different meanings, than in the form of celebrating achievements in the snow.
Never heard of a switch backside 900 either I'll wager. Or a cork, at least in this context. (A switch is when a snowboarder rides in the opposite of their natural stance, with the 'wrong' foot at the front of the stance. And to put you out of your misery, a cork is an off-axis rotation. If a rider inverts twice, the trick becomes a double cork and so on. Clear?)