Venue: Perth Stadium, Australia Date: Saturday, 2 July Kick-off: 10:55 BST |
Coverage: Live commentary on BBC Radio 5 Live, the BBC Sport website and app. |
On social media, Henry Arundell was famous.
He has made waves in rugby's backwaters for a while if that 90m score was the 19-year-old's entry into the mainstream.
He slashed open Scotland's under-20s after his debut for London Irish.
Eddie Jones was in the stands for the end-of-season dead rubber when Arundell scored a chip and chase try.
The biggest stage is going to be more important than the small screens and modest venues.
Arundell will be on the bench for the first Test against the Australians in Perth.
His coaches are surprised by his rise. They are used to being surprised by the things they expect.
As a 14-year-old, Patrick O'Grady saw Arundell in action.
He would do the same things on the field from a very young age.
You could see he had the ability to beat defenders from the first moment you saw him.
We were in the academy league. The two tries Henry scored in a row were carbon copies of each other.
He got the ball on the edge, chipped and chased over his opposite wing, caught the ball and rounded the full-back to score in the corner."
The same thing happened a week later.
The skill and soft touch to drop the ball on to his foot, execute a perfectly weighted kick, get on to the end of it and have the pace to beat the last defender, all while playing against a couple of years older, was pretty eye-opening.
He is having an impact on the men's game very quickly.
In his first year out of school, he did some amazing things.
The attributes are obvious. There are things that go viral.
He has seen more. Things that Jones will want to live in.
"From the highlight reels, people see the pace, power, footwork, strength, the step and acceleration, but if you take that away, there are a lot of fine skills to his game," he said.
His catch-pass is very good, he can kick off both feet equally well, and in pressure situations he comes to the fore. I think he's going to add a lot to the team.
Sean Turner is the rugby coach at the school.
He was Arundell's coach before his father's job changed and he was offered a scholarship.
Turner said that the school takes its rugby seriously.
It was obvious that Henry was one of the better ones when he joined the group.
He could look up and see where the weaknesses were to attack if he got the ball in the back field.
It's remarkable for a person at that age.
Turner had to try to make up for the threat he had helped hone.
Turner said that they would face him at a Sevens event.
Until Henry got the ball, it was always two even teams.
There isn't much our boys could do about it.
It would not be bad if we lost, because Henry needed to win.
He made sure to keep in touch with his team-mates if they had a hard time getting to grips with Arundell.
Beechen Cliff's team was strong even without his talents. Mackenzie Graham and Archie Maggs have since signed for Bath. Will Morris is excelling in university rugby with Durham.
When Beechen Cliff won the under-15 Schools Vase competition in 2018 at Twickenham, Arundell was on their side, even if he was no longer in their side.
Turner said that he was in touch with all the boys before the final, making sure they knew he was with them.
There is no ego to him.