This is all grist for the analysis mill, but for now my overriding takeaway from Eden Park is that All Blacks supporters have grown so accustomed to success they've forgotten how to be a crowd.
This was a big game for any number of reasons, not least that the cherished Bledisloe Cup was genuinely on the line. I expected the stadium to be crackling with energy from the start, but the only sense of community seemed to come from 30,000 people dressed for a funeral recording the haka on their phones.
Eden Park's piecemeal development and cricket ground dimensions make it difficult to achieve the cauldron effect that makes live sport so compelling, but to blame a stadium would be missing the point.
For the first half an hour you would have found more fizz in a half-empty can of Rheineck than you did on the bleachers. Even a lacklustre rendition of the global laughingstock "black, black, black" chant would have been welcomed.
It would be exaggerating to say you could hear a pin drop but you could certainly hear individual conversations about the offside line taking place rows behind you.
It was only when the All Blacks started to assert real authority and staked a handy lead that the vibe changed from a sort of edgy quiet to something short of raucous celebration.
That's when the realisation hit: New Zealand fans aren't interested in the contest, they're just in it for the confirmation.
They want their fears eased; their collective confidence boosted by the knowledge that the All Blacks remain in the seat of power.
The joy comes not from the sport itself, but the result… as long as the result is the right one.
It makes for a strange sort of atmosphere, with the expectation of victory always getting in the way of the thrill of battle.
So as the crowd filed out of the ground and into cars, bars and buses, the fans were back in their happy place, with All Black primacy once again confirmed and illusions of vulnerability shelved for the time being.
They'd found their voice again.