Wayne Barnes was in the middle of another forward pass controversy during the All Blacks' win over Wales last night.
The decision had no impact on the outcome of the test - the All Blacks were leading 32-21 and eventually added another try to their final advantage - but it did evoke some particularly bad memories.
Barnes, of course, was the man in charge when France knocked the All Blacks out of the 2007 Rugby World Cup, failing to spot a clear forward pass in the build-up to a French try.
The referee had no such problems last night - in fact, it was the opposite. After TJ Perenara crossed for what he thought was his side's fifth try, Barnes sent the decision up to the television match official to check whether Aaron Cruden's pass had drifted forward.
The TMO saw no evidence to support that and was set to award the try but, watching on the Eden Park big screen, Barnes decided to overrule his colleague and deny Perenara.
It was a contentious decision, with most observers believing the pass and try were both legitimate. "Wrong decision by Wayne Barnes," tweeted former England international Will Carling. "If you applied the same criteria to scoring passes - so many tries would be disallowed."