An area of potential improvement for the All Blacks against Wales tomorrow as they seek to put what Kieran Read today described as "an exclamation mark on the series", is their start.
It is here that they face a balancing act. They want to stretch Wales with their pace and width on what will be a hard and fast surface under the roof, but they don't want to repeat the start of last weekend in Wellington, where their play was more frantic than focused. Then the teams went to the break locked at 10-all; the week before at Eden Park, Wales had an 18-15 lead at halftime.
Credit must go to Wales for their competitiveness in the early stages of both tests, and while down two-nil in the series and no doubt looking forward to returning home after a tough series at the end of a long rugby year, they might scent another opportunity to put the All Blacks under early pressure given the 12 personnel changes Steve Hansen has made to his match-day squad.
How new boys Elliot Dixon and George Moala go, in particular, could have a bearing on how quickly the All Black machine gets up to speed. First-five Beauden Barrett will also be expected to set an early agenda. The key, skipper Read said, will be patience.
"You can't expect to go out and dominate a team right from the word go," he said. "These games are tough, the Welsh make you work for it, so it takes sometimes 45-50 minutes and other times it takes 70 minutes."