"It is one of those things I have always remembered. We lost. I don't know if we would have won if I had played but I do know I did not have the opportunity to influence it.
"The fact I still remember it now must say something about me. I don't remember much of the detail of the game or the score, only the feeling afterwards. It was that anger of not being able to change things."
That anger remains Jones' defining quality. Compared with his Lions teammates, he is neither as athletic as Maro Itoje nor as destructive as Courtney Lawes or Iain Henderson. He does not possess the handling skills of a Brodie Retallick. But no other player in world rugby can shape a game according to his furious will alone.
Sean Holley, his first coach at the Ospreys, remembers clasping eyes on Jones for the first time when he was 17. Physically he was an unimpressive specimen. As Jones himself admits "I had enough puppy fat for three labradors."
Yet Holley quickly realised the kid from Swansea had something special about him.
"I'm not saying he was this outstanding player back then but he had character, personality, intelligence, energy and exuberance," Holley said. "To find all those qualities in someone so young is very rare."
As Jones recalls: "My instinct back then was probably not 10m passes or kicking but pushing my heart out in the scrum, being effective in the maul and a bit of ballast elsewhere. I like to think I have added to those skills, but those core skills can often be under-rated.
"It is very easy to make athletes and it is very difficult to make rugby players with that rugby instinct. I would like to think I have got a bit of rugby instinct and have become more of a rugby athlete along the way."
His other distinguishing feature in those days was a pair of white boots which led to the nickname "Alun Gwyn Boots" that still endures today.
"I can get real fruity in the boot department," Jones confirms. "I still have them somewhere."
Jones is a different man now. The birth of his daughter changed him. So, too, the death of his father, Tim, last year after a long fight with illness. He accepts he has mellowed a fraction.
"I think I probably have," Jones said. "Not entirely, I hope. To a point, family does that and a couple of life experiences both positive and negative that have definitely altered my perception on rugby.
"Whereas my first 28-29 years, rugby was the entire focus, which was not that healthy, now you realise what is really important."
Further perspective was provided during his rehabilitation from a shoulder injury sustained in Wales' 20-18 defeat to France on March 18.
To speed up his recovery, Jones installed a mini altitude tent at his home - "that was a true test of my marriage" - and attending the South Wales Multiple Sclerosis Therapy Centre where he attended communal sessions in a pressurised chamber.
"There were people sat in there with various ailments, people who had MS, cancer," Jones said. "There was a bit of Top Trumps and there was me with a bad shoulder."
Jones returned to action nine days ago in Ospreys' PRO12 semifinal defeat to Munster. Now his attention turns to the Lions and the challenge of facing the All Blacks which he makes no effort to play down.
"We are playing the most rounded team that has ever existed," Jones said,
"Two World Cup wins, unbeaten at Eden Park for 23 years, one loss in something like 30 games for their Super Rugby franchises."
The ludicrous nature of the Lions schedule in New Zealand has been well documented. So, too, the future threats to the Lions as a concept from the avarice of certain stakeholders. The solution to protecting the Lions, according to Jones, lies in a fully integrated global calendar.
"I don't think you need to go global rugby to save the Lions but I think you need to go global rugby to save rugby and not lose things like the Lions," said Jones.
"There's so much rugby on. If you had a global calendar, then you would have less games, you create more intrigue, create supply and demand with regards to the sport and that will heighten the intrigue with regards to the Lions.
"Create more mystique not only at international level but at club level as well. I'm not a commercial or marketing person at all but surely it makes sense to streamline everything."
That is one battle Jones may not be able to win. Already his list of accomplishments includes two Grand Slams, a further Six Nations championship, three PRO12 titles, 116 international caps as well as captaining Wales and the 2013 Lions in their series decider against Australia. Other targets remain: victory against the All Blacks, the 2019 World Cup, Champions Cup progress with the Ospreys. These are all on what he deems his "long list of itches that still need scratching".
But will there come a point that seething 10-year-old Swansea schoolboy will be satisfied with what he has accomplished?
"I would like to say yes but it is probably a no," Jones said. "I know there are certain things I may never achieve. If I did all those things, will I still have things to do? Probably. Will I still have regrets? Probably. I think that is just who I am."