New Zealand are relishing the pressure as they vie for an unprecedented third consecutive World Cup title and have put behind them a recent lacklustre spell to kick off their Japan campaign with a clean slate.
The All Blacks lost their world number one ranking for the first time in nearly a decade last month, they briefly regained it only to fall to second after Ireland, prompting speculation their recent domination of the tournament could be at its end.
But for the most-capped All Black of the 2019 World Cup squad, Kieran Read, none of that matters.
"The results are not important at all. I think that's shown across all the test matches that have been played," Read told reporters after the team arrived in Tokyo for a welcome ceremony. "Teams have beaten each other across the board.
"So in the World Cup it (form in the warm-ups) doesn't matter, it's about turning up in this World Cup and putting your best foot forward. And so every team right now has got the same chance as everyone else."
NONE OF THAT MATTERS: Kieran Read, centre, believes their recent lackluster spell doesn't matter. Photo: Andrew Cornaga/AP.
New Zealand are coming off a July and August that saw them draw with South Africa in Wellington, narrowly avoid an upset to Argentina and get blown away by Australia.
But they regained their footing with a dominant win over the Wallabies and a 14-try demolition of Tonga last week set them up nicely for the tournament.
Read, a member of the 2011 and 2015 World Cup-winning squads, said there is pressure in their quest for a third straight title but added that the team embraced the challenge.
THRASHED: New Zeland thrashed Tonga with 14-tries. Photo: Andrew Cornaga/AP.
"We wouldn't be sitting here as a part of this tournament if we didn't relish these opportunities to play at that highest level. And the World Cup is the highest level," he said.
New Zealand open their campaign in a blockbuster clash with South Africa on Sept. 21 in Yokohama. The also play Canada, Italy and Namibia in Pool B.
Reuters