It is an intoxicating blend of speed merchants and young guns that Stuart Lancaster has drafted in for England's summer tour of Argentina and Uruguay.
Slightly wet behind the ears this squad may be but the pampas of South America should be braced for a herd of dancing feet to come rumbling over them at one heck of a lick.
There has been relatively little comment on Lancaster's squad selection due to Lions fever already threatening to become an eardrum-bursting roar.
But I think an experimental change of tack by England can be discerned in the head coach's squad selection.
Lancaster received some criticism in the aftermath of the Six Nations for failing to include enough line-breaking, potentially game-changing outside backs. That accusation cannot be levelled at the squad for Argentina.
Among the exciting uncapped players in the backs is Bath Rugby's Kyle Eastmond. It is a deserved call-up for the former League half-back, who has adapted to the technicalities of Union with aplomb without losing his maverick streak.
A couple of months ago, Bath head coach Gary Gold said Eastmond would cause "mayhem" were he selected as a Lions wildcard. I expect the sentiment of that remark to apply in Argentina just as much as it would have done had he gone to Australia.
Eastmond is not the only slightly raw but prodigiously gifted back in Lancaster's party. Jonny May, Christian Wade and Marland Yarde are all young, blindingly fast and potential game-changers.
May has a rangy, almost languid, running style, while Wade skates over the turf like a man for whom the phrase 'fleet-footed' had been coined.
Yarde has more of the muscular track-and-fielder about him and the thought of those three working in harness is exciting.
Eastmond is one of 11 uncapped players in the touring party – and he is not the only one with Bath connections.
Alongside him is former King Edward School pupil Henry Thomas, a prop whose stock has been steadily rising ever since he emerged on the scene with Sale two years ago.
Thomas is already renowned as a precocious scrummager but what sets him apart from many tightheads is his athleticism and natural ball-handling ability.
He was a sporting all-rounder at school and that comes through in his performances for the Sharks. He is a prop who seeks to get his hands on the ball but who revels in the dirty work too – a coach's delight.
Elsewhere, Dave Attwood's recall is just reward for a season of superbly controlled aggression, while hooker Rob Webber's inclusion means a season scarred by injury finishes on a deserved high.
Davey Wilson's furious ball-carrying, coupled with his reliable graft at the set-piece, ensured his berth.
And Bath can take heart from the composition of the squad. Only Northampton have more players – six – going to Argentina.
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