In settling his squad after another Super Rugby triumph by a New Zealand team, and in the wake of yet more talk about the haka and its relevance to the All Blacks – an issue, admittedly that will probably never die – there is a sense of the familiar as coach Steve Hansen considers the first Bledisloe Cup test.
That doesn't mean he or the All Blacks are comfortable, however. As Hansen he and his 32-player squad left for Sydney today for next weekend's test at ANZ Stadium, the point was made that the All Blacks must take an attacking mindset to the week; rather than retain the Bledisloe Cup, they must instead win it.
"We've just got to go and re-capture the Bledisloe Cup and the attitude has to be 'take it' rather than expect it to happen," said Hansen.
"We've got a lot of proud about what's been done in the past but at the same time you've got to go and earn it, earn the right to put a hand on it. Even if we win this week it doesn't mean we've won it."
In announcing his All Blacks squad on Thursday last week as his players came into camp in Christchurch, Hansen described the Wallabies as favourites, but while that may be overstating the case a little given New Zealand's recent dominance, he is aware that Michael Cheika's men upped their intensity significantly in the three test series against Ireland in June, which the home side narrowly lost.