"But the job isn't done."
Captain Richie McCaw echoed those sentiments.
"We're not going to get ahead of ourselves because we've now given ourselves a chance. That why you do all that for - to give yourself a chance in a final, and we're going to have to make sure we get our feet back on the ground right away and put a performance together the same, if not better, next week."
Jones: "One of the best performances"
Michael Jones, who was a part of New Zealand's 1987 World Cup winning squad lauded the All Blacks' "absolutely outstanding performance".
"It was huge in the context of the pressure on the guys," he told TV3's Firstline programme.
"It was one of the best performances I have seen from an All Blacks side in a long time."
Jones said the team was "the best 15 collectively in the world", and executed their game plan perfectly against the Wallabies.
"They can still go to another level."
Wayne Shelford, also a World Cup winning All Black, said the tough match against the Wallabies puts the All blacks in good stead to face France on Sunday.
"Last night wasn't the perfect game, but it was still a very good game," Shelford told Newstalk ZB.
France have been lucky to make the final, he said, "but luck gets you through sometimes".
"They played well in patches and survived the onslaughts from the Welsh.
"They will turn up next Sunday but ... we are going to be too strong."
McCaw: Win was "awesome"
After the match, captain Richie McCaw described the win as "awesome".
"It was awesome," said All Black captain Richie McCaw.
"We realised we had to front up and be on the job for 80 minutes. Every single man did their bit tonight."
James Horwill, the Australian captain, said: "We didn't do well enough to get the pressure off ...
"Look, it's really disappointing ...credit to the All Blacks - they outplayed us and they deserved to win."
For the Wallabies last night, there were problems from the kick-off, Quade Cooper putting the ball out on the full and allowing the All Blacks an immediate attacking scrum.
Cooper had one of his usual mixed games, punctuated by some wayward ball handling and missed tackles.
But for some early goalkicking nerves by Piri Weepu, the All Blacks could have won by a bigger margin. They led just 14-6 at halftime, but always seemed in control of their destiny.
Weepu revealed later he was suffering from a bad dose of flu and that the team doctor would be ensuring he used hand sanitiser this week.
He said his grandfather Johnny Lui - who died 10 days ago - would "definitely be proud - he'll be looking down on me".
Cory Jane joked: "I don't want to relax too much, because I relaxed the other week and got in trouble for it."
Land of the long.... wait
New Zealand are now just 80 minutes from glory, having made their first final since 1995.
That was when they lost in extra time to South Africa on an unforgettable day in Johannesburg.
Since then they have lost at the semifinal stage twice and, shockingly, in the quarter-final four years ago.
Graham Henry and his men crossed that hurdle last week when they defeated Argentina in a sloppy encounter, but Australia in the semifinal were always going to be the true test of this side's mettle.
This Sunday's final may be one for the romantics, but there was little sentimentality in the way France booked their place.
After reports of internal ructions and a coach who had "lost" the dressing room, France scraped into the quarter-finals despite losing to the All Blacks and Tonga in pool play.
Their enmity for the team across the English Channel was enough to rouse them for one big display, but they were poor in Saturday night's semifinal, three penalties being all they could muster against a team reduced to 14 men for more than an hour.
Credit France for turning around a poor tournament, but the All Blacks, too, deserve praise after their campaign appeared to be in crisis.
On October 2, the country learned there was a pesky body part called the adductor tendon and that star playmaker Dan Carter's had snapped.
That would be difficult enough to deal with on its own, but the problems have mounted - and we're not talking about late nights out in Takapuna.
McCaw has struggled to shake off the foot injury that has plagued his 2011 season and fellow centurion Mils Muliaina's tournament and All Black career ended with a shoulder injury in the quarter-final.
So, too, did Colin Slade's, meaning Aaron Cruden, not in the original squad of 30, was entrusted with helping guide the All Blacks around the park.
Cometh the hour and all that.
Last night was as stern a test of Henry's credentials as there has been since he was controversially reappointed in the wake of the 2007 calamity.
So we wake to a sense of relief in the Land of the Long Wait - New Zealand finally has the opportunity to add to its one world title, secured on this ground 8884 days ago.
REASONS TO BE CONFIDENT
* The All Blacks have faced France before in a final at Eden Park, and the year was 1987.
* France turned on the kind of rugby that has carried them to the final at the start of their pool game against the All Blacks. Ten minutes later Ma'a Nonu and co. shut them down.
* The All Blacks will not wear an alternate strip after France waived their right to be the home team in the final. Most Kiwis still remember the dull grey jerseys the All Blacks imploded in four years ago.
* If the French win that's three victories in a row - far too much consistency for Les Bleus.
* With the eyes of the world and the all-seeing Spidercam hovering overhead, it's unlikely dark arts such as the odd scrotum pull will be risked by the French.