As wonderful as Melody Belle was up to 1600m in limited attempts at home, winning the Windsor Park Plate and Thorndon Mile, Avantage was remarkable, winning the Railway, Telegraph, BCD Sprint, Haunui Stud Stakes and Thoroughbred Breeders (all Group 1 events).
But it was Probabeel who was New Zealand's biggest star this season, winning one of Australia's great mile races in the Epsom at Randwick and the star-studded Futurity in Melbourne, as well as two other group races.
The reality is even the best version of Melody Belle or Avantage wouldn't have won those two Aussie Group 1s.
So that sprinting division will come down to the domination at home versus just how hard it has become for New Zealand-trained horses to win open-age Group 1s in Australia.
The 1601m to 2200m award is Melody Belle's after she won the Livamol and Bonecrusher NZ Stakes, while the importance of Australian racing at the highest level will again be tested in the staying division.
Ocean Billy, Waisake and Savy Yong Blonk were all outstanding at home, but The Chosen One, who won only one relatively minor race all season, ran third in a Caulfield Cup and was the first Australasian horse home when fourth in the Melbourne Cup, which is about as serious as it gets.
The juvenile division brings together the two Te Akau stablemates who dominated that age group, and as good as On The Bubbles was winning the Karaka Million and Sires' Produce, Sword Of State beat him the only two times they met in the Sistema Stakes (Group 1) and Waikato Stud Slipper, so deserves the top freshman honour.
Aegon's win in the Hobartville at Group 2 in Sydney tagged on to stunning performances in the Hawke's Bay and 2000 Guineas, as well as the Karaka Classic Mile, maybe the domestic race of the year, makes him favourite for the 3-year-old award.