It's being hailed as one of the best tries in the history of the NSW Waratahs as the backline laps up the plaudits following last night's victory.
The NSW Waratahs stunned the Chiefs with a 21-14 win in Sydney but it's Teddy Wilson's 120 metre effort that has everyone talking.
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Coach Dan McKellar called it a 'cracker' after the game, with the Waratahs breaking out into attack after withholding another Chiefs attacking raid.
Wilson and fullback Andrew Kellaway, who started the play, sat down with reporters after the game to dissect a short-odds favourite for try of the year.
At the 44th minute of the game, the Waratahs are ahead 14-7 but under serious pressure. The Chiefs come out of the gates firing and camp inside their 22, only for the hosts to force the mistake.
Angus Bell and Ben Grant are the unsung heroes of this move. The tight-five members jam up on Manaaki Selby-Rickit to force the ball loose, with Lalakai Foketi scooping it off the deck for Wilson to find Kellaway.
"We spoke about during the week just being brave and playing from wherever," Wilson said.
"We got the turnover and then, yeah, the boys just lit up. There's plenty of space out there on the right. So, I found 'Kells', and 'Kells' did a lot of the work.
"It just shows we can play from wherever. We back ourselves, we've got that skill and that flair."
Fullback Kellaway has a history of being involved in magical plays from his in-goal.
It was nine months ago that he engineered a similar play for the Wallabies against Wales at AAMI Park, chipping ahead for himself before handing off to Fraser McReight as Filipo Daugunu finished off the long-range effort.
This time, Kellaway eyes up the space and straightens the attack, knowing there's a big weapon outside him in Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii.
"I was telling Su to switch under me. That's my Nathan Cleary moment.He wouldn't come underneath me," he joked.
"What we know is you give the thoroughbred the ball nice and early and he'll do his thing."
The move is magical but it doesn't end up being a try without flyhalf Lawson Creighton.
Creighton's skills under pressure are remarkable in the moment, in one motion throwing it back over his head for Kellaway as the defence from Josh Jacomb collects him.
" I think Lawson's just a naturally gifted footy player," Wilson said.
"He's that type of guy that can take the line on at 10, create things out of nothing. So that, to him, just comes naturally.
"He knew that Kells was going to be there and just that tap over the top, it was very special.
"If he doesn't do that. We don't score the try so it's a credit to him."
The resulting play has gone viral worldwide, with the official Super Rugby page's clip of the try notching up close to 30,000 likes and 400,000 views.
It's part of the connection the Waratahs are building at home after five straight wins.
This starts from the beginning of the night as the team walk out of the warm-up area at the RA headquarters to the ground, with a mass of fans there to cheer them on.
The energy from the players to create tries like this is reciprocated late as the first organic 'New South Wales' chant rings around Allianz for the first time in years during a dogged 28 phases last stand to secure the win.
"There's just winning the game, there's winning the moments, and then having the superstars. So I think we've probably got two of those things right, but we've never really got three of them right at any one time," Kellaway said.
"We're not there yet, and we know that, but we've got the thoroughbred and we've got a couple of other pretty high-profile superstars coming through."