Veteran Rokocoko still wary of O'Connor
Relevant offers
All Blacks
Wing novice James O'Connor is being viewed as Australia's Achilles heel but he'll have an All Blacks rugby record-breaker on edge on Saturday night.
After overcoming Springboks superstar Bryan Habana in his baptism in the position last week, the challenge doesn't get any easier for the 20-year-old when he marks Joe Rokocoko.
New Zealand's 'Rocket Man', who is set to eclipse former greats Jonah Lomu and John Kirwan as the All Blacks most capped winger, enjoys a significant size and experience advantage over O'Connor.
But the 64-test flyer fears he'll be shown up by the Wallabies wonderboy, who he likened to jockey-sized Welsh wizard Shane Williams.
"They're so elusive smaller wingers," Rokocoko said.
"I'd rather mark someone who is solid and big, than someone who is small and nippy.
"They can step off both feet and run really sharply, so he'll be a handful."
O'Connor, 10cm shorter and 14kg lighter than Rokocoko, is happy to hear it but has his own concerns in what looms as one of the more intriguing positional battles at Etihad Stadium.
"I guess I would say the opposite because I'm the smaller bloke," he said.
"The bigger blokes are tougher and especially when you have a bit of speed on you as well."
One thing is for sure, O'Connor is certain to be targeted by New Zealand even though they denied reports a photo of their team plans attempted to expose him as reported.
Added to his minimal time out wide, he was terrorised by Dan Carter's kicks in his run-on Bledisloe Cup debut in Wellington last year in a 33-6 thumping by the All Blacks.
O'Connor expects first five-eighth Carter's pinpoint bombs, which land just as their chasers arrive, will again be a feature of New Zealand 's gameplans, and he did mistime and drop his first high ball in last week's 30-13 win over the Springboks.
"Carter can put up a good high ball so I'll be ready for that," he said.
"Carter's got the ball on a string."
While O'Connor is Australia's youngest player, he's more experienced in Bledisloe Cup battles than eight teammates who are set to face New Zealand for the first time.
NSW centre Rob Horne is one who is savouring the prospect 10 years after being at a packed Olympic stadium as an 11-year-old when Lomu scored in the dying seconds for a 39-35 All Black win.
"That was unbelievable," he recalled today.
"Like the other 100,000 fans there I was pretty filthy he went over."
- AAP
Sponsored links
Usshers make it his and hers at Coast to Coast
Black Caps overcome spirited Zimbabwe in T20
Danny Lee drops back to pack at Pebble Beach
NZ Sevens team start strong in Las Vegas
New Zealand facing clean sweep in Davis Cup tie
Ko upstages local hero in penultimate round
Adams upbeat despite sub-par Porritt Classic
Linsanity sweeps Kobe, Lakers aside at MSG
Crusaders beat Hurricanes in annual warm-up
Chiefs take narrow victory over Highlanders
Cooper says tacticts contributed to his poor RWC
Is one-day cricket suffering a mid-life crisis?
Tension high as lethal log pile cleared
Police name Hawke's Bay crash victim
'Trail blazer' Carmen farewelled in Auckland
Usshers make it his and hers at Coast to Coast
Victim was holding bat, says witness
Gardener's paradise planned for Chch
Danny Lee drops back to pack at Pebble Beach
Obama tries to defuse birth control fight
Police recapture Madonna stalker
Promoter dismisses bike helmet harm study
Will bill make food safer or be a form of control?
Quakes blow Wellington's benchmark
EU courts Kiwis for science grants
Earthquakes shake north and south of NZ
Engineer's report prompts mall evacuation
Quakes blow Wellington's benchmark
Tension high as lethal log pile cleared
Police name Hawke's Bay crash victim
Daily trivia quiz: February 11
Author, 12, gives proceeds to cancer research
Baby murder-accused sobs, sniffles in court
Helmet law halves cyclist numbers
CERA report prompts mall evacuation
Old trains more reliable than new Matangi