There is nothing in rugby quite so good as a tour. And nothing better than the beginning of a tour when the team arrives full of faces we are going to get to know, resplendent in their blazers, startled by the reception, suddenly realising what it means to be a good rugby player in New Zealand.
A Lion's tour is all that remains of the grand odysseys of yesteryear. At 10 matches this one barely compares with those of old that went to practically every province and saw winter turn to spring. But it feels like a real tour as the annual June and November jaunts never do. This itinerary will let us see all the tourists. By the time it comes to the first test we will be debating the merits of various players as avidly as our own and comparing armchair selections of both sides.
A tour is so much more interesting than any other contest outside of the Rugby World Cup that you wonder why the professional era cannot accommodate more of them.
The explanation, I suppose, is the same as that for Twenty20 cricket, four-game sets of tennis and, the spectacle of the moment, this crazy America's Cup. Sport thinks the modern fan has less time and a more limited attention span. I wonder if that's true.
I'm enjoying the new America's Cup. It has some of the same tactical elements of the longer format. It is like seeing the previous sailing on fast forward, which we used to see quite a lot. Russell Coutts must have been watching those tracking animations and thinking that is what the punters want.