All Black captain Richie McCaw said he wouldn't be losing any sleep tonight ahead of the biggest game of his life at the Rugby World Cup.
While he admitted there were 'absolutely no guarantees', a relaxed McCaw said he had been more concerned with final preparations leading up to tomorrow night's World Cup final than fretting over the result.
"If you get to wound up and anxious you will waste a lot of energy," he told a packed press conference at the Heritage Hotel in central Auckland.
"I am not worried about anything else apart from going out there and playing well.
"The opportunity to go out on the biggest stage and play for your country against a team like the French is an opportunity that you play the game for. I just want to get out there and show that this team can play its best when it really counts."
Assistant coach Wayne Smith, attending his last press conference before he leaves the All Blacks, said that there was very little the coaching staff could do at this late stage.
He brushed off questions about where the game would be won and lost, saying it was anyone's guess.
"I would just end up with egg on my face if I started making those predictions."
McCaw said the team had been inspired by a visit from former NZRU chairman Jock Hobbs, who spoke to the team on Friday night.
He added that he hoped that he wouldn't be judged on one game alone.
"Hopefully when I leave people will say that all the history that's gone before, all the standards that have been set have been upheld, if not raised."
McCaw said that his development as a captain had been affected by the early exit from the 2007 World Cup, as well as a losing streak in 2009. He said that under those circumstances, it was possible, as captain, to either "lie down" or "look to improve".
He said he had no doubts France will play their best game of the tournament, pointing out that the media had 'loaded their guns for them'.