All Blacks fans will be hoping Sam Whitelock is not peaking too early. The Crusaders lock and captain did his core tasks with aplomb, ran like a spring chicken, probed in the wide channels and fired passes off his left hand. Whitelock set up left wing Manasa Mataele for the first try with a powerful surge, and then gave the assist for the first of two tries to replacement loose forward Jed Brown. It was a virtuoso display from an in-form senior player.
The Rebels had little ball in the first spell, though Reece Hodge's sinbinning for a slap down was very costly - the visitors ran in three tries while he was sedentary. However, they did rally in the second stanza with a brace to wing Marika Koroibete and a try to Toby Smith, one of three Kiwis in the Rebels' starting line-up.
Yet every time the Rebels turned over ball, they were stretched on defence, as the Crusaders' speed and ability to transition from defence to attack was compelling.
Still, it will niggle the Crusaders that they were perhaps not more clinical in the second half after setting up a commanding 31-7 lead. Some of their fans can, nevertheless, start dreaming of a possible 19-0 season, including the Lions clash. That would certainly trump the 13-0 record of Robbie Deans' class of 2002.
Next weekend, the Crusaders host the Highlanders in a rare 2.35pm Saturday kickoff, while the Rebels travel to Canberra to try and stymie the Brumbies' Australian conference ambitions.
Crusaders 41 (J. Brown 2, M. Mataele, S. Tamanivalu, D. Havili, M. Drummond tries; R. Mo'unga 4 con, pen) Rebels 19 (M. Koroibete 2, T. Smith tries; B. Volavola con, R. Hodge con) HT: 31-7