Wallabies coach Michael Cheika is right about the All Blacks having a tricky issue to solve at openside flanker and first-five. But he's wrong to say New Zealand don't expect anything from Australia this week.
The All Blacks, for all their Bledisloe dominance in the past 14 years, have never once taken anything for granted.
The Wallabies are going to be a treacherously good side on Saturday night at a venue where the All Blacks haven't got the greatest record. That much is locked into the All Blacks' thinking, so Cheika is unlikely to gain traction by suggesting New Zealand don't believe they have much to fear.
"We'll just be doing our best when we play them," Cheika said yesterday. "I know not many people are expecting us, as he [All Blacks coach Steve Hansen] isn't, to do much with that but we'll prepare to our best and see how we go.
"When they say we've got our own problems that's what they're referring to, the fact that we can't beat them. I don't know what he's upset about. For us, we know how we're thought of I suppose, we know that they think we're no chance to do anything."