Australia continued their dominant run over Wales with a sublime, exhausting 30-26 victory in the final Test of the year in Cardiff.
It could only ever be agonisingly close, such has been the nature of the battles between these two in recent times.
It came down to the simple matter of whether Wales were good enough to finally win. With territory and possession five minutes from the finish and only four points down, the chance was there and then destroyed.
In the end Australia found that extra gear. The acceleration in intensity after going 16-10 down was breathtaking — tries from Israel Folau and Joe Tomane flipping the match on it's head and leaving Wales to chase their way back in.
It was an absolute thriller; no question. Take your pick for a standout moment from a pre-Christmas treat littered with them served up under the roof of the Millennium Stadium.
Ireland's noble effort against New Zealand a week ago had seen them playing above their level, but this was a contest between two evenly-matched teams full of running and bruising force that surged and subsided one way and then the other. There is no love lost between Wales and Australia, that is for sure.
Perhaps it was the lack of scrums in the first half that resulted in such a high level of magnificent entertainment. It certainly meant that the absence of Adam Jones for Wales was not as dear as predicted.
The Wallabies were ruthless. Last week against Scotland chances slipped away and the scoreboard failed to reflect the gulf between the two teams but here, against a rival, they endlessly tore up Shaun Edwards' defensive system.
It was Wales though who struck first. North pounced on a rare lackadaisical mistake from Adam Ashley-Cooper to hack on and then finish in the left corner, sending the Millennium Stadium into raptures. It was an omen. It left you breathless.
Quade Cooper marked his 50th cap for Australia with a world-leading performance.
His reverse pass around the back will be his legacy, mimicked in backyards around the world on Sunday, and it came off twice — first for Christian Leali'ifano's equalising try and then creating a chance on a silver platter for Will Genia that the scrum-half left behind.
Leigh Halfpenny's boot faltered only once in the first half, a penalty pinging back off the post but his other two efforts were successful. Added to an attempt from Dan Biggar, Wales were 16-10 ahead.
Israel Folau though had other plans. First he was brilliantly denied in the far corner by Scott Williams with a try-saving tackle, with Biggar heading to the bin from the resulting ruck.
But despite monstrous tackles from first North and then Richard Hibbard, Folau cruelly bounced off Mike Phillips and powered through two more tacklers to snatch the try — standing over his victims with the air of a world champion boxer. By scoring he levelled Lote Tuqiri's Wallaby record of ten tries in a single Test year.
It sling-shotted the Wallabies into the lead following Leali'ifano's conversion, Australia up 17-16 at half-time.
There was to be no second half let up in intensity. Australia sniffed blood and pummeled the Welsh defensive front through breaks from Nick Cummins and Cooper to leave the home side scuttling backwards.
Leali'ifano added a penalty before Tomane added the Wallabies third try — following close consultation with the TMO over the final pass. It created a chorus of boos but the more alarming aspect for Wales were the 20 unanswered points added by Australia to put them in the driving seat.
Wales grew desperate, the next score all but deciding the result at 30-16 down. Liam Williams did his part by racing away down the left touchline, but the Wallabies prowess at the breakdown was too much as they scrambled to safety.
North though was not done. The Northampton wing flew through Scott Fardy's tackle attempt and then had the power to outmuscle Folau to go in under the posts and drag Wales back within seven points.
Driven by hope and that burning fire to finally put one over the Wallabies, Wales turned to their bench and their pack to suck away the wide channels for Australia.
Three points came after Ben Mowen's indiscretion at the breakdown as the oxygen disappeared ahead of another typically tight finish in this fixture.
Cooper's yellow card then gave Wales the impetus, the fly-half binned for an early tackle as the clock ticked away.
It came down to a tapped penalty for Wales in their own half, the length of the pitch to run in order to finally break that losing streak. It was a task too far, bringing a pulsating Test match to a close.
Man of the Match: Quade Cooper's tribute was already written until he was harshly yellow carded. But he was so good that he still takes this award. Sensational throughout. George North a close second.
Moment of the Match: With a line-out in the Australian 22, Wales sought to deploy their famous 12-man maul but the execution was off and a huge chance wasted.
Villain of the Match: Despite the sin-binnings of Cooper and Biggar, there was nothing nasty here.
The scorers:
For Wales:
Tries: North 2
Cons: Halfpenny, Biggar
Pens: Halfpenny 2, Biggar, Priestland
Yellow Card: Biggar
For Australia:
Tries: Leali'ifano, Folau, Tomane
Cons: Leali'ifano 3
Pens: Leali'ifano 3
Wales: 15 Leigh Halfpenny, 14 Alex Cuthbert, 13 Owen Williams, 12 Scott Williams, 11 George North, 10 Dan Biggar, 9 Mike Phillips, 8 Toby Faletau, 7 Sam Warburton (capt), 6 Dan Lydiate, 5 Ian Evans, 4 Alun-Wyn Jones, 3 Rhodri Jones, 2 Richard Hibbard, 1 Gethin Jenkins.
Replacements: 16 Ken Owens, 17 Ryan Bevington, 18 Samson Lee, 19 Ryan Jones, 20 Justin Tipuric, 21 Rhodri Williams, 22 Rhys Priestland, 23 Liam Williams.
Australia: 15 Israel Folau, 14 Joe Tomane, 13 Adam Ashley-Cooper, 12 Christian Leali'ifano, 11 Nick Cummins, 10 Quade Cooper, 9 Will Genia, 8 Ben Mowen (c), 7 Michael Hooper, 6 Scott Fardy, 5 James Horwill, 4 Rob Simmons, 3 Sekope Kepu, 2 Stephen Moore, 1 James Slipper.
Replacements: 16 Tatafu Polota-Nau, 17 Benn Robinson, 18 Ben Alexander, 19 Kane Douglas, 20 Dave Dennis, 21 Nic White, 22 Mike Harris, 23 Bernard Foley.
Referee: Wayne Barnes (England)
Assistant referees: Alain Rolland, John Lacey (both Ireland)
After losing narrowly to Italy last week, Fiji, who led 16-7 at half time, outscored their hosts three tries to one.
It was an incredible 80 minutes of rugby that reminded us why we love this sport so much.
The Springboks led from start to finish and were 13-7 ahead at the interval thanks to an opportunistic early try from JP Pietersen, with France replying just before half-time via a Yoann Huget try.
The depleted Wallaby side overcame a much-improved Scotland side in a scrappy Test punctuated by penalties and errors but could easily have won by a lot more had Christian Leali'ifano not missed five kicks at goal.
It was wet and by no means wonderful, but Argentina bounced back following their humiliating defeat to Wales last week.
Chris Wyles the USA full-back, and Saracens stalwart, was in familiar surroundings at Sarries' home ground and got his side off to a solid start with an early try which was converted by fly-half Adam Siddal.
The Brave Blossoms outscored their hosts four tries to one with flanker Michael Broadhurst grabbing a brace.
James Pritchard was the visitors' hero, contributing 27 points via two tries, four conversions and three penalties.
Friday's showpiece simply spluttered its way through a catalogue of handling errors and set-piece calamities, interspersed with thunderous moments of physicality from Tonga as they kept themselves in the game until the death.
Tries from Willem Alberts, WIllie le Roux, JP Pietersen and Coenie Oosthuizen were enough to see off a home side that were blighted by handling errors and imprecision.
The hosts made a bright start and raced into a 6-0 lead, after 15 minutes, via two penalties from Agustín Ormaechea but Spain struck back with a three-pointer of their own from Igor Genua.
Samoa, coming off the back of a 40-9 mauling by Ireland last week, raced out to an early lead thanks to tries from Alapati Leiua and Brando Vaaulu.
Merab Kvirikashvili opened the scoring in style for the hosts with a penalty and a converted try in the corner in the opening fifteen minutes.
The Maple Leaves defended well early on, and indeed were dynamic and powerful when given the chance to attack, but fell behind to two Vlaicu penalties in the opening fifteen minutes to trail 6-0.
With many expecting a much closer scoreline than the one recorded, the visiting outfit will undoubtedly be delighted with their four-try win.
A healthy level of passion from the Pacific Island side boiled over at the beginning of the second half, when Perpignan prop Sona Taumalolo unleashed a flurry of punches on Yoann Maestri.
Scores from Mike Phillips, George North, Toby Faletau and Ken Owens coupled with twenty points from the boot of Leigh Halfpenny were too much for a Pumas team that failed to capitalise on their early opportunities.
Despite what the scoreline might suggest, the game was a terrible advertisement for Test match rugby.
Julian Savea scored two tries with Kieran Read also crossing the England line for the All Blacks to win their 13th match of the year.
Japan scored one try in the first half and four in the second as they picked up the first win of their European tour.
Gloucester made history on Tuesday as they thrashed a spirited and ambitious second-string Japan side 40-5 in seven-try spectacle at Kingsholm.
Romania have not lost a Test match in 2013, winning seven out of eight and drawing 9-9 with Georgia in March.