I just can't see us doing anything than going all guns blazing to try and break the Eden Park hoodoo and win the Bledisloe Cup.
The fact that AAC (Adam Ashley-Cooper) has cemented his spot would be entirely why I'd pick him rather than giving someone else a go.
If we'd lost in Sydney then sure, rest AAC (Adam Ashley-Cooper), but I think Cheika will be desperate to go for the win.
Maybe Speight will start instead of Mitchell. It would seem like his best shot to get to the RWC. Hard to see him being selected in front of Horne, Tomane or Mitchell without playing a game.
I get your drift BH and largely agree. But I don't think it's just that.
To me, the absolutely, truly wonderful Wallaby stand out from Saturday was not so much the win, but the exceptionally intense, ferocious, all-of-80, gritty, convincing, 'strong team mind', 'all believing', never relenting, never weakening, never deferring, totally fucking fired up
......and so many more similarly inspiring words and truths that characterised the Wallabies' essential mode of play.
I have not seen that from the Wallabies in that way since well before the Deans' era (when, by the way, we never saw it). And, speaking personally, that's what I want to see. I literally couldn't sleep half the night after watching that game; in those dark hours I rediscovered all over again what it means to really love this game. My faith - so long gone through relentless, never-backed-up hype and endless mediocrity - came back that night.
This newly wonderful
mode of play is the hallmark of a team that will start to deliver a fantastic combination of consistently good results and consistently good crowd affection, respect and engagement (this combination being the essential basis of sports code health). This is the mode of play that allows losses, but keeps banking precious assets for the future.
Cheika likely, deep down, won't expect to win at Eden Park. But what he knows is that if he gets the team close by minute 81, they continue to display over and over again this mode of Wallaby play and get better and better as a result of it, the belief within the team will genuinely build to be the type that is simply essential to win the big moments, and more importantly the big championships.
So Eden Park will be an important event of psychological building and construction work within the inner mind of the 2015 Wallabies. Winning there will likely be coincidental.