The drop-goal, it seems, has earned a secret redemption in New Zealand now that Daniel Carter has become adept and rather fond of knocking them over.
For most of the last decade, probably longer, the drop-goal has been treated with disdain in New Zealand. It has been the drunken uncle at the family wedding - invited but not really welcome - especially at World Cups.
It is the nature of knock-out rugby that games often go to the wire and the drop goal becomes the means to make and break dreams. Trawl through the past and there is barely a World Cup where the drop goal has not been massively influential: the 1995 final, the 1999 quarter-final between England and South Africa as well as the semi-final between the Wallabies and the Springboks and of course the final of 2003.
Yet despite the legitimacy of the tactic, New Zealanders have been rather dismissive and anti this drop goal business. A kind of moral superiority has existed and grown: that somehow victories with tries are the only ones worth celebrating. The northern hemisphere sides are mocked for nudging the scoreboard up in multiples of three.
After every World Cup, bar the last, debate has broken out about reducing the points value of drop goals.