That's the special thing about Nadolo - he is very big and fast, but his micro skills are as good as any player in the world.
His attacking threat can lead to comical moments. In the second half, after a superb turnover by the Crusaders on their line, prop Wyatt Crockett was away, stampeding out of his territory and making a beeline not for the Blues tryline but for Nadolo outside him, hoping desperately to link up with someone slightly bigger and a lot faster than him. Nadolo is a popular figure because he appears to play the game in the right spirit, too.
His run in the second half from a scrum move put replacement loose forward Luke Whitelock over by the posts, but the try was ruled out due to obstruction by Ryan Crotty on Ihaia West. Nadolo's response was to smile as he ran back into position and to shrug his shoulders at the crowd.
The Crusaders' third try came thanks in part to Nadolo's pressure on the Blues rearguard. A 5m scrum was the result, a penalty try the pay-off for the red and blacks.
He's not perfect, of course. Nadolo dropped a Jamison Gibson-Park box kick on halfway in front of the main stand. He responded with more smiles. The game by then was well in the bag, the Crusaders having scored the four tries in a victory they were desperately chasing.
As the big No 11 with the Aussie accent is fond of saying, "happy days".
For all the latest Super Rugby stats go to:
nzherald.co.nz/rugby/statscentre