These are unusual times, in which a variety of freedoms and pleasures have been denied us by a global pandemic. You might not be able to leave the house, but you can still argue long and loud and here's another opportunity.
I watched my first All Blacks test, against Wales in Cardiff in 1980, and haven't missed too many since. Some very fine – and sometimes great – players have worn the silver fern over that span and this is my favourite 15 of them.
Exclusion from this line-up is not a slight on anyone, nor is this meant to be the definitive word on the last 40 years of All Blacks rugby. This team merely reflects my preferences and is entirely subjective.
To that end, please complain loudly if you don't like it. Don't ring (because I don't tend to answer the phone) but bag me by other means if you like.
And, more than anything, look after yourselves and your family and let's all hope we're all here to tell the tale of this pandemic in a few months' time.
What a player, probably the most brilliant I can recall seeing. Even now his deeds still amaze, as evidenced by the proliferation of Cullen highlights reels that exist around the place.
Blessed with great pace and evasive skills, Cullen's ability to beat defenders truly was remarkable and your heart skipped a beat whenever he got near the ball.
14. John Kirwan
1984-1994; 63 tests
There's a pattern in some of these selections, in that many are men who broke the mould. Be it with athleticism or skill, they changed the way people played their position or altered our perception of what such a player could do.
Kirwan, with his size and speed and sidestep, was one of those. Bryan Williams pre-dates me a bit, but Kirwan took what Williams had done and lifted it to another level.
13. Joe Stanley
1986-1990; 27 tests
He might not be on your list, but he's definitely on mine. Frank Bunce and Tana Umaga were others I considered, but Stanley's distribution skills put him in a different league.
Few men straightened an attack like Stanley. With the ball in two hands, he hit the line so square and kept so many defenders honest.
He could carry but, by playing so direct, Stanley created so much space for his outsides. Better still, his ability to then put the ball out in front of men such as John Kirwan, Craig Green and John Gallagher put Stanley in a class of his own.
These last 40 years have seen a lot of strong-running All Blacks second five-eighths. Many have been very effective in that role but, for me, Mauger's skill and subtlety set him apart.
11. Jonah Lomu
1994-2002; 63 tests
Again, we're talking about a man who changed rugby.
Sure, there have been more complete players to appear on the wing for New Zealand. Jeff Wilson, for one, was a guy whose range of skills probably put Lomu's to shame.
But when Lomu was well – and even when he wasn't sometimes – he did things on a rugby field that we'd never seen before.
Just the complete first five-eighth. We've seen blokes like Grant Fox and Beauden Barrett be stars in their time, but neither possessed the all-round game of Carter.
At his best, there have been none better in his position anywhere in the world.
9. Aaron Smith
2012-present; 92 tests
No halfback has suited the style of rugby most All Blacks teams have sought to play, better than Aaron Smith.
We want the game to played at pace, and with accuracy, and Smith epitomises that.
Others such as Justin Marshall and Dave Loveridge and Graham Bachop are remembered as great All Blacks halfbacks too, but Smith has taken the position to heights we probably haven't seen before.
8. Murray Mexted
1979-1985; 34 tests
Wayne Shelford played 22 tests for New Zealand. Twenty-two! It's really not a lot when you consider the 127 Kieran Read cobbled together.
That's partly why these are difficult exercises but, if I had to, I'd argue for Shelford ahead of Read every time. Shelford was a legend in his era and the nation felt a safer place when 'Buck' was the captain and No 8.
Zinzan Brooke also enjoyed two or three phenomenal years of test rugby, but best of all in my time was Murray Mexted.
He'd have been a sensation in the modern game, given the combination of athleticism and toughness he played with. Mexted oozed charisma and style too, at a time when All Blacks forwards could be a fairly dour lot.
This is by no means a slight on Richie McCaw, who occupies a colossal place in All Blacks' history.
But Jones was a bit like Cullen or Lomu. We'd never really seen anyone do the things that he did and it's not an exaggeration to say a period of national mourning greeted the anterior cruciate ligament rupture he suffered in 1989.
Such was medicine at the time, there were grave fears Jones might never run again, let alone play rugby at anything like the levels he'd taken openside play to since lighting up the 1987 Rugby World Cup.
The Jones of later years, who played on the blindside and bashed ball-carriers for fun, was still a very fine player, but nothing like the phenomenon who'd come before.
Kaino might not have won test matches on his own, but he contributed to wins in a way that few blindside flankers ever had.
The controlled ferocity of his football was remarkable and he was able to dominate opponents on both attack and defence.
5. Brodie Retallick
2012-present; 81 tests
There's an argument to be made that Retallick is the best all round player on the planet.
A good lineout forward, whose work at the breakdown is of the highest order, Retallick carries strongly too. Better than that, though, he's also a better playmaker than many backs.
Sure, our backline stars can all tuck the ball under an arm and run. But few are genuine ballplayers, who can put teammates through holes the way big Brodie does.
The term "dockyard brawl'' used to be synonymous with lineouts.
At best, they could be described as a shambles, from which there was no guarantee you'd win your own throw. Jones changed that for the All Blacks, with his leaping ability and aerial skills.
Even when lifting came into the game, New Zealand's supply of ball was hardly plentiful. What they got came from Jones, even though the opposition knew almost every throw was coming his way.
Fitzpatrick was a guy with a big mouth and a few Auckland airs that not everyone liked initially. But the All Blacks captaincy made him and, while he forever chipped away at opponents, he grew to become someone the whole country admired and counted on.
Before Fitzpatrick, players didn't say much to referees. But he gave them a running commentary of their performance, to the point where they were intimidated by him.
He also set the benchmark when it came to lineout throwing.
1. Tony Woodcock
2002-2015; 118 tests
Like Brown, Woodcock was elite in his field.
Competition for places is among the things that have made the All Blacks so formidable over the years. But, again like Brown, Woodcock wasn't just the best New Zealander in his position for the bulk of his career, but the best in the world too.
A great scrummager, with a seemingly limitless engine, Woodcock chugged around the field like few props before him, often scoring tries in the most unexpected times and places.