Home "derbies" have proved to be much more popular, which helped Sanzaar make the decision to adopt the conference system. So why are we grizzling that our sides have to play each other so much?
Well, maybe it's just the coaches complaining, but they shouldn't be. They are in a global centre of excellence, as business analysts would say. They are competing in the world's toughest arena of their enterprise, where high performance is constantly demanded, customers are well-informed and severely critical, where recruitment, skills, training and supporting industries are the best in the business and the product is consistently ahead of its rivals.
That formula for success will be familiar to anyone who remembers "The Porter Project on New Zealand" that applied Harvard Professor Michael Porter's theory of competitive advantage to this country mid-way through our economic reform. It found rugby to be a model of how to succeed with a small population and so far from large markets. And that was around 1990, before professionalism, Sky contracts and Super Rugby.
If the Porter Project looked at New Zealand rugby now they would be even more impressed. One of the project's interests was in the kind of government regulation that can strengthen industries exposed to international competition. The NZ Rugby Union issued one crucial regulation to its players when it put five regional teams into an international competition.
It said only New Zealanders playing for New Zealand teams would be picked for the All Blacks. It used the established mana of its national brand to offset the offers its best players would receive to play in bigger, richer markets.
Many said it wouldn't work, that money would trump mana and the All Blacks would be weakened unless exceptions were made. But it has worked brilliantly. We lose few players before their peak and our rugby dominates the game worldwide, not only with the All Blacks and the Super teams and the pace and style of our game, but through the coaches we export now.
There must be lessons here for all our international trade. New Zealand is on a roll now, with a rapidly growing population, booming tourism and strong products from farms, gardens, orchards and vineyards. Those products don't quite have a national brand with the mana of the All Blacks but they may not be far off it. A bit more investment in enforcing and promoting the excellence of products permitted to wear the silver fern could work wonders.
We probably should not be shy about putting more public money into infrastructure too, for tourism, fine food and wines, distinctive and competitive cultural products and sport.
Dare we build another stadium in Auckland, in the right place this time, after spending so much in recent years on Eden Park? Probably. We should have done if for the 2011 Rugby World Cup, and probably would have done it if Trevor Mallard had not proposed such an obscene site on the central wharves.
We can afford to be a little less modest, recognise our strengths and play to them. Our rivals should be complaining about the Super Rugby format, not us. They need to compete with the best.