The video on kicking from The Dead Ball Area was very good. Often we should have cleared a phase or two earlier than we did. I understand the desire to truck it up for a phase before clearing but often we put ourselves under more pressure and in a poorer position after doign that than if we'd just cleared immediately.
I agree on trying to run multiple phases out of our 22. It works every now and then, but as a consistent tactic it's something that can work at provincial level but is unlikely to be successful at Test level.
The other thing I was struggling with is why Foley was taking our exit kicks (and penalty kicks for touch) when To'omua has a much bigger kick on him. Under Link To'omua did most of the long kicking, but under Cheika it's pretty much been Foley.
The other frustrating thing with Cheika's style is lack of a discernible pattern, and it seemed to create confusion in phase ball. After several phases we seemed to just go left - right - left - right with little structure. It was like probing, but when nothing was happening or we were going nowhere there was no reset so players seemed to not really know what to do. What resulted was holding the majority of possession but with not a lot of impact. Against England, I thought White, although not as effective as Phipps in terms of clearance speed, provided a bit more structure to the attack simply by working the same way rather than left - right - left - right.
This is why I was confused when people claimed that the third Bledisloe was using Tahs tactics - actually it was still based on the typical McKenzie tactics of same way phase ball and pump the short side. From there Link altered his game plans, but each game plan still had that same base set of structure. This is the base structure that I think the Wallabies were lacking a bit in the EOYT on phase ball.
The stuff I've outlined above is what I think Cheika needs to consider when implementing his running game plans at Test level. The players are generally better and Test defences of the top tier nations tend to be very organised, so I think a bit more structure needs to underline the attack.