"At their last race before the Olympics, Hamish Bond and Eric Murray were paying $1.30 to win, so basically the All Blacks are as sure a thing as them."
At the other end of the scale, the Wallabies haven't beaten the All Blacks at Eden Park since 1986. Combined with their dire recent form, the bookies have plonked the longest-ever odds on the Wallabies to beat the men in black.
"Australia are at $10 to beat them. They have never been that high, never," Stafford said.
"When we offer a decent team, and based off world rankings Australia are a decent side, you do get some money on it.
"Same with South Africa, when they were here we had $9 on them and took a fair amount of money on that, especially on the day of the game.
"People start thinking 'what if, what if?' and they can turn $10 into $100. You do get a bit of $10 and $20 traffic on the day of the match.
"I'd imagine we'd get a lot of that again this weekend."
Stafford said punters are also letting rip on the All Blacks running riot tonight.
"We're seeing money go on a win of 31 points and over, at $2.60, and all the try-scoring books are all All Blacks, there's nothing to do with the Wallabies," he said.
"All the ancillary books are heavily backed in New Zealand's favour."
Almost exactly a year to the day a monster $400,000 bet was placed on the All Blacks to win the Rugby World Cup - the biggest bet in New Zealand history.
The punt, which saw the brave Kiwi bank $540,000, floored TAB staff as it was almost double the size of the previous record, which had stood for 13 years.