"It always has been for all the usual near-neighbours and Big Brother reasons. You can see it means a lot to England too from the way that they have started the week with those sort of comments."
Davies, who has a varied business portfolio from head of sport at BBC Wales to stints in regional rugby, acknowledges that the success of the national team is paramount to the well-being of the entire operation in Wales.
"The fortunes of the team drive almost everything," said Davies, who was charged with helping improve the fractured relationship between the union and its four cash-strapped regions and has been productive in that regard.
"We don't take anything for granted and are determined to keep the love for the sport in Wales alive and to nurture the pathway of talent."
Three Grand Slams have been achieved since the turn of the Millennium. Yet the game in Wales is at a delicate balancing point. The national team are in decent shape but the regional game has acute difficulties. Football is an ever-present rival attraction.
"Yes, but it has always been played by many in Wales and I grew up doing just that," said Davies. "Football is not the issue. Funding is. It is the problem that gives me the most heartache. The gap between us and the English and French clubs is ever-widening.
"We do want our players here but there are economic realities and I do wonder if we should look at the Australian model where players with more than 60 caps can play overseas and still be available for the Wallabies," said Davies. "We are looking at all sorts of options and we don't have the answer but we all have to make it work."
And to that end, victory for Howley's side on Sunday would be a boost on so many levels.