Milestones await for two of current-day rugby union's outstanding players in Alun Wyn Jones and Beauden Barrett when Wales face New Zealand in Cardiff on Saturday.
Wales captain Jones is poised to play his 149th Test for his country, with the lock set to surpass former All Blacks skipper Richie McCaw's world record of appearances for a single country in a match that pits Europe's Six Nations champions against the recently-crowned southern hemisphere Rugby Championship winners.
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Meanwhile, New Zealand fly-half Barrett is in line to win his 100th cap as a strong and much-changed team head into the first leg of a European tour after the All Blacks' 104-14 rout of the United States in Washington last weekend.
At the age of 30, the two-time world player of the year is one of the few who could go past Jones and New Zealand coach Ian Foster said of Barrett: "He's just a quality person. The thing I love about him is that he prepares the team first and then himself. He's very selfless."
'Selflessness' has long been a quality attributed to Jones, who has also played 12 Tests for the British and Irish Lions, with Wales coach Wayne Pivaclabelling his skipper as "the ultimate professional".
He added: "It's fantastic he is going to go one more than Richie McCaw, but typically for Al, it's not about him, but the team coming together and having a great performance."
That might be particularly hard this weekend, with many fearing for Walesgiven they are missing a raft of first-choice players.
Dashing wing Louis-Rees Zammit, fly-half Dan Biggar and No.8 Taulupe Faletau have not been released by their England-based clubs as Saturday'smatch falls outside the International Rugby Board's designated Test window.
Liam Williams, George North, Leigh Halfpenny, Justin Tipuric and Josh Navidi are among a lengthy injury list.
- 68 years of defeat -
Wales have suffered 31 straight losses to New Zealand since their last victory over the All Blacks in 1953.
But Pivac, himself a New Zealander, said his side should take heart from James 'Buster' Douglas's stunning win over previously unbeaten world heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson in 1990.
"I could rattle off upsets here -- James 'Buster' Douglas and Mike Tyson. Every now and then, you get a massive upset."
Meanwhile, Pivac, a former Scarlets coach who has been in Wales for seven years, defended the timing of the match by insisting the Welsh Rugby Union could not turn down the estimated £4 million ($5.5 million) it will make from the game.
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"Looking at the finances in this country, without this fixture, we'd be in big trouble," he said.
And he insisted his revamped side, with New Zealand-born fly-half Gareth Anscombe making his first Test start in more than two years following ligament damage, would be inspired by playing in front of a capacity crowd at the Principality Stadium in what will be Wales' first sell-out international since the Covid-19 pandemic.
"You can pull out stats like it being 68 years of defeat...It's an opportunity to go out there and put on a good performance. 75,000 people have been starved of this, so we've got a job to do to make it a great occasion."
It was a point endorsed by Foster, who asked what his side could expect, replied: "Loud, boisterous, fanatical and red...I sense a real edge in this game. We felt it in New Zealand when we were first able to fill a stadium after the Covid period.
"We love these occasions, we know it will certainly fuel our opposition, but we've got to make sure it fuels us with excitement too."