The All Blacks want this consecutive victories record. Really want it. There's plenty of reasons why, but none driving them harder than their desire to make a definitive statement about their place in history.
This All Blacks team loves the opportunity to create legacy. That's what drove them between 2012 and 2015 - their desire to become the most dominant team in history, a goal they felt they would achieve if they became the first team to record a perfect season and win back-to-back World Cups.
They wanted to collect the consecutive victories record along the way, too, but when they drew with the Wallabies first in 2012 and then again in 2014, they blew their chance.
On Saturday they can achieve what they have previously failed to do and own another record. Having a tangible footprint matters. Obviously it matters because the team have spent time talking and thinking about it.
That much was revealed by Sam Cane when he said that there have been more than 5000 tests between Tier One nations and no side has ever managed to win 18 on the trot.