Mick Byrne, the former All Blacks skills coach now with the Wallabies, says he wasn't surprised by the rustiness of his old team during the British and Irish Lions series.
The All Blacks' skills under pressure, normally a constant thanks in large part to the work Byrne, an Australian, put into the side over an 11-year period which finished after the last World Cup, let them down against the Lions and they are vowing to make big improvements in that area against the Wallabies at ANZ Stadium tomorrow.
"June is always a tough time for skill," Byrne said. "There are combinations coming together and different game plans coming together. You see some players doing the stuff they do for their franchises... there is always a bit of rust around in June. It doesn't surprise me.
"You're there for three weeks and then you're out with another team. It's now that you can start to make some in-roads in that area."
The 58-year-old former Australian Rules player, who watched as the All Blacks beat the Wallabies in all three Bledisloe Cup tests during his first year with the side, has had no contact with Steve Hansen this week, but that was due to the Australians being based in the western suburb of Penrith, with the All Blacks in the well-to-do eastern suburb of Double Bay.