
Three things about the All Blacks side
Three things you need to know about the All Blacks team to face the Wallabies at Westpac Stadium on Saturday night. The new cap Chiefs
Three things you need to know about the All Blacks team to face the Wallabies at Westpac Stadium on Saturday night. The new cap Chiefs
Prop Joe Moody will return from injury to start for the All Blacks against the Wallabies on Saturday, with Anton Lienert-Brown making his test debut.
21-year-old Anton Lienert-Brown is the man the All Blacks selectors have chosen to start at No12 in place of the injured Ryan Crotty.
Do we still care about a player whose skill and influence has waned or is it just the default mechanism?
The news doesn't get any better for the Wallabies. Backing up from Saturday's thrashing at the hands of the All Blacks they now have to break an 18-test losing streak.
It may not look like it, but Saturday's Rugby Championship encounter with the Wallabies is the biggest test to date of the new-look All Blacks side.
Once again the All Blacks have a tricky midfield puzzle to solve.
COMMENT: The hardest thing for players to learn about test rugby is that a top performance one week provides zero guarantees it can be reproduced.
The All Blacks have suddenly taken on a youthful and inexperienced look after calling up five players who have three test caps between them.
Don't worry, the All Blacks don't have a secret new training ritual involving alcohol.
World Rugby are taking seriously the discovery of a listening device in the All Blacks' hotel in Sydney.
The Wallabies face the stark prospect of becoming only the second Australian team in the professional era to lose seven games in a row.
COMMENT: Something has to change for the Wallabies, they can't do in Wellington next Saturday what they did in Sydney because they will get beaten by more.
When sportspeople have reason to suspect someone has gone so far as to bug their team room, something has gone wrong.
If the All Blacks' discovery of a listening device was a surprise, so too has been the response of the game's governing bodies.
There is a scary thing for other rugby nations to contemplate about the latest version of the All Blacks, writes Chris Rattue.
The All Blacks have been asked today whether they are "paranoid" for taking extra security arrangements.
The All Blacks won't need a listening device to know that this week the pressure will be squarely on the Wallabies.
Chris Rattue runs the rule over the standout players in the All Blacks' 42-8 win over Australia in Sydney last night.
Herald rugby columnist Wynne Gray is here to answer your questions following the All Blacks 42-8 thrashing of the Wallabies in Sydney.
Coach Steve Hansen has explained why it took five days for New Zealand Rugby to come forward about the alleged bugging device found in All Blacks' hotel.
Wallabies coach Michael Cheika has admitted bungling the team's mental preparation after his side suffered their worst defeat to New
"This is not a trans-Tasman rivalry, it is an annual funeral". That's how an Australian rugby writer has described the All Blacks' 42-8 thrashing of the Wallabies.
As the hunt begins to identify who bugged the All Blacks, security experts have described the outrageous operation as expensive and sophisticated.
Australian police forensics experts were last night analysing the sophisticated listening device discovered in the All Blacks' team room.
COMMENT: Rugby executives all too easily revert to their unwritten code of secrecy and belief they can cover almost anything up.
Police investigating rugby's spying scandal have turned on All Black bosses and their delay in reporting the discovery of a bug.
All Blacks coach Steve Hansen has showed his class by taking the time to wish Wallabies and Brumbies star Christian Lealiifano all
There's no side in world rugby that makes pass and catch work for them quite like the All Blacks.
Ryan Crotty might start getting the widespread respect he deserves after delivering another quality, low-error display in Bledisloe I.