Not since 1980 with Manawatu has a union outside the "big five" won the national provincial championship top title.
That will all change tonight when either home team and top qualifiers Taranaki or Tasman - in just their ninth season of existence - clash at New Plymouth's Yarrow Stadium.
Both sides have maintained settled squads, and the good news for Taranaki is second five Charlie Ngatai, recently named the Maori All Blacks' captain, is clear to play after being a late scratching for the 49-30 extra-time win over Auckland in last weekend's semifinal.
Taranaki have no less than six (five of them backs) in that Maori team, including both halfbacks. That might not seem surprising given Colin Cooper is coach of both the Maori and Taranaki, but all have played well during this ITM Cup.
Taranaki host this Premiership final after they stole a 31-30 victory in Nelson last month, thanks to a brilliant 55m solo try by wing Waisake Naholo, now signed to the Highlanders.
It was a game Tasman let slip through their grasp, when they failed to kick the ball out in their search for a bonus point. They forgot about the win in the heat of battle, and Taranaki assistant coach Leo Crowley was not backward in reminding the Makos of their folly in the media yesterday.
Victory tonight would erase memories of an often bitter Nelson Bays-Marlborough power struggle.
In coach Kieran Keane, an All Black out of Canterbury but a Tasman man to his bootlaces, like his offsider Leon MacDonald, they have two astute tacticians.
The referee is New Zealand's top whistler Glen Jackson.
In the first of two Heartland Championship finals, the feel-good story of Buller reaches its climax today in Westport.
The home side, playing their first Meads Cup final, host defending champions Mid Canterbury. Buller have gone unbeaten through 2014, and will be favourites against the Hammers.
Tomorrow's Lochore Cup final in Oamaru pits t North Otago's Old Golds against the Butcher Boys from Wanganui.