Whatever or whoever England throws at him at Forsyth Barr Stadium this Saturday, Sam Whitelock is not going to be too bothered.
Whitelock, the experienced All Black lock, is set to play his 53rd test, and is likely to go toe to toe with another couple of hefty English pieces of beef.
But Whitelock is not getting too concerned about who comes to the locking table in the white jersey.
''I think if you go out there with a personal battle thinking, 'I'm marking this person', you'll get into trouble,'' Whitelock said.
''Sure, there is a lineout battle at times where it is one on one. But there is so much movement right across the field so you never really tackle your opposite. So if you got caught into that you'll get caught into trouble.
''You have to make sure you have a good understanding of every player, whether it is your opposite or a fullback.''
The 25-year-old said there was always something to work on, and after Saturday night's close first test there had been a lot of honesty in the review session, which took place yesterday morning.
''If you get comfortable you should probably not be here. Myself and other members of the team have very high standards and improving is the way we want to be.''
He said All Black hooker Dane Coles had thrown well, and had been doing that all season.
The review had shown there were plenty of places to improve in the wake of the 20-15 victory at Eden Park.
''Individual skills were not good enough and we are pretty keen to get better this week.
''I think you have to look at yourself individually, so everyone has to do their own review - where they played well and when they need to improve. Working on that will help them and will help the whole team improve. If you do that first then you're on your way.''
England is likely to bring some established players, who did not arrive in time to play the first test in Auckland, into its side.
Whitelock said good sides had great depth.
''They can put anyone out there and they are still going to have that same passion. Great international sides don't have 15 or 23 players. They have a large number of players, and they showed that they have great depth.''
Whitelock said the onus was on individuals to get their skills right and once that was sorted, the All Blacks should be much more accurate.
The scratchy win on Saturday was marred by some dropped balls and misdirected kicks from the home side.
But under a roof and assurance of a dry track, the All Blacks will seek to improve their handling and make better use of possession.
Whitelock said that came down to the player.
''First of all we have to get our own individual skill set right and if we do that, and sort our own game out, we should be right.''