Sydney — Michael Cheika is looking for an attitude change rather than a personnel overhaul ahead of the return Test against New Zealand, but it is hard to imagine the Wallabies coach naming the same side on Thursday after the Sydney humiliation. Australian rugby, already reeling after a miserable Super Rugby season and the chaos surrounding the cull of the Western Force, hit a new nadir when the All Blacks racked up 54 points in the opening 48 minutes of last Saturday’s Test. With the World Cup in Japan a little more than two years away, though, the temptation for Cheika to stick to his selectorial guns for Saturday’s match in Dunedin must be strong even after the crushing 54-34 defeat. After changing his line-up for almost every match and doling out 20 first caps since the 2015 World Cup final, Cheika knows he needs to start giving his combinations some time to bed in before 2019. The defensive chaos in Sydney is sure to result in some tweaks in the backline, but otherwise Cheika r...

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