It's that time again, a moment as good as any for paying homage to Richie McCaw.
Without his wonder try in Wellington, the All Blacks' long winning run at home may have ended. Thinking back over that gritty test, it's hard to remember many try-scoring opportunities at all. McCaw recognised one, though, zooming up with perfect timing to take Kieran Read's offload and diving into the corner like a wing.
Other veterans in this All Blacks lineup - Keven Mealamu, Ma'a Nonu, Conrad Smith and Cory Jane - look tired. Mealamu only plays a few minutes these days, and the rest - all younger than McCaw - are backs. McCaw is not only a hard-working forward, but he plays 80 minutes.
McCaw is zooming around close enough to the way he always has. He rediscovered some old ball running vigour against the Boks. The statistics usually put him among the hardest workers in any game - the man is a miracle.
Approaching 34, McCaw is not ancient. But when you add up all the matches (including 130-odd tests), the exacting physical demands of his position, the number of minutes, plus the responsibility he has carried for so long as captain, leader, superstar, legend etc, then he is defying what many of us thought possible in modern rugby.