As Sunday's World Cup semifinal comes ever closer, attention will inevitably focus on the rivalry of the two coaches, New Zealanders Graham Henry and Robbie Deans, but there is someone else in the Australia camp who as an intimate knowledge of the game here and he spoke today of the mounting pressure on the home team.
David Nucifora, Australia's coaching co-ordinator, spent three years in charge of the Blues after joining the Super Rugby franchise as a technical adviser in 2005.
His tenure meant he was based in Auckland during the All Blacks 2007 quarter-final exit in Cardiff and he said the public's response was educational.
"It was pretty glum,'' Nucifora said. "It means a heck of a lot to New Zealanders, the game of rugby. I think that just puts a lot of pressure on their team. The players know and understand the expectation that sits on their shoulders to win the World Cup and how that deal with that will be really important because you only have to walk the streets, it's everywhere around you at the moment. The pressure is mounting, the expectation is there, it's been a long time. People want to win it, it means a heck of a lot to them. It's going to be interesting to see how they respond to that.''
Asked about specifics of the reaction to the 2007 defeat to France, Nucifora replied: "I don't think I went outside for a while. People were disappointed, that's to be expected.You know...it was glum, it was glum.