All Blacks could set three world records
The All Blacks have the potential to set three remarkable records as they pass the halfway point of their 2010 test season, and less than 12 months ago to suggest even one of them would be breached would have been madness.
The first opportunity will be to break a 63 year old record and potentially register ten wins on the trot against the Wallabies.
The All Blacks will not have Dan Carter available for that match, and potentially the team could feature changes as players who have featured for most of the season could make way to develop the second tier.
However the Wallabies, while match hardened, will play the All Blacks after two consecutive matches at altitude, and will be challenging for Robbie Deans and his men, who have not beaten New Zealand since their thumping 34-19 victory in Sydney in the ex-Crusaders coach first match against his countrymen.
The nine game losing streak set between 1936 and 1947 is a record, although in 1967 and 1978 the All Blacks did go 11 straight without defeat to the Wallabies, but there was a drawn match.
The Wallabies best hope is that five of their last six wins against the All Blacks have occurred at ANZ Stadium.
There is also the potential to go through the calendar year unbeaten.
Ireland did achieve this last year, but were blemished with their draw against the Wallabies. It was the closest a side has come to the achievement in the professional era.
In 1997 the All Blacks won 11 straight to kick off a magical year, before being held to a 26-26 draw by England at Twickenham to deny John Hart’s team a clean sweep.
A year later the Springboks nearly did the same, but lost their final match of their season, while in 2003 England went close, winning all and sundry that year, but lost to France in Marseille in a warm up match to give them a 16-1 record.
Finally there is the talk of the world record unbeaten streak.
The current record is 18, set over a five year period by Lithuania until May this year, losing to Georgia to break their dream run.
Of the major test nations, both the All Blacks of the sixties and the Springboks of the late nineties hold the joint record of 17.
From 1987 to 1990 the All Blacks did go 23 tests unbeaten, but drew to Australia 19-19 to interrupt the sequence, while from 2003 to 2008 the All Blacks achieved the world record unbeaten streak at home, winning 30 test matches.
