New Zealand ended 2009 on a slightly sour note on Saturday as a Bryan Habana hat-trick-inspired Barbarians beat them 25-18 at Twickenham.
The dashing Springbok winger was treated to a standing ovation at HQ as reward for a dazzling display of finishing that saw him named man of the match.
Ben Smith and lock Anthony Boric crossed for New Zealand -- the world's top ranked side -- but it was not enough to prevent the Barbarians from clinching a famous victory.
Australia fly-half Matt Giteau must have pushed Habana close for the man of the match honours after booting seven points and proving a thorn in the All Blacks' side throughout.
Barbarians fixtures are traditionally preceded by a discussion over their relevance in the modern game, though the 63,554 crowd that descended on Twickenham clearly thought they still have a role to play.
As a spectacle the contest just about lived up to expectation, though it was fascinating throughout and was more akin to a Test match than a crowd-pleaser.
The Barbarians' line-up contained 925 caps including six Springboks and while they sought to honour their swashbuckling tradition, New Zealand provided typically resilient opposition.
The All Blacks fielded what was effectively their second string -- skipper Richie McCaw aside -- and suffered the first defeat of a gruelling five-match tour that ended on Saturday.
The crowd had come to be entertained so New Zealand's decision to take an early kick at goal -- Stephen Donald landed the points -- drew a chorus of boos.
Provoked by the response, both teams began running at each other with intent and it was unfortunate the All Blacks' ambition proved their undoing in the eleventh minute.
Hooker Corey Flynn surged into the 22 and placed the ball down in the hope of recycling it -- but there was no support.
Showing quick thinking, Wallaby full-back Drew Mitchell scooped up possession and dashed 30 metres before supplying the scoring pass to Habana.
Matt Giteau made the tricky touchline conversion and kept the pressure on with a muscular run that swept him within five metres of the line.
Scrum-half Fourie du Preez almost wriggled over but was denied by McCaw in the nick of time.
The Barbarians were on the rampage, but New Zealand responded with a precise series of moves that restored their lead.
Luke McAlister made the initial break that stretched the Barbarians' defence, creating an overlap that straight running and quick hands exploited to send Smith over.
New Zealand seemed in control but Habana pounced for his second try, grabbing a loose pass by Donald to race home after juggling with the ball and giving the Barbarians a 14-10 half-time lead.
Only a try-saving tackle by McAlister prevented Rocky Elsom from crossing in the right corner after being teed-up by a crossfield bomb from Giteau.
It was then Habana's turn to come to his side's rescue, preventing Brendon Leonard from crossing after the All Blacks has spent several minutes pounding at the line with a series of scrums.
The Barbarians' determination to win was underlined when Giteau slotted his first penalty with three points sparking a period of domination from the invitational team.
But once again McAlister strode into space, starting a move that was finished when Boric crashed over.
Leading 17-15, the Barbarians raced in their third try with Habana inevitably accepting the crucial pass after Giteau's slippery run has caused doubt in New Zealand's defence.
Substitute Mike Delany landed a penalty with nine minutes to go but Morne Steyn stepped off the bench to respond in kind and the Barbarians successfully closed out the game.
The scorers:
For Barbarians:
Tries: Habana 3
Con: Giteau 2
Pen: Giteau, Steyn
For New Zealand:
Tries: Smith, Boric
Con: Donald
Pen: Donald, Delany
Barbarians: 15 Drew Mitchell, 14 Joe Rokocoko, 13 Jaque Fourie, 12 Jamie Roberts, 11 Bryan Habana, 10 Matt Giteau, 9 Fourie du Preez, 8 George Smith, 7 Schalk Burger, 6 Rocky Elsom, 5 Victor Matfield (capt), 4 Carlo del Fava, 3 WP Nel, 2 Bismarck du Plessis, 1 Salvatore Perugini.
Replacements: 16 Stephen Moore, 17 Tendai Mtawarira, 18 Quintin Geldenhuys, 19 Andy Powell, 20 Will Genia, 21 Morne Steyn, 22 Leigh Halfpenny.
New Zealand: 15 Cory Jane, 14 Ben Smith, 13 Tamati Ellison, 12 Luke McAlister, 11 Zac Guildford, 10 Stephen Donald, 9 Brendon Leonard, 8 Rodney So'oialo, 7 Richie McCaw (capt), 6 Liam Messam, 5 Anthony Boric, 4 Jason Eaton, 3 John Afoa, 2 Corey Flynn, 1 Wyatt Crockett.
Replacements: 16 Andrew Hore, 17 Neemia Tialata, 18 Adam Thomson, 19 Tanerau Latimer, 20 Jimmy Cowan, 21 Mike Delany, 22 Sitiveni Sivivatu.
Referee: Christophe Berdos (France)
Assistant referees: Romain Poite (France, David Changleng (Scotland)
TMO: Andrew Turner (England), Graham Hughes (England)
The match was played in chilly 11 degrees in the Romanian capital. The sides have only ever met once before, when Romania won 17-15 in Brive at the Rugby World Cup in 1991
In an international match built up to the highest of standards, the 80 minutes played in the blinding mist at Croke Park was as tough and physical as you would expect from these two rugby heavyweights.
The scorers:
It was a cold cold day in Edinburgh and the first half did nothing at all to warm the digits of the hardy souls who had braved Murrayfield's icy gates.
The scorers:
A lot has been said about the state of the game over the past few days, but I challenge anyone calling for a change in the laws to go back and watch this game and then tell me that running rugby is dead.
The Scorers
Say what you will about the Wallabies but they do possess a class and zest that can dominate anyone on their day. This was one of those unfortunately for the shell-shocked Welsh, who were left chasing gold shadows and falling off tackles for large parts of the Cardiff contest.
The scorers:
Despite being without inspirational captain Sergio Parisse due to long-term injury, the Azzurri were a cut above their opponents with Luke McLean's score and a penalty try adding to Craig Gower, Mirco Bergamasco and Tito Tebaldi's kicks.
Canada were much improved in comparison to last week's 46-8 loss and will hope to take that improvement into the match against Russia in Vancouver next weekend.
Centre Keith Earls bagged a double as the Six Nations warmed up for next weekend's big Test against South Africa in style.
The scorers:
There was very little to write home about in a Test fixture predicted to act as the Wallabies' ideal tonic after suffering a painful draw in Dublin.
The scorers:
After crashing and bashing South Africa into oblivion last week, a virtually all-new XV de France showed they can turn on the flair when needed, giving Marc Lièvremont a couple of selection headaches leading up to next week's clash with the All Blacks.
The scorers:
Martin Johnson had made a couple of tweaks for their final November fixture of 2009, with a more comfortable Mark Cueto preferred to Ugo Monye in the full-back jersey and the size of Simon Shaw taking over from Louis Deacon.
The scorers:
An error-strewn match was lit up by Williams' try after 65 minutes, which quashed any thoughts Argentina had harboured of a comeback after Martin Rodriguez had brought them back to within a score at 23-16 on the hour.
The scorers:
The Springboks will take the win, but this victory will do nothing to their self-esteem or credentials on this somewhat unrewarding trip of Europe that has only dented their title as world champions.
The scorers:
Thirteen points in the last six minutes have boosted Uruguay's chances of claiming the Americas 2 spot at Rugby World Cup 2011 after the first leg of their play-off.
Left flanker Michael Leitch opened the scoring in the ninth minute with stand-off Shaun Webb missing the conversion but later adding two penalties to take an 11-3 lead, which appeared enough to beat the visitors.
The Wallabies stepped up a gear from their defeat of England last week and delivered by some distance their most polished performance of the year, capped by a fine second-half try from Rocky Elsom, returning to Dublin where he was so revered earlier this year.
A litany of handling errors, poor decisions and wonky white set-pieces was punctuated by a late try from Matt Banahan and four swings of Jonny Wilkinson's left leg. And that was just enough for the purple turtles.
Despite holding a two-score cushion with just eight minutes remaining, the second-string visitors were under serious pressure which arguably should have translated into a penalty try after several scrum resets close to the line.