Despite hammering Italy last time out, New Zealand have insisted all week they are not taking minnows Uruguay lightly ahead of Thursday's final Rugby World Cup Pool A clash.
The three-time winners need to win to qualify for the quarter-finals and the party line coming out of the All Blacks camp has been that Uruguay are a serious threat.
Watch every game of the Rugby World Cup LIVE on Stan Sport. Start watching Stan Sport now.
It is a Uruguay team that lost 38-17 to Italy, whom the All Blacks have just trounced 96-17.
Most people are expecting a similar one-sided romp on Thursday, despite New Zealand's insistence that Los Teros are formidable foes.
But that mask slipped a touch on Wednesday when bulky prop Ofa Tu'ungafasi spoke with refreshing honesty.
"For as long as I've been playing, one of the toughest challenges of the week is preparing for a team that you know will be easy to overcome," said Tu'ungafasi.
"When that happens you tend to leave stones unturned, you take it easy on some areas," the 31-year-old added.
In fairness to Tu'ungafasi, he was trying to explain the All Blacks' mentality and how they manage to maintain their performance levels when the challenge facing them is limited.
And he was quick to revert to the well-honed All Blacks script when faced with teams that are about to spend 80 minutes as cannon fodder.
"For as long as I've been in this environment... no matter who we play, our attention and our focus is to go out there and play to our standard and have a performance that we can be proud of," he said.
"And it's no different for this week, last weekend and previous weeks: we raise our standards and try to be better."
Scrum coach Greg Fleek pointed to their impressive showing against France as evidence you can't take Uruguay lightly
"As a team we were sitting watching that game. Obviously we were curious to see how they went. That was part of what got us excited and made us go, 'we can't get complacent in this tournament against anyone we play'.
"We talked about it the other day, how many turnovers they get at breakdowns, how physical they are and even some of their backs, quite electric too. So, we've done our homework. We have to."