Pumas supporters Ramiro Viaz and Emiliano Tade are counting down to Argentina's opening World Cup match against the All Blacks.
It's probably the worst time of day to watch a game of rugby.
However two die-hard Pumas fans will be in full voice when their team takes on the All Blacks in the wee hours of Monday morning.
Ramiro Viaz and Emiliano Tade are a long way from their native Argentina - their central Auckland flat in Mt Eden is the place they call home.
Viaz, who moved to New Zealand seven years ago and owns a carpet cleaning business, says this is one of the best chances his beloved Pumas will have of beating the All Blacks.
"Can [we win]? Yes. Anybody can beat New Zealand. But it won't be easy.
"Argentina have a better chance now. Why? Because of the Rugby Championship.
"The World Cup is the World Cup, it's totally different."
Viaz played rugby in his homeland and says the game was mostly played by the middle and upper classes.
That hasn't changed much but it's slowly gaining wider appeal.
Tade, who plays premier football for Auckland City, says although rugby is not his favourite game he will always support the Pumas. It's part of the territory coming from Latin America.
"It's the same as you see in football, tennis... there's a real feeling put into it. For us it's folklore."
Tade says the sport has come a long way in Argentina in the last four years.
"There are scouts at the games. You can see players from the Pumas from different parts of Argentina, before they were just from Buenos Aires."
Travelling to the UK to back the Pumas at the global tournament was a bit too far this time. Viaz made it to a number of matches at the 2011 World Cup, including Argentina's quarterfinal loss to the All Blacks.
"I went to the hotel to say hi to the players after the game. That's where I got my signed jersey," he says.
But that was then and this is now. Much can be expected from this Pumas squad who shocked with a third-place finish at the 2007 showpiece.
Household rivalries will intensify if Argentina face off against the French - which could become a possibility come quarterfinal time.
Viaz and Tade have two French flatmates who undoubtedly have fond memories of a few World Cup upsets themselves.
- Stuff
Next International story:
Rugby World Cup 2015: Final the minimum goal for France, coach Philippe Saint-Andre says
Sport Homepage