Round-the-world trips and late injuries have made preparation for the Bledisloe Cup opener far from ideal but Joe Schmidt's Australia have shown they have belief in themselves
To beat New Zealand at home, all the stars must align. You've got to pick a smart side, play the right style, win over the referee and catch a little luck along the way. Silencing the crowd early, with fast points or fierce attack and defence, helps too. Even then, there are no guarantees against the All Blacks. And they are never more dangerous than when wounded, as Scott Robertson's side certainly is after their worst ever Test defeat last week, a 43-10 spifflication by South Africa in Wellington.
Yet instead of smelling blood and making plans to dismantle an enemy in disarray, the Wallabies inexplicably sent two of their most important players on magical mystery tours to the far side of the planet. James O'Connor and Will Skelton were allowed to return to their clubs Leicester and La Rochelle despite being crucial to Australia's chances of ending a 23-year Bledisloe Cup drought and snapping New Zealand's 31-year-long, 51-Test unbeaten streak at their "fortress" of Eden Park.
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